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Chinese constellations

Traditional Chinese astronomy has a system of dividing the celestial sphere into asterisms or constellations, known as "officials" (Chinese 星官 xīng guān).[1]

Reproduction of the Suzhou star chart (13th century)

The Chinese asterisms are generally smaller than the constellations of Hellenistic tradition. The Song dynasty (13th-century) Suzhou planisphere shows a total of 283 asterisms, comprising a total of 1,565 individual stars.[2] The asterisms are divided into four groups, the Twenty-Eight Mansions (二十八宿, Èrshíbā Xiù) along the ecliptic, and the Three Enclosures of the northern sky. The southern sky was added as a fifth group in the late Ming Dynasty based on European star charts, comprising an additional 23 asterisms.

The Three Enclosures (三垣, Sān Yuán) include the Purple Forbidden Enclosure, which is centered on the north celestial pole and includes those stars which could be seen year-round,[3] while the other two straddle the celestial equator.

The Twenty-Eight Mansions form an ecliptic coordinate system used for those stars visible (from China) but not during the whole year, based on the movement of the moon over a lunar month.[4]

History

The Chinese system developed independently from the Greco-Roman system since at least the 5th century BC, although there may have been earlier mutual influence, suggested by parallels to ancient Babylonian astronomy.[5]

The system of twenty-eight lunar mansions is very similar (although not identical) to the Indian Nakshatra system, and it is not currently known if there was mutual influence in the history of the Chinese and Indian systems.

The oldest extant Chinese star maps date to the Tang dynasty. Notable among them are the 8th-century Treatise on Astrology of the Kaiyuan Era and Dunhuang Star Chart. It contains collections of earlier Chinese astronomers (Shi Shen, Gan De and Wu Xian) as well as of Indian astronomy (which had reached China in the early centuries AD). Gan De was a Warring States era (5th century BC) astronomer who according to the testimony of the Dunhuang Star Chart enumerated 810 stars in 138 asterisms. The Dunhuang Star Chart itself has 1,585 stars grouped into 257 asterisms.

The number of asterisms, or of stars grouped into asterisms, never became fixed, but remained in the same order of magnitude (for the purpose of comparison, the star catalogue compiled by Ptolemy in the 2nd century had 1,022 stars in 48 constellations). The 13th-century Suzhou star chart has 1,565 stars in 283 asterisms, the 14th-century Korean Cheonsang Yeolcha Bunyajido has 1,467 stars in 264 asterisms, and the celestial globe made by Flemish Jesuit Ferdinand Verbiest for the Kangxi Emperor in 1673 has 1,876 stars in 282 asterisms.[citation needed]

The southern sky was unknown to the ancient Chinese and is consequently not included in the traditional system. With European contact in the 16th century, Xu Guangqi , an astronomer of the late Ming Dynasty, introduced another 23 asterisms based on European star charts.[6] The "Southern Sky" (近南極星區) asterisms are now also treated as part of the traditional Chinese system.

Terminology

The Chinese word for "star, heavenly body" is xīng. The character originally had a more complicated form: , a phono-semantic character (形聲字) whose semantic portion, , originally depicting three twinkling stars (three instances of the "sun" radical ).

The modern Chinese term for "constellation", referring to those as defined by the IAU system, is 星座 (xīng zuò). The older term 星官 (xīng guān) is used only in describing constellations of the traditional system. The character means "public official" (hence the English translation "officials" for the Chinese asterisms), but it is historically a variant glyph of gōng "temple, palace", in origin a pictogram of a large building.[citation needed]

The generic term for "asterism" is 星群 (xīng qún, lit. "group of stars").

Three Enclosures

The Three Enclosures are the Purple Forbidden enclosure (紫微垣, Zǐ Wēi Yuán), the Supreme Palace enclosure (太微垣, Tài Wēi Yuán) and the Heavenly Market enclosure (天市垣, Tiān Shì Yuán).

The Purple Forbidden Enclosure occupies the northernmost area of the night sky. From the viewpoint of the ancient Chinese, the Purple Forbidden Enclosure lies in the middle of the sky and is circled by all the other stars. It covers the Greek constellations Ursa Minor, Draco, Camelopardalis, Cepheus, Cassiopeia, Auriga, Boötes, and parts of Ursa Major, Canes Venatici, Leo Minor and Hercules.

