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Created on or before 5926± 12
06 2022 [2006-02-05]
The prior
version was extensively revised and edited[1] on 5930± 03 03 2026
[2010-05-18]
The prior revised version
received further
evaluation re the length of the cubit etc. before this extensively revised
edition[2] of 5930± 04 15 2026
[2010-06-28]
Significant
additional revisions on
5930± 04 23 2026 [2010-07-06] - With considerable added values over and above
the prior revision.
Edit 5941[(?)] 12
23 2027 [2011-03-28]
Addition
5926[(*??*)] 12 13 2030 [2014-03-15] – Re the size of lunar
halos: Beginning at the last footnote
of line 14’...
Revision
5926[(*??*)] 12 23 2030 [2014-03-26] – Revisions in consequence of Ann
O’Maly’s work (publ. 2011; Non-sustained variants in AOM’s work highlighted.) Cf. my last prior version.
Press the
image for a high
resolution
view!
- a
Transcription of
its
Translation[3] and of
the Comments of
its Transliteration
plus Added Links to
Reconstructions of the Events
that are Recorded on VAT 4956
and Footnotes with exact Julian Dates and Comments
by Gunnar
Anders Smårs Jr©
-
A Study in Progress:
(Therefore, please forgive me
for any errors,
whether
words remaining from past thinking and not yet corrected
or thoughts
of mine that are still suffering from being in error until somehow I am given
additional rays of light!)
Abstract:
This is a confirmation of the exact astronomical dates for Nebuchadnezzar’s 37th year of reign using Starry Night Backyard software. Said year began at sunset April 22, ‑567, i.e. 568 BCE. Twenty-one or more very precise observations of celestial events were recorded on tablet VAT 4956 during said 37th year. When an ancient record with that many precise observations, all of which agree with the best available astronomical calculations, is available there is little or no room for doubt as to the exact timing of Nebuchadnezzar’s 37th year of reign. Because this is the oldest such record that I am so far aware of, which can be exactly correlated with biblical chronology, it is of great importance in my attempts to establish an absolute chronology from the beginning of creation.
Obv[erse side of clay table. / ToL ©]
1.
Year 37 of Nebukadnezar, king of Babylon.
Month I. (the 1st [4] of
which was identical with) the 30th (of the preceding month)[5], the moon became visible
behind
[and/or ‘after’ /ToL©] the Bull
of Heaven[6]; [sunset
to
moonset: [15° (=65 min) /ToL©]] ….[….][7]
2.
Saturn was in front of the Swallow.[8], [9] The 2nd,[10] in the morning, a rainbow stretched in the west. Night
of the 3rd,[11] the moon was 2
cubits in front of [….][12]
3.
it rained’.
Night of the 9th
[13] (error for: 8th) [striking
the translator’s own comment /ToL©][14], beginning of the night, the moon stood 1
cubit in front of β [ γ /ToL©][15]
Virginia.
The 9th.[16] the sun in the west (was surrounded)
by a halo […. The 11th][17]
4.
or[18] 12th[19]. Jupiter’s
acronychal rising.[20] On the 14th[21]. one god was seen with the other: sunrise to moonset: 4°.[22] The 15th[23]. overcast. The 16th, [24] Venus [….][25]
5.
The 20th,[26] in the morning, the sun was surrounded by a halo. Around
noon…… rain PISAN. A
rainbow stretched in the east. [….][27]
6.
From the 8th of month XII,[28] to the 28th, [29] the river level rose 3 cubits and 8 fingers. 2/3
cubits [were missing] to the
high flood [….]
7.
were killed
on order of the king. That month, a fox entered the city. Coughing and a little
risutu-disease
[….]
8.
Month II, the 1st (of which followed the 30th of
the preceding month),[30] the moon
became visible while
the sun
stood
there,[31] 4
cubits below β
Geminorum [Venus
/ToL©;][32] it was
thick[33]: there
was earthshine[34] [….]
9.
Saturn
was [seen /ToL©] in front
of the Swallow:[35] Mercury,
which had set, was not visible [was seen in conjunction
with sunset /ToL©.] Night of the 1st,[36] gusty storm from east and south. The
1st, all day [….]
