Camelopardalis: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Campelopardalis in Bartsch's Usus astronomicus.png|thumb]]
[[File:Campelopardalis in Bartsch's Usus astronomicus.png|thumb]]
His description of the constellation in ''Usus astronomicus planisphaerii stellati'' reads: <blockquote>V. CAMELOPARDALIS, ''Καμηλοπάρδαλις'', Ital. ''Giraffa, Giraff'', animal cameli proceritate, pantherae colore, bovis pedibus: ex informibus circa polum arcticum, iis stellulis Cassiopeiae & Aurigam, recentioribus sic formatur. ''Mihi sit Camelus Rebeccae, quo cum Abrahami servo ad Isacum profecta.'' Gen. 24. v. 61 & 65.
His description of the constellation in ''Usus astronomicus planisphaerii stellati'' reads: <blockquote>V. CAMELOPARDALIS, ''Καμηλοπάρδαλις'', Ital. ''Giraffa, Giraff'', animal cameli proceritate, pantherae colore, bovis pedibus: ex informibus circa polum arcticum, iis stellulis Cassiopeiae & Aurigam, recentioribus sic formatur. ''Mihi sit Camelus Rebeccae, quo cum Abrahami servo ad Isacum profecta.'' Gen. 24. v. 61 & 65.



'''Camelopardalis''', ''Καμηλοπάρδαλις'', in Italian ''Giraffa'', the giraffe. An animal the height of a camel, the colour of a panther, and the feet of an ox. It is formed from faint stars near the Arctic Pole, between Cassiopeia and Auriga, as established by more recent astronomers. ''Let it be to me the camel of Rebecca, with which she journeyed with Abraham’s servant to Isaac.'' (Genesis 24:61, 65)</blockquote>
'''Camelopardalis''', ''Καμηλοπάρδαλις'', in Italian ''Giraffa'', the giraffe. An animal the height of a camel, the colour of a panther, and the feet of an ox. It is formed from faint stars near the Arctic Pole, between Cassiopeia and Auriga, as established by more recent astronomers. ''Let it be to me the camel of Rebecca, with which she journeyed with Abraham’s servant to Isaac.'' (Genesis 24:61, 65)</blockquote>

Revision as of 05:06, 17 October 2025

star chart
Cam star chart (IAU and Sky & Telescope magazine, Roger Sinnott & Rick Fienberg)

One of the 88 IAU constellations.

Etymology and History

The Greek constellation ...


Origin of Constellation

Petrus Plancius (...)

[to be written]

Jacob Bartsch (1600-1632)

In 1624, Bartsch published Usus astronomicus planisphaerii stellati, a book of star charts that included several new constellations first proposed around 1613 by the Dutch cartographer Petrus Plancius. Among these was Camelopardalis, the constellation representing a giraffe, which Bartsch depicted on his charts based on Plancius’s celestial globe created by Pieter van den Keere.

Campelopardalis in Bartsch's Usus astronomicus.png

His description of the constellation in Usus astronomicus planisphaerii stellati reads:

V. CAMELOPARDALIS, Καμηλοπάρδαλις, Ital. Giraffa, Giraff, animal cameli proceritate, pantherae colore, bovis pedibus: ex informibus circa polum arcticum, iis stellulis Cassiopeiae & Aurigam, recentioribus sic formatur. Mihi sit Camelus Rebeccae, quo cum Abrahami servo ad Isacum profecta. Gen. 24. v. 61 & 65.


Camelopardalis, Καμηλοπάρδαλις, in Italian Giraffa, the giraffe. An animal the height of a camel, the colour of a panther, and the feet of an ox. It is formed from faint stars near the Arctic Pole, between Cassiopeia and Auriga, as established by more recent astronomers. Let it be to me the camel of Rebecca, with which she journeyed with Abraham’s servant to Isaac. (Genesis 24:61, 65)

Transfer and Transformation of the Constellation

Mythology

Weblinks

References