IAU-Constellations Origins

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In the past decades, a viewgraph of a former Harvard director on "constellation families" has become rather popular, although it's wrong.

Map of ancient Greco-Babylonian constellations

Stellarium map, handcoloured
Ancient constellations coloured according to their origin (CC BY Susanne M Hoffmann 2021)

Blue are the so-called Greek constellations (a multi-cultural mix already), brownish the Babylonian ones and yellow the (later) Christian ones.

Remark: Pisces, the two fish are coloured blue-and-brownish (striped) because the constellation has Babylonian roots but underwent several transformations. The original Babylonian constellation at this area was named “The Tails of the Giant Swallow” and later trandformed into the Uruk constellation of the “Swallow-Fish” and the Greco-Egyptian “two Fish” because for the Egyptians the Autumn Square (that was called “One Field” by the Babylonians) was a squared water tank for for the Egyptians. Thus, the modern constellation of Pisces is a product of transformations.

Stellarium map, handcoloured
All constellations coloured according to their origin (CC BY Susanne M Hoffmann 2021)

Origins of constellations

  • light brownish: Babylonian constellations
  • blue: Greek constellation  
  • light green: constellations created by Dutch sailors (depiction on globe by Plancius 1598, in Bayer’s Uranometria 1603, and in the star catalogue published by de Houtman in 1603)
  • dark green: English asterism, created in the 1670s – included in a newly invented constellation by Hevelius (1687)
  • dark red: Hevelius (Polish), 1687
  • pink: Lacaille (French), 1756 with the pattern of a leopard: Giraffe, probably invented by Plancius, too – first appearance on his 1612 globe but roots unknown
  • yellow: Christian.

Scutum, the shield was invented by Hevelius, Monoceros, the unicorn and Columba, the dove were (probably) invented by Plancius (for the unicorn this is uncertain); the Cross had already served as a navigational asterism for long time (introduced by A. Corsali, the navigator of A. Vespucci after a Christian asterism mentioned in their compatriot Dante’s poem) while the stars originally belonged to the constellation of the centaur.

Mythological groups

Stellarium map, handcoloured
Constellations coloured according to their Greek mythology (CC BY Susanne M Hoffmann 2021)
  • dark blue: the figures of the legend of Andromeda and Perseus (Andromeda and Perseus themselves, the sea monster called Ketos and Andromeda’s parents)
  • orange: myth of Hercules, (according to Greek mythology, the hero had defeated the monster lion of Nemea, the Draco-Snake (the snake who guarded the apples of the Hesperids), and crunched a crab while fighting with a dragon.
  • green: the heavenly hunting scene (Orion-group) the hunter Orion is accompanied by two hunting dogs, he fights with the bull but his (big) dog hunts a hare
  • light blue/ water constellations: The giant ship (Puppis, Carina, Vela) that the Dutch had enlarged with regard to the ancient ship, is accompanied by a Flying Fish (Volans) which possibly landed on deck of the historical ship while fleeing from the huge predator Dorado.
  • light gray: Hydra-group As we are defining groups with common mythological background, we could also connect Hydra with the Bowl (Crater) and the Raven (Corvus). According to Greek mythology, the raven carried the water snake to god Apollo which is not really convincing with regard to their sizes in the sky. However, it is known that both constellations were copied as a group from ancient Babylon to Greek astrometry.
  • golden yellow: the “holy” Greek constellations: the altar (Ara) with its fire is the place were the gods represented by the natural force of fire witness oaths. The centaur represents the wild man who becomes civilised by sacrificing an animal at the altar. Virgo and Ursa Major symbolizse the ancient Greek rituals of initiation for men and women respectively.

References

http://stellarium.org

Zotti, G., Hoffmann, S. M., Wolf, A., Chéreau, F., & Chéreau, G. (2020). The Simulated Sky: Stellarium for Cultural Astronomy Research. Journal of Skyscape Archaeology, 6(2), 221–258. https://doi.org/10.1558/jsa.17822

Hoffmann, S. M. (2021). Wie der Löwe an den Himmel kam – Auf den Spuren der Sternbilder. Franckh Kosmos Verlag