10. stood
[…. In front] of [I could see [the Moon] and Venus even until the evening sunset /ToL©] to the west.[37] The 2nd.[38] The north wind blew. The 3rd,[39] Mars
entered Praesepe[40], [41], [42]. The 5th,[43] it went out
(of it). The 10th,[44] Mercury [rose[45]] in the west behind the [little] Twins[46] [….]
11. The 15th.[47] ZI-IR.
[= ”Aquila rose” in the east. /ToL©] The
18th.[48] Venus was balanced[49] 1 cubit 4
fingers above α Leonis.[50] The 26th,[51] {moonrise
to sunrise} 23°:[52] I did not observe the moon.[53] The 27th,[54] 20 + x [….][55]
12. Month III, {the 1st [56] of which was identical with} the 30th (of
the preceding month), the
moon became visible behind Cancer:
it was thick[57]; sunset
to moonset: 20° [58]; the
north wind blew. At that time. Mars
and Mercury were 4 cubits in front of α [Leonis ….][59]
13. Mercury
passed below Mars to the
East; Jupiter
was above α Scorpii;[60] Venus
was in the west opposite
the rump of Leo (δ
Leonis)[61] [….][62]
14.
1’ cubit. Night of the 5th,[63] beginning of
the night. The moon passed towards the east 1 cubit (above:below) the bright star of the end of the Lion’s foot.[64] Night of the 6th.[65] beginning of the night, [….][66]
15. it was low. Night of the 8th.[67] first part of the night. The moon stood
2 ½ cubits below β Librae.[68] Night
of the 9th,[69] first part of the night. The
moon [stood] 1 cubit in front of [….][70]
16. passed towards the east. The 9th.[71] solstice.[72] Night of the 10th.[73] first part of the night. The
moon was balanced 3 ½ cubits above α Scorpii.[74] The 12th,[75] Mars
was 2/3 cubits above [α Leonis….][76]
17. [….] The 15th,[77] one
god was seen with the other; sunrise to moonset: 7° 30’. [78] A lunar eclipse which was omitted[79] [….]
18.
[…. The moon[80] was be]low the bright
star at the end of the
[Lion’s| foot |….][81]
19. [….]….[….]
Rev[erse side of clay table. / ToL ©]
1'. [….]…. First part [of the night
….. the moon was]
2'. 1 cubit [above/below] the middle
star of the elbow of
Sagittarius….[….]
3'. When
5° of daytime had passed, the sun was
surrounded by a halo. The 19th. [82] Venus was 2 ½ cubits below β Capricorni.[83] Night of the [….]
4'. That month, the equivalent (of 1
shekel of silver was): barley, 1 kur 2 sut:
dates. 1 kur 1 pan ½ sut: mustard. 1 kur …. [….]
5'.
Month XI, (the 1st [84] of which was identical with) the 30th (of the
preceding month), the
moon became visible in the Swallow;
sunset
to moonset: 14° 30’;[85] the north wind blew. At that time, Jupiter was 1
cubit behind the elbow[86] of Sagittarius [….]
6'. The 4th, the river
level rose. The 4th,[87] Venus was balanced ½ cubit below
(sic)[88] Capricorn. Night of the 6th.[89] first part of the night. The
moon was surrounded by a halo: Pleiades,
the
Bull of Heaven,
and the
Chariot [stood
in it….][90]
7'. the moon was surrounded by a halo: Leo and Cancer were
inside the halo; α Leonis was balanced 1 cubit below the moon.[91] Last part of the night, 3° of night remaining, [….]
8'. sunrise
to moonset: 17°:[92] I did
not watch. The sun was surrounded by a halo. From the 4th [93] to the 15th.[94] the river level rose 1 ½ cubits. On the 16th. [95] it receded. Night of the 18th
(and) the 18th. [96] rain PISAN DIB [….]
9'. when the {….] of Bel was cut off
from its place two hosts….
Went away’. The 22nd, [97] overcast.
Night of the 23rd. [98] [….Mars’]
10'. was balanced
above(sic) the small star
which stands 3 ½ cubits behind Capricorn.[99] Night of the 20th. [100] red glow flared up in the
west: 2 double-[hours….]
11'. barley. 1 kur’; dates. 1 kur 1 pan 4 sut: mustard.
1 kur 1
pan: sesame. 4 sut: cress
[….]
