Chitra: Difference between revisions
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| ===Transfer and Transformation of the Constellation=== | ===Transfer and Transformation of the Constellation=== | ||
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| File:Chitra nakshatras in Temple draw+lbl 4ase.jpg|Chitra 10th century CE | |||
| File:Nakshatra temple magDraw lbl.jpg|Display of all 28th nakshatra in silver arch with candles in Tirupperunthurai (Athmanathaswamy temple) near Aranthangi, India, 10th century CE. (SMH 2025). | |||
| File:Nakshatras in Temple draw+lbl 4ase.jpg|Display of all 28th nakshatra in a door frame in Tirupperunthurai (Athmanathaswamy temple) near Aranthangi, India, 10th century CE. (SMH 2025). | |||
| File:Tibet nakshatra 12.png|Chitra Tibetean | |||
| File:14 Chitra draw.png|Chitra as reconstructed by Jones (1720). | |||
| </gallery> | |||
| ==Mythology== | ==Mythology== | ||
Latest revision as of 15:57, 30 October 2025
Citrā (चित्रा), "the bright one", is an Indian name, used by the Indian Vedic tradition. Most of these names are roughly 3000 years old. They pre-date Hinduism but were taken over by it.
Etymology and History
Name Variants
- Chitra
- Tvarshtra
Chitra means "the bright one" and is clearly a name for a single star-asterism. In the Indian Vedic coordinate system, the sidereal zodiac, this star marks the point 180° at the ecliptic. As precession continues, the ecliptic latitudes remain always the same, so that a star directly at the ecliptic (like Spica) at any historical epoch marked and will mark the invisible ecliptic.
The temple depictions characterise this nakshatra by a point which refers to the important anchor of their frame of reference.
Origin of Constellation
Transfer and Transformation of the Constellation
Mythology
mnemonic tales and cultural significance
Weblinks
References
- References (general)