The Supreme Palace Enclosure covers the Greek constellations Virgo, Coma Berenices and Leo, and parts of Canes Venatici, Ursa Major and Leo Minor.

The Heavenly Market Enclosure covers the Greek constellations Serpens, Ophiuchus, Aquila and Corona Borealis, and parts of Hercules.

The Three Enclosures are each enclosed by two "wall" asterisms, designated yuán "low wall, fence; enclosure" (not to be confused with the lunar mansion ""Wall" ):

  • Purple Forbidden Left Wall 紫微左垣 (Cassiopeia / Cepheus / Draco)
  • Purple Forbidden Right Wall 紫微右垣 (Draco / Ursa Major / Camelopardalis)
  • Supreme Palace Left Wall 太微左垣 (Virgo / Coma Berenices)
  • Supreme Palace Right Wall 太微右垣 (Leo / Virgo)
  • Heavenly Market Left Wall 天市左垣 (Hercules / Serpens / Ophiuchus / Aquila)
  • Heavenly Market Right Wall 天市右垣 (Serpens / Ophiuchus / Hercules)

The Twenty-Eight Mansions

 
A modern star chart showing the traditional Chinese asterisms, with the 28 mansions indicated on the border of each hemisphere.[citation needed]

The Twenty-Eight Mansions are grouped into Four Symbols, each associated with a compass direction and containing seven mansions. The names and determinative stars are:[7][8]

Four Symbols
(四象)
Mansion (宿)
Number Name (pinyin) Translation Determinative star
Azure Dragon
of the East

(東方青龍)
Spring
1 (Jué/Jiăo) Horn α Vir
2 (Kàng) Neck κ Vir
3 (Dī) Root α Lib
4 (Fáng) Room π Sco
5 (Xīn) Heart α Sco
6 (Wěi) Tail μ Sco
7 (Jī) Winnowing Basket γ Sgr
Black Tortoise
of the North

(北方玄武)
Winter
8 (Dǒu) (Southern) Dipper φ Sgr
9 (Niú) Ox β Cap
10 (Nǚ) Girl ε Aqr
11 (Xū) Emptiness β Aqr
12 (Wéi/Wēi) Rooftop α Aqr
13 (Shì) Encampment α Peg
14 (Bì) Wall γ Peg
White Tiger
of the West

(西方白虎)
Fall
15 (Kuí) Legs η And
16 (Lóu) Bond β Ari
17 (Wèi) Stomach 35 Ari
18 (Mǎo) Hairy Head 17 Tau
19 (Bì) Net ε Tau
20 (Zī) Turtle Beak λ Ori
21 (Shēn) Three Stars ζ Ori
Vermilion Bird
of the South

(南方朱雀)
Summer
22 (Jǐng) Well μ Gem
23 (Guǐ) Ghost θ Cnc
24 (Liǔ) Willow δ Hya
25 (Xīng) Star α Hya
26 (Zhāng) Extended Net υ¹ Hya
27 (Yì) Wings α Crt
28 (Zhěn) Chariot γ Crv

The Southern Asterisms (近南極星區)

The sky around the south celestial pole was unknown to ancient Chinese. Therefore, it was not included in the Three Enclosures and Twenty-Eight Mansions system. However, by the end of the Ming Dynasty, Xu Guangqi introduced another 23 asterisms based on the knowledge of European star charts.[9] These asterisms were since incorporated into the traditional Chinese star maps.