12'. Month XII. The 1st {of
which followed the 30th of the preceding month}.[101] The moon
became visible behind Aries while the sun stood there: sunset to moonset: 25° measured: earthshine: the north wind blew. At
that time. Jupiter |….
Mercury and Saturn. Which had set.]
13'. were not visible. The
1st.[102] the river
level rose. Night of the 2nd,[103] the moon was
balanced 4 cubits below η Tauri.[104] Night of the 3rd,[105] beginning of the night. 2 ½ cubits [….][106]
14'.
From the 1st [107] to the 5th.[108] the river level rose 8 fingers: on the 6th [109] it receded. Night of the 7th.[110] the moon was surrounded by a halo: Praesepe and α
Leonis [stood] in [it….][111]
15'. the halo surrounded Cancer and Leo, it was split towards the south. Inside
the halo. The moon
stood 1 cubit in of (α
Leonis[112]). The moon being 1 cubit high. Night of the 10th.[113] first [part of the night. ….]
16'. Night of the 11th.[114] overcast. The 11th.
rain DCL. Night of the 12th.[115] a little rain. …. The 12th.[116] one god was seen with the other: sunrise to moonset: 1° 30’[117]: ….[…. Mercury]
17'. was in front of the “band” of the Swallow. ½ cubit below
Venus, Mercury having passed
8 fingers to the east: when it became visible it was bright and (already)
high. 1° ‘ [….Saturn[118]]
18'. was[119] balanced
6 fingers above Mercury and
3 fingers below Venus, [120] and Mars
was balanced 2/3 cubits below the bright star of[121] (….) towards [….]
19'. …, …. The 21st.[122] overcast: the river level rose. Around the 20th.[123] Venus
and Mercury entered the “band”
of the Swallow[124]. From […. Jupiter.]
20'. which had passed to the east. Became stationary. At the end
of the month. It went back to the west.
Around the 26th.[125] Mercury
and Venus [came out] from the “band” of Anunitu [….]
21'. the river level receded 8 fingers. That month. On the 26th.[126] a wolf entered Borsippa and killed two dogs: it did not go out. It was
killed [….]
1.
Year 38 of Nebukadnezar, month 1, the 1st
(of which followed the 30th of the preceding month):[127] dense clouds so that [I did not see the moon ….]
2.
Year 37 [….]
Left edge
1.
[Year 37 of Nebukad]nezar
1: The last sign visible can be any number from 14 to 18.
5: UGU-ME occurs also in rev. 16’ and 19’. It cannot designate a part of the day (as
suggested by P.V.Neubebauer and E.Weidner)
because in rev. 16 it appears during the night as well as during daytime. It is
rather another weather phenomenon. Mentioned side by side with rain
10: ALLA is used here not for the whole zodiacal constellation Cancer but only for Praesepe since Mars can pass through it within two days. As was remarked by P.V.Neugebauer and E.Weidner.
11: A translation “was balanced” for LAL was proposed by A.Sachs.
This expression seems to occur mostly (but not only) in those cases where both
celestial bodies compared have the same longitude. It is restricted to the
oldest diaries preserved so far. It probably went out of use because it was
redundant: if no difference in longitude was mentioned one could conclude that
there was none. – siv may be a mistake[129] for the missing sign KUR “moonrise to sunrise”.
13: One is inclined to regard åer+tam DIB as an equivalent of and NIM DIB. But this is rendered uncertain
by the occurrence of the latter expression in line 14 and elsewhere: in
addition, ana berti is
expected.
5’: The “elbow of
Sagittarius” was identified as the cluster of stars around π Sagittarii by P.V.Neugebauer. op.cit. 50f.
13’: in the broken part at the end of the line. A reference to the moon being close to the
Normal Star α Tauri is expected.
15’: The broken star
name must have been α Leonis.
17’: According to computation. Saturn has to be restored at the end of the line.
Nebukadnezar II year 36 XII2 0 -567 Mar 23/24
year 37 I 0=XII2
29 Apr
21/22 [130]
II 0=I 30 31 May 21/22 22/23 [131]
III 0=II 29 28 Jun
19/20 [132]
X 0=IX 30 -566 Jan 13/14
XI 0=X 29 Feb
11/12
XII 0=XI 30 Mar 13/14 [133]
year
38 I 0=XII 29
30 Apr
11/12 12/13 [134]
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[1] These revisions were prompted by an email that I received from
a certain “Ann OMaly”on “Wednesday, May 12, 2010
12:11 AM.”
