Coma Berenices: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Melotte-111.jpg|alt=photograph Melotte 111|thumb|photograph of the Coma star cluster. This file is from Wikimedia Commons and may be used by other projects. Open cluster Melotte 111, or Coma Star Cluster. http://sternwarte-kempten.de/]]
[[File:Melotte-111.jpg|alt=photograph Melotte 111|thumb|photograph of the Coma star cluster. This file is from Wikimedia Commons and may be used by other projects. Open cluster Melotte 111, or Coma Star Cluster. http://sternwarte-kempten.de/]]
{{DISPLAYTITLE:Coma Berenices (πλόκαμος)}}
One of the 88 [[wikipedia:International_Astronomical_Union|IAU]] constellations. The ancient "Greek" constellation originates from Egypt. It has been invented by Konon, the royal astronomer of king [https://www.britannica.com/biography/Ptolemy-III-Euergetes Ptolemy III] and it was named after his wife, Queen [https://www.britannica.com/biography/Berenice-II Berenice II] Euergetis as reported by Eratosthenes. However, the asterism always used to have names in other cultures. In this area of the sky close the pole of the ecliptic, there are not many bright stars, but a clearly recognizable star cluster of triangular shape (the visual appearance is an isosceles triangle).
One of the 88 [[wikipedia:International_Astronomical_Union|IAU]] constellations. The ancient "Greek" constellation originates from Egypt. It has been invented by Konon, the royal astronomer of king [https://www.britannica.com/biography/Ptolemy-III-Euergetes Ptolemy III] and it was named after the king's wife, Queen [https://www.britannica.com/biography/Berenice-II Berenice II] Euergetis as reported by Eratosthenes. However, the asterism always used to have names in other cultures. In this area of the sky close the pole of the ecliptic, there are not many bright stars, but a clearly recognizable star cluster of triangular shape (the visual appearance is an isosceles triangle).


==Etymology and History==
==Etymology and History==
This figure has only been regarded as a constellation since Tycho Brahe in the 16th century, but the figure itself is ancient. It is treated as an association of faint stars in the constellation Leo; in the Almagest, for example, it is described as a ‘nebulous mass’ representing a ‘curl’.

The Almagest does not define whose curly hair is being represented here. It is not mentioned in Aratos, but the figure appears in Eratosthenes. Interestingly, he mentions it twice and somewhat confusedly:  In one of the two surviving text versions of Eratosthenes on the lion, there is a supplement to the list of stars in which he speaks of a triangle of stars next to the lion's tail and calls it the ‘curl of Berenice’. However, the fact that he also mentions a curl in the constellation of the Northern Crown - the curl of Ariadne - causes more confusion. Philologists therefore speculate whether, after Berenice II was removed by her son for political reasons, it was not appropriate for a time to speak of the "Lock of Berenice". There are astronomical reasons against this, but if the curl was - at least temporarily - assigned to Ariadne, this was not permanent, as the cult of Berenice subsequently became more important.

===Origin of Constellation===
===Origin of Constellation===
Berenice was the name of several queens of Egypt. According to Eratosthenes, this refers to Berenice II Euergetis, the wife of the Greek ruler Ptolemy III. The royal couple were already revered for their charity during their lifetime: they were regarded as a pair of gods in Egypt and worshipped in Crete and Athens. The constellation is said to have been invented by Konon of Samos in 241 BCE. While Eratosthenes worked as a librarian and teacher of princes in Alexandria, Konon was the king's astronomer.

In Mesopotamia, the panicle of the date palm of the goddess Erua was in this place - neither a tuft of hair nor a curl of a queen.


===Transfer and Transformation of the Constellation===
===Transfer and Transformation of the Constellation===


==Greek Mythology==
==Greek Mythology==
The contemporary poet Kallimachos described why Konon invented the constellation, and the Roman poet Catullus translated it into Latin around 200 years later.

Berenice was a princess from Cyrene who married the king of Egypt in 246 BCE. The same year, he went to war against the Seleucids in the Third Syrian War. Eratosthenes, who also came from Cyrene but was now working in Athens, was brought in as tutor to the princes when their son Ptolemy IV Philopator was born in 245 BCE. However, Berenice prayed that her husband would return from the war in one piece and vowed to sacrifice her head of hair (or a lock of it) as soon as this happened.

On the king's return, she cut her hair and brought it to the temple of Arsinoë. Disturbance ensued when it disappeared the following day. Konon showed the excited crowd, which had gathered suspiciously, that the gods had moved the hair of the benevolent queen to the sky.

Nowadays, the constellation is often used for romantic narratives: As a constellation symbolising conjugal love and fidelity, it can be wonderfully used in planetariums and other contexts.