The asterisms are:

English name Chinese name Number of stars Hellenistic Constellation
Sea and Mountain 海山 (Hǎi Shān) 4 Carina/Centaurus/Musca/Vela
Cross 十字架 (Shí Zì Jià) 4 Crux
Horse's Tail 馬尾 (Mǎ Wěi) 3 Centaurus
Horse's Abdomen 馬腹 (Mǎ Fù) 3 Centaurus
Bee 蜜蜂 (Mì Fēng) 4 Musca
Triangle 三角形 (Sān Jiǎo Xíng) 3 Triangulum Australe
Exotic Bird 異雀 (Yì Què) 9 Apus / Octans
Peacock 孔雀 (Kǒng Què) 11 Pavo
Persia 波斯 (Bō Sī) 11 Indus / Telescopium
Snake's Tail 蛇尾 (Shé Wěi) 4 Octans / Hydrus
Snake's Abdomen 蛇腹 (Shé Fù) 4 Hydrus
Snake's Head 蛇首 (Shé Shǒu) 2 Hydrus / Reticulum
Bird's Beak 鳥喙 (Niǎo Huì) 7 Tucana
Crane (Hè) 12 Grus / Tucana
Firebird 火鳥 (Huǒ Niǎo) 10 Phoenix / Sculptor
Crooked Running Water 水委 (Shuǐ Wěi) 3 Eridanus / Phoenix
White Patched Nearby 附白 (Fù Bái) 2 Hydrus
White Patches Attached 夾白 (Jiā Bái) 2 Reticulum / Dorado
Goldfish 金魚 (Jīn Yú) 5 Dorado
Sea Rock 海石 (Hǎi Dàn) 5 Carina
Flying Fish 飛魚 (Fēi Yú) 6 Volans
Southern Boat 南船 (Nán Chuán) 5 Carina
Little Dipper 小斗 (Xiǎo Dǒu) 9 Chamaeleon

Chinese star names

Ancient Chinese astronomers designated names to the visible stars systematically, roughly more than one thousand years before Johann Bayer did it in a similar way. Basically, every star is assigned to an asterism. Then a number is given to the individual stars in this asterism. Therefore, a star is designated as "Asterism name" + "Number". The numbering of the stars in an asterism, however, is not based on the apparent magnitude of this star, but rather its position in the asterism. The Bayer system uses this Chinese method occasionally, most notably with the stars in the Big Dipper, which are all about the same magnitude; in turn, the stars of the Big Dipper, 北斗 in Chinese, are numbered in Chinese astronomy in the same order as with the Bayer designations, with Dubhe first in both cases.

For example, Altair is named 河鼓二 in Chinese. 河鼓 is the name of the asterism (literally the Drum at the River). is the number designation (two). Therefore, it literally means "the Second Star of the Drum at the River". (Bayer might have called Altair "Beta Tympani Flumine" if he had been cataloguing Chinese constellations.)

Some stars also have traditional names, often related to mythology or astrology. For example, Altair is more commonly known as 牛郎星 or 牵牛星 (the Star of the Cowherd) in Chinese, after the mythological story of the Cowherd and Weaver Girl.

These designations are still used in modern Chinese astronomy. All stars for which the traditional names are used in English are routinely translated by their traditional Chinese designations, rather than translations of their catalogue names.

By modern IAU constellation

The following is a list of the 88 IAU constellations with the Chinese translation of their names. Each linked article provides a list of the (traditional) Chinese names of the stars within each (modern) constellation.[clarification needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ 星官 literally translates to "star official". The English translation "officials" is used in Hsing-chih T'ien. and Will Carl Rufus, The Soochow astronomical chart, Ann Arbor : Univ. of Michigan Press, 1945.
  2. ^ Hsing-chih T'ien. and Will Carl Rufus, The Soochow astronomical chart, Ann Arbor : Univ. of Michigan Press, 1945, p. 4.
  3. ^ Needham, J. "Astronomy in Ancient and Medieval China". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences, Vol. 276, No. 1257, The Place of Astronomy in the Ancient World (May 2, 1974), pp. 67–82. Accessed 9 Oct 2012.
  4. ^ 二十八宿的形成与演变
  5. ^ Xiaochun Sun, Jacob Kistemaker, The Chinese sky during the Han, vol. 38 of Sinica Leidensia, BRILL, 1997, ISBN 978-90-04-10737-3, p. 7f. and p. 18, note 9. The authors, citing Needham, Science and Civilisation in China vol. 3 (1959), p. 177, speculate that both the Babylonian MUL.APIN and the cardinal star names in the Yáo diǎn suggest an ultimate origin in Sumerian astronomy of about 2300 BC (based on calculations regarding the precession of the equinoxes), or approximately the reign of Sargon of Akkad.
  6. ^ Sun, Xiaochun (1997). Encyclopaedia of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Non-Western Cultures. p. 910.
  7. ^ "The Chinese Sky". International Dunhuang Project. Archived from the original on 2012-07-10. Retrieved 2011-06-25.
  8. ^ Sun, Xiaochun (1997). Helaine Selin (ed.). Encyclopaedia of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Non-Western Cultures. Kluwer Academic Publishers. p. 517. ISBN 0-7923-4066-3. Retrieved 2011-06-25.
  9. ^ Sun, Xiaochun (1997). Encyclopaedia of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Non-Western Cultures. p. 910.