Praise the Lord of Hosts, Yahweh Elohim, the
Creator of the Universe, who orchestrates events like these!
[2] These additional revisions were
prompted by a 2nd email
that was sent to me by my new friend Ann O’Maly on “Wednesday, May 19, 2010
8:36 PM.”
Praise the Lord of Hosts, Yahweh Elohim, the
Creator of the Universe, who orchestrates events like these!
[3] [All
quotes are from the original translation, by, as best I can tell, Neugebauer P V and Weidner E F, of the cuneiform tablet
unless otherwise indicated:]
“The
terminology used in the diaries is rigid and very condensed. The order of items
recorded is also to a large extent fixed. Because of the repetitive character
of these texts, the scribes apparently, tried to reduce as much as possible the
number of words they had to write.
“In
translating I have tried to imitate this style by using a similarly rigid
terminology. Unfortunately, the almost exclusively logographic writing of the
diaries frequently makes it impossible to determine whether the Akkadian text
consisted of sentences or asyndetic sequences of nouns.
Where this can be decided with the help of one of the rare sylabie writings. I have of course translated
accordingly. But more often I had to choose some fixed translation which may
not be syntactically equivalent to the Akkadian hidden by the logograms. In
addition, several statements which are very short in cuneiform had to be
translated by longer expressions to convey the meaning without creating a new
artificial terminology. The way in which the diaries indicate the
length of a month can serve as an example. This length can be 29 or 30 days. [We shall notice
that this is a false assumption so far as this tablet is concerned, that is, as
even the very first month is proven to have been reckoned as 31 days! / ToL ©] The diaries are
arranged in sections each of which deals with a single month. Each section
begins with the name of the month; after the name, a "1" indicates
that the preceding month had 30 days; [Apparently this must be corrected to “30
days or more” / ToL ©] a "30", that it had
only 29 days, [Apparently this must be corrected to “29 days or less” / ToL ©] in which case the next month begins with a
"1st" day: if a month has only 29 days [or less / ToL ©], its successor begins, so to speak, already
on the "30th" day [etc. / ToL ©]
which would have been theoretically possible for the preceding month. In order
to make this visible in the translation, I have formulated sentences which
contain the words "the 1st" or "the 30th" (which are all
that is written in the text), and at the same time clearly state the situation:
Month X, the 1st (of which followed the 30th of the preceding month), or: Month
X, (the 1st of which was identical with) the 30th (of the preceding month)." (Astronomical Diaries and Related Texts From
Babylonia, p. 38)
[4] The day beginning in the evening of
April 22, 568 BCE. (A primary anchor point for this date is the events
of the 14th day. However, given the additional information that the
lag between sunset to moonset is readable as any number between 14 and 18 (cf.
Ann O’Maly Obv. line 1; search terms: “ “ittanmar 14” ”, “ “comes
to 14” ,”) while seeing that my Starry Night Backyard astronomy software is
giving me 15° from the top of the Moon (which will set last) to the
point on the horizon where it will set, I find that April 22, 568 BCE may be
considered confirmed and sustained. Said 15° corresponds
to 65+ minutes per SNB, that is, from the point where the Sun is first touching
the horizon (18:27:52; per my SNB astronomy software) until the last of the
Moon is being potentially visible (19:33:37; lag: 65min 45 sec; illumination:
1.70%.)
[5] Cf. the italic
blue font text in
footnote #3 and my bracketed comments thereto.
[6] Nebuchadnezzar’s 37th year began
at sunset April 22, 568 BCE (-567:)
Per ADT I (Astronomical
Diaries and Related Texts From Babylonia,) p. 17-19 (= p.
7-9 of the pdf copy,) the references for words like “behind,” “in front of,”
etc. are a set of “Normal Stars.”