== Names of the Star Cluster in other cultures ==
== Names of the Star Cluster in other cultures ==


# Aldafirah (Arabic - translation from Greek)
* <br />
# [[Awarhakoya]] (Locono People, South America)
==Weblinks==
# [[Fatana-lua]] (..., Tonga/ Polynesia)
# Hulbatalasad (Arabic Indigenous)
# [[Itua ni Bure]] (..., Gilbert Is./ Micronesia)
# [[Kinallaúb|Kinallaub]] (Kankanaey People, Philippines)
# [[Langwei]] (Chinese)
# [[Phyllon Kissinou|Phyllonkissinou]] (Ancient Greek)
# Plokamos (Ancient Greek)
# [[Sissinnu]] (Akkadian/Babylonian)
# [[Te Yiku-o-te-kiole]] (Pukapuka, Cook Islands/ Polynesia)
Images from different cultures<gallery>
File:Spirit of the Awarra Palm.jpg|Spirit of the Awarra Palm: constellation of the Lokono People in South America. Screenshot from Stellarium (2024), sky culture produced by Konrad Rybka.
File:Eruas asterism.jpg|Sissinu: the branch/ frond/ spadix of the date palm in Babylonian astronomy
File:Papke Erua.jpg|Babylonian Goddess Erua with a frond and a spadix of a date palm (drawn in a map by Papke 1987).
File:IvyLeaf stellarium 2024.jpg|asterism of the Ivy Leaf as described in Ptolemy's Almagest (Stellarium 2024)
File:TheTassel stellarium2024 Arabic.jpeg|The Tassel (Arabic Indigenous constellation) of the Lion, screenshot from Stellarium (by Khalid al-Ajaji)
File:Langwei Reconstructed-.jpg|Chinese constellation Langwei (reconstructed by Boshun Yang)
</gallery>


==Weblinks==
*
* Ridpath, Ian, “[http://www.ianridpath.com/startales/comaberenices.html Star Tales: online edition]”.


==References==
==References==
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[[Category:West Asian]]
[[Category:West Asian]]
[[Category:Modern]]
[[Category:Modern]]
[[Category:88 IAU-Constellations]]
[[Category:4work]]

Latest revision as of 06:56, 6 November 2024

photograph Melotte 111
photograph of the Coma star cluster. This file is from Wikimedia Commons and may be used by other projects. Open cluster Melotte 111, or Coma Star Cluster. http://sternwarte-kempten.de/

One of the 88 IAU constellations. The ancient "Greek" constellation originates from Egypt. It has been invented by Konon, the royal astronomer of king Ptolemy III and it was named after the king's wife, Queen Berenice II Euergetis as reported by Eratosthenes. However, the asterism always used to have names in other cultures. In this area of the sky close the pole of the ecliptic, there are not many bright stars, but a clearly recognizable star cluster of triangular shape (the visual appearance is an isosceles triangle).

Etymology and History

This figure has only been regarded as a constellation since Tycho Brahe in the 16th century, but the figure itself is ancient. It is treated as an association of faint stars in the constellation Leo; in the Almagest, for example, it is described as a ‘nebulous mass’ representing a ‘curl’.

The Almagest does not define whose curly hair is being represented here. It is not mentioned in Aratos, but the figure appears in Eratosthenes. Interestingly, he mentions it twice and somewhat confusedly:  In one of the two surviving text versions of Eratosthenes on the lion, there is a supplement to the list of stars in which he speaks of a triangle of stars next to the lion's tail and calls it the ‘curl of Berenice’. However, the fact that he also mentions a curl in the constellation of the Northern Crown - the curl of Ariadne - causes more confusion. Philologists therefore speculate whether, after Berenice II was removed by her son for political reasons, it was not appropriate for a time to speak of the "Lock of Berenice". There are astronomical reasons against this, but if the curl was - at least temporarily - assigned to Ariadne, this was not permanent, as the cult of Berenice subsequently became more important.

Origin of Constellation

Berenice was the name of several queens of Egypt. According to Eratosthenes, this refers to Berenice II Euergetis, the wife of the Greek ruler Ptolemy III. The royal couple were already revered for their charity during their lifetime: they were regarded as a pair of gods in Egypt and worshipped in Crete and Athens. The constellation is said to have been invented by Konon of Samos in 241 BCE. While Eratosthenes worked as a librarian and teacher of princes in Alexandria, Konon was the king's astronomer.

In Mesopotamia, the panicle of the date palm of the goddess Erua was in this place - neither a tuft of hair nor a curl of a queen.

Transfer and Transformation of the Constellation

Greek Mythology

The contemporary poet Kallimachos described why Konon invented the constellation, and the Roman poet Catullus translated it into Latin around 200 years later.

Berenice was a princess from Cyrene who married the king of Egypt in 246 BCE. The same year, he went to war against the Seleucids in the Third Syrian War. Eratosthenes, who also came from Cyrene but was now working in Athens, was brought in as tutor to the princes when their son Ptolemy IV Philopator was born in 245 BCE. However, Berenice prayed that her husband would return from the war in one piece and vowed to sacrifice her head of hair (or a lock of it) as soon as this happened.

On the king's return, she cut her hair and brought it to the temple of Arsinoë. Disturbance ensued when it disappeared the following day. Konon showed the excited crowd, which had gathered suspiciously, that the gods had moved the hair of the benevolent queen to the sky.

Nowadays, the constellation is often used for romantic narratives: As a constellation symbolising conjugal love and fidelity, it can be wonderfully used in planetariums and other contexts.

Names of the Star Cluster in other cultures

  1. Aldafirah (Arabic - translation from Greek)
  2. Awarhakoya (Locono People, South America)
  3. Fatana-lua (..., Tonga/ Polynesia)
  4. Hulbatalasad (Arabic Indigenous)
  5. Itua ni Bure (..., Gilbert Is./ Micronesia)
  6. Kinallaub (Kankanaey People, Philippines)
  7. Langwei (郎位) (Chinese)
  8. Phyllonkissinou (Ancient Greek)
  9. Plokamos (Ancient Greek)
  10. Sissinnu (Akkadian/Babylonian)
  11. Te Yiku-o-te-kiole (Pukapuka, Cook Islands/ Polynesia)

Images from different cultures

Weblinks

References