Further reading

External links

  • (download)
  • Ian Ridpath's Star Tales: The Chinese sky – a lost tradition

chinese, constellations, chinese, stars, redirects, here, american, rock, band, chinese, stars, traditional, chinese, astronomy, system, dividing, celestial, sphere, into, asterisms, constellations, known, officials, chinese, 星官, xīng, guān, reproduction, suzh. Chinese stars redirects here For the American rock band see The Chinese Stars Traditional Chinese astronomy has a system of dividing the celestial sphere into asterisms or constellations known as officials Chinese 星官 xing guan 1 Reproduction of the Suzhou star chart 13th century The Chinese asterisms are generally smaller than the constellations of Hellenistic tradition The Song dynasty 13th century Suzhou planisphere shows a total of 283 asterisms comprising a total of 1 565 individual stars 2 The asterisms are divided into four groups the Twenty Eight Mansions 二十八宿 Ershiba Xiu along the ecliptic and the Three Enclosures of the northern sky The southern sky was added as a fifth group in the late Ming Dynasty based on European star charts comprising an additional 23 asterisms The Three Enclosures 三垣 San Yuan include the Purple Forbidden Enclosure which is centered on the north celestial pole and includes those stars which could be seen year round 3 while the other two straddle the celestial equator The Twenty Eight Mansions form an ecliptic coordinate system used for those stars visible from China but not during the whole year based on the movement of the moon over a lunar month 4 Contents 1 History 2 Terminology 3 Three Enclosures 4 The Twenty Eight Mansions 5 The Southern Asterisms 近南極星區 6 Chinese star names 6 1 By modern IAU constellation 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory EditFurther information Chinese star maps and Song of the Sky Pacers The Chinese system developed independently from the Greco Roman system since at least the 5th century BC although there may have been earlier mutual influence suggested by parallels to ancient Babylonian astronomy 5 The system of twenty eight lunar mansions is very similar although not identical to the Indian Nakshatra system and it is not currently known if there was mutual influence in the history of the Chinese and Indian systems The oldest extant Chinese star maps date to the Tang dynasty Notable among them are the 8th century Treatise on Astrology of the Kaiyuan Era and Dunhuang Star Chart It contains collections of earlier Chinese astronomers Shi Shen Gan De and Wu Xian as well as of Indian astronomy which had reached China in the early centuries AD Gan De was a Warring States era 5th century BC astronomer who according to the testimony of the Dunhuang Star Chart enumerated 810 stars in 138 asterisms The Dunhuang Star Chart itself has 1 585 stars grouped into 257 asterisms The number of asterisms or of stars grouped into asterisms never became fixed but remained in the same order of magnitude for the purpose of comparison the star catalogue compiled by Ptolemy in the 2nd century had 1 022 stars in 48 constellations The 13th century Suzhou star chart has 1 565 stars in 283 asterisms the 14th century Korean Cheonsang Yeolcha Bunyajido has 1 467 stars in 264 asterisms and the celestial globe made by Flemish Jesuit Ferdinand Verbiest for the Kangxi Emperor in 1673 has 1 876 stars in 282 asterisms citation needed The southern sky was unknown to the ancient