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Decans : ウィキペディア英語版
Decans

The decans (; Egyptian ''bakiu'') are 36 groups of stars (small constellations) which rise consecutively on the horizon throughout each earth rotation. The rising of each ''decan'' marked the beginning of a new decanal "hour" (Greek ''hōra'') of the night for the ancient Egyptians, and they were used as a sidereal star clock beginning by at least the 9th or 10th Dynasty (c. 2100 BCE).
Because a new decan also appears heliacally every ten days (that is, every ten days, a new decanic star group reappears in the eastern sky at dawn right before the Sun rises, after a period of being obscured by the Sun's light), the ancient Greeks called them ''dekanoi'' (δεκανοί; pl. of δεκανός ''dekanos'') or "tenths" (and when the concept of decans reached northern India, they were called ''drekkana'' in Sanskrit.)
Decans continued to be used throughout the Renaissance in astrology and in magic, but modern astrologers almost entirely ignore them.
== Ancient Egyptian origins ==

Decans first appeared in the 10th Dynasty (2100 BCE) on coffin lids.〔Symons, S.L., Cockcroft, R., Bettencourt, J. and Koykka, C., 2013. Ancient Egyptian Astronomy (database ) (Diagonal Star Tables )〕 The sequence of these star patterns began with Sothis/Sirius, and each decan contained a set of stars and corresponding divinities. As measures of time, the rising and setting of decans marked 'hours' and groups of 10 days which comprised an Egyptian year. The ancient Book of Nut, covers the subject of the decans.
There were 36〔von Bomhard, Dr. A. S., The Egyptian Calendar a Work for Eternity, London 1999, page 51〕 decans (36 X 10 = 360 days), plus 5 added days to compose the 365 days of a solar based year. Decans measure sidereal time and the solar year is 6 hours longer; the Sothic and solar years in the Egyptian calendar realign every 1460 years. Decans represented on coffins from later dynasties (such as King Seti I) compared with earlier decan images demonstrate the Sothic-solar shift.
According to Sarah Symons,

Although we know the names of the decans, and in some cases can translate the names (''Hry-ib wiA'' means ‘in the centre of the boat’) the locations of the decanal stars and their relationships to modern star names and constellations are not known. This is due to many factors, but key problems are the uncertainty surrounding the observation methods used to develop and populate the diagonal star tables, and the criteria used to select decans (brightness, position, relationship with other stars, and so on).〔Symons, S.L. (A Star’s Year: The Annual Cycle in the Ancient Egyptian Sky ) in: Steele, J.M. (Ed.), Calendars and Years: Astronomy and Time in the Ancient World. Oxbow Books, Oxford, pp. 1-33.〕


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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