Chinese and is consequently not included in the traditional system With European contact in the 16th century Xu Guangqi an astronomer of the late Ming Dynasty introduced another 23 asterisms based on European star charts 6 The Southern Sky 近南極星區 asterisms are now also treated as part of the traditional Chinese system Terminology EditThe Chinese word for star heavenly body is 星 xing The character 星 originally had a more complicated form 曐 a phono semantic character 形聲字 whose semantic portion 晶 originally depicting three twinkling stars three instances of the sun radical 日 The modern Chinese term for constellation referring to those as defined by the IAU system is 星座 xing zuo The older term 星官 xing guan is used only in describing constellations of the traditional system The character 官 means public official hence the English translation officials for the Chinese asterisms but it is historically a variant glyph of 宮 gōng temple palace in origin a pictogram of a large building citation needed The generic term for asterism is 星群 xing qun lit group of stars Three Enclosures EditThe Three Enclosures are the Purple Forbidden enclosure 紫微垣 Zǐ Wei Yuan the Supreme Palace enclosure 太微垣 Tai Wei Yuan and the Heavenly Market enclosure 天市垣 Tian Shi Yuan The Purple Forbidden Enclosure occupies the northernmost area of the night sky From the viewpoint of the ancient Chinese the Purple Forbidden Enclosure lies in the middle of the sky and is circled by all the other stars It covers the Greek constellations Ursa Minor Draco Camelopardalis Cepheus Cassiopeia Auriga Bootes and parts of Ursa Major Canes Venatici Leo Minor and Hercules The Supreme Palace Enclosure covers the Greek constellations Virgo Coma Berenices and Leo and parts of Canes Venatici Ursa Major and Leo Minor The Heavenly Market Enclosure covers the Greek constellations Serpens Ophiuchus Aquila and Corona Borealis and parts of Hercules The Three Enclosures are each enclosed by two wall asterisms designated 垣 yuan low wall fence enclosure not to be confused with the lunar mansion Wall 壁 Purple Forbidden Left Wall 紫微左垣 Cassiopeia Cepheus Draco Purple Forbidden Right Wall 紫微右垣 Draco Ursa Major Camelopardalis Supreme Palace Left Wall 太微左垣 Virgo Coma Berenices Supreme Palace Right Wall 太微右垣 Leo Virgo Heavenly Market Left Wall 天市左垣 Hercules Serpens Ophiuchus Aquila Heavenly Market Right Wall 天市右垣 Serpens Ophiuchus Hercules The Twenty Eight Mansions EditMain article Twenty Eight Mansions A modern star chart showing the traditional Chinese asterisms with the 28 mansions indicated on the border of each hemisphere citation needed The Twenty Eight Mansions are grouped into Four Symbols each associated with a compass direction and containing seven mansions The names and determinative stars are 7 8 Four Symbols 四象 Mansion 宿 Number Name pinyin Translation Determinative starAzure Dragonof the East 東方青龍 Spring 1 角 Jue Jiăo Horn a Vir2 亢 Kang Neck k Vir3 氐 Di Root a Lib4 房 Fang Room p Sco5 心 Xin Heart a Sco6 尾 Wei Tail m Sco7 箕 Ji Winnowing Basket g SgrBlack Tortoiseof the North 北方玄武 Winter 8 斗 Dǒu Southern Dipper f Sgr9 牛 Niu Ox b Cap10 女 Nǚ Girl e Aqr11 虛 Xu Emptiness b Aqr12 危 Wei Wei Rooftop a Aqr13 室 Shi Encampment a Peg14 壁 Bi Wall g PegWhite Tigerof the West 西方白虎 Fall 15 奎 Kui Legs h And16 婁 Lou Bond b Ari17 胃 Wei Stomach 35 Ari18 昴 Mǎo Hairy Head 17 Tau19 畢 Bi Net e Tau20 觜 Zi Turtle Beak l Ori21 參 Shen Three Stars z OriVermilion Birdof the South 南方朱雀 Summer 22 井 Jǐng Well m Gem23 鬼 Guǐ Ghost 8 Cnc24 柳 Liǔ Willow d Hya25 星 Xing Star a Hya26 張 Zhang Extended Net y Hya27 翼 Yi Wings a Crt28 軫 Zhen Chariot g CrvThe Southern Asterisms 近南極星區 EditThe sky around the south celestial pole was unknown to ancient Chinese Therefore it was not included in the Three Enclosures and Twenty Eight Mansions system However by the end of the Ming Dynasty Xu Guangqi introduced another 23 asterisms based on the knowledge of European star charts 9 These asterisms were since incorporated into the traditional Chinese star maps The asterisms are English name Chinese name Number of stars Hellenistic ConstellationSea and Mountain 海山 Hǎi Shan 4 Carina Centaurus Musca VelaCross 十字架 Shi Zi Jia 4 CruxHorse s Tail 馬尾 Mǎ Wei 3 CentaurusHorse s Abdomen 馬腹 Mǎ Fu 3 CentaurusBee 蜜蜂 Mi Feng 4 MuscaTriangle 三角形 San Jiǎo Xing 3 Triangulum AustraleExotic Bird 異雀 Yi Que 9 Apus OctansPeacock 孔雀 Kǒng Que 11 PavoPersia 波斯 Bō Si 11 Indus TelescopiumSnake s Tail 蛇尾 She Wei 4 Octans HydrusSnake s Abdomen 蛇腹 She Fu 4 HydrusSnake s Head 蛇首 She Shǒu 2 Hydrus ReticulumBird s Beak 鳥喙 Niǎo Hui 7 TucanaCrane 鶴 He 12 Grus TucanaFirebird 火鳥 Huǒ Niǎo 10 Phoenix SculptorCrooked Running Water 水委 Shuǐ Wei 3 Eridanus PhoenixWhite Patched Nearby 附白 Fu Bai 2 HydrusWhite Patches Attached 夾白 Jia Bai 2 Reticulum DoradoGoldfish 金魚 Jin Yu 5 DoradoSea Rock 海石 Hǎi Dan 5 CarinaFlying Fish 飛魚 Fei Yu 6 VolansSouthern Boat 南船 Nan Chuan 5 CarinaLittle Dipper 小斗 Xiǎo Dǒu 9 ChamaeleonChinese star names EditMain article Chinese star names Ancient Chinese astronomers designated names to the visible stars systematically roughly more than one thousand years before Johann Bayer did it in a similar way Basically every star is assigned to an asterism Then a number is given to the individual stars in this asterism Therefore a star is designated as Asterism name Number The numbering of the stars in an asterism however is not based on the apparent magnitude of this star but rather its position in the asterism The Bayer system uses this Chinese method occasionally most notably with the stars in the Big Dipper which are all about the same magnitude in turn the stars of the Big Dipper 北斗 in Chinese are numbered in Chinese astronomy in the same order as with the Bayer designations with Dubhe first in both cases For example Altair is named 河鼓二 in Chinese 河鼓 is the name of the asterism literally the Drum at the River 二 is the number designation two Therefore it literally means the Second Star of the Drum at the River Bayer might have called Altair Beta Tympani Flumine if he had been cataloguing Chinese constellations Some stars also have traditional names often related to mythology or astrology For example Altair is more commonly known as 牛郎星 or 牵牛星 the Star of the Cowherd in Chinese after the mythological story of the Cowherd and Weaver Girl These designations are still used in modern Chinese astronomy All stars for which the traditional names are used in English are routinely translated by their traditional Chinese designations rather than translations of their catalogue names By modern IAU constellation Edit The following is a list of the 88 IAU constellations with the Chinese translation of their names Each linked article provides a list of the traditional Chinese names of the stars within each modern constellation clarification needed Andromeda 仙女座 Antlia 唧筒座 Apus 天燕座 Aquarius 寶瓶座 Aquila 天鷹座 Ara 天壇座 Aries 白羊座 Auriga 御夫座 Bootes 牧夫座 Caelum 雕具座 Camelopardalis 鹿豹座 Cancer 巨蟹座 Canes Venatici 獵犬座 Canis Major 大犬座 Canis Minor 小犬座 Capricornus 摩羯座 Carina 船底座 Cassiopeia 仙后座 Centaurus 半人馬座 Cepheus 仙王座 Cetus 鯨魚座 Chamaeleon 蝘蜓座 Circinus 圓規座 Columba 天鴿座 Coma Berenices 后髮座 Corona Australis 南冕座 Corona Borealis 北冕座 Corvus 烏鴉座 Crater 巨爵座 Crux 南十字座 Cygnus 天鵝座 Delphinus 海豚座 Dorado 劍魚座 Draco 天龍座 Equuleus 小馬座 Eridanus 波江座 Fornax 天爐座 Gemini 雙子座 Grus 天鶴座 Hercules 武仙座 Horologium 時鐘座 Hydra 長蛇座 Hydrus 水蛇座 Indus 印第安座 Lacerta 蝎虎座 Leo 獅子座 Leo Minor 小獅座 Lepus 天兔座 Libra 天秤座 Lupus 豺狼座 Lynx 天貓座 Lyra 天琴座 Mensa 山案座 Microscopium 顯微鏡座 Monoceros 麒麟座 Musca 蒼蠅座 Norma 矩尺座 Octans 南極座 Ophiuchus 蛇夫座 Orion 獵戶座 Pavo 孔雀座 Pegasus 飛馬座 Perseus 英仙座 Phoenix 鳳凰座 Pictor 繪架座 Pisces 雙魚座 Piscis Austrinus 南魚座 Puppis 船尾座 Pyxis 羅盤座 Reticulum 網罟座 Sagitta 天箭座 Sagittarius 人馬座 Scorpius 天蝎座 Sculptor 玉夫座 Scutum 盾牌座 Serpens 巨蛇座 Sextans 六分仪座 Taurus 金牛座 Telescopium 望远镜座 Triangulum 三角座 Triangulum Australe 南三角座 Tucana 杜鵑座 Ursa Major 大熊座 Ursa Minor 小熊座 Vela 船帆座 Virgo 室女座 Volans 飛魚座 Vulpecula 狐狸座 See also EditChinese calendar Chinese star maps Five elements Chinese Four Symbols Chinese constellation Lunar mansion Nakshatra Traditional Chinese star namesReferences Edit 星官 literally translates to star official The English translation officials is used in Hsing chih T ien and Will Carl Rufus The Soochow astronomical chart Ann Arbor Univ of Michigan Press 1945 Hsing chih T ien and Will Carl Rufus The Soochow astronomical chart Ann Arbor Univ of Michigan Press 1945 p 4 Needham J Astronomy in Ancient and Medieval China Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London Series A Mathematical and Physical Sciences Vol 276 No 1257 The Place of Astronomy in the Ancient World May 2 1974 pp 67 82 Accessed 9 Oct 2012 二十八宿的形成与演变 Xiaochun Sun Jacob Kistemaker The Chinese sky during the Han vol 38 of Sinica Leidensia BRILL 1997 ISBN 978 90 04 10737 3 p 7f and p 18 note 9 The authors citing Needham Science and Civilisation in China vol 3 1959 p 177 speculate that both the Babylonian MUL APIN and the cardinal star names in the Yao diǎn suggest an ultimate origin in Sumerian astronomy of about 2300 BC based on calculations regarding the precession of the equinoxes or approximately the reign of Sargon of Akkad Sun Xiaochun 1997 Encyclopaedia of the History of Science Technology and Medicine in Non Western Cultures p 910 The Chinese Sky International Dunhuang Project Archived from the original on 2012 07 10 Retrieved 2011 06 25 Sun Xiaochun 1997 Helaine Selin ed Encyclopaedia of the History of Science Technology and Medicine in Non Western Cultures Kluwer Academic Publishers p 517 ISBN 0 7923 4066 3 Retrieved 2011 06 25 Sun Xiaochun 1997 Encyclopaedia of the History of Science Technology and Medicine in Non Western Cultures p 910 Further reading EditBook of Jin volume 11 13 晉書 天文志 Huainanzi volume 3 淮南子 天文訓 External links EditHong Kong Space Museum Interactive Star Maps download Hong Kong Space Museum English Chinese Glossary of Chinese Star Regions Asterisms and Star Name Hong Kong Space Museum Chinese Starlore 天丈 Astronomy SHOOTING STARS China s Astronomical Legacy Ian Ridpath s Star Tales The Chinese sky a lost traditionPortals Astronomy China Stars Spaceflight Outer space Solar System Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chinese constellations amp oldid 1144668265, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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