Four “Normal Stars” are listed in ADT
I for the constellation Taurus:
1) “MÚL
MÚL” (= “η Tauri” =
“The Bristle” = Alcyone = one of the stars in the Pleiades;)
2) “is le10“ (= “α Tauri” = “The Jaw of the Bull” = Aldebaran.) Aldebaran is
not part of the star cluster named Hyades (cf. Wikipedia;)
3) “ŠUR
GIGIR šá SI” (= “β Tauri” = “The Northern (variable star) of the Chariot”;)
and
4) “ŠUR
GIGIR šá ULÚ” (= “ζ Tauri”
= “The Southern (variable star) of the Chariot”.)
These four stars are the four brightest
stars of the constellation Taurus. Seeing that none of these four “Normal
Stars” are a part of Hyades, and that the literal translation of the Akkadian
words, “GÙ-AN” or “GU4-AN” (on VAT 4956 Obv.
line 1) are “the Bull of Heaven,” [GU4= “Ajjaru”
(= month #2 [Notice: The Sun was located in the constellation Taurus every year
at that time during that month, i.e. from around April 15-May 24, whereas at
this day and age it is located in Taurus from about May 14-June 22!;] cf. Table
2.2 in ADT I) = ”The
Bull;”
and AN = “heaven,
sky, god,
rain,”]
I fail to see any basis for the translation “Hyades” as found for Obv. line 1 of the tablet per Ann
O’Maly’s work (under “[p. 34.]”) However, Ann O’Maly, while apparently giving
reference to each and all of said four stars, is referencing Weidner in
stating:
“For the Babylonians, Taurus falls into three parts. The
Pleiades are called kakkabZappu “Star (κατ’ έζοχήν)” Rev. 6, 13)3, the Hyades GÚ-AN “Bull of Heaven” Obv. 1;
Rev. 6)4 and β + ζ Tauri Narkaptu
“Chariot” (Rev. 6).5 ”
Footnote 3: “Cf. Weidner, Alter und Bedeutung
der babylonischen Astronomie, p. 19, note 2.”
Footnote 4: “Probably to be read as alû
in the Semitic (cf. Delitzsch, Handwörterbuch,
p. 60; Meissner, Seltene assyr. Ideogramme, No 4040); but
also cf. [The Cuneiform Inscriptions of Western Asia, Vol.] II R[awlinson] 49, 3, line 45.“
Footnote 5: “Cf. Weidner passim p.51f.”
That much given, it
seems certain enough that Ann O’Maly et.al. are
identifying Hyades with Aldebaran, which was the one and only star visible in
front of the New Moon observed and recorded on Obv.
1. [I do not find the reference to “Rev. 6” helpful towards resolving whether
or not Aldebaran is indeed the one and only “Bull of Heaven” = “GÚ-AN.” Nevertheless, Obv. 1 should be
sufficient by itself in order to confirm that Ann O’Maly et.al. are identifying Aldebaran with “the Bull of Heaven!”]
Considering also the fact that
Aldebaran was the one and only star being visible in front of the setting Moon
on April 22, 568 BCE, I find it clear that, although Aldebaran is not
specifically being identified upon Obv. l.1 of VAT 4956, it is the one and only “Normal Star” that
could have been referenced, but then only as a representative for the
constellation Taurus, “the Bull of Heaven.” The translation for the Babylonian
name provided (in the list in ADT I,) for “is le10 ,” is “the Jaw of the
Bull,” and the modern name listed is “α Tauri,” that is, Aldebaran. However, I do not see
“is le10” upon the transliteration
of VAT 4956. The next star within the constellation of Taurus to become visible
would have been θ Taurii, but it is
likely that the New Moon crest was at that time becoming invisible.
Accordingly, I conclude that, on this occasion, Aldebaran was being used by the
astronomer as a representative of the Bull of Heaven: Thus the words translated
“behind the Bull of Heaven.”
All
of the words and Comments pertaining to line 1, obverse, now make sense to me
in terms of April 22, 568 BCE. Yet, this requires that this 1st
month is reckoned as having 31 lunar days… (!) To me this is not too strange
when considering also the likelihood of a relatively recent interplanetary
catastrophe around the first part of the 7th century BCE.
Indeed, I find good evidence that in
the year beginning in the fall of 699 BCE there was a pole shift such that the
crust of the Earth slid 150° pole towards pole
within a matter of 72 hours. I find the timing of said pole shift consistent
with the record of 2 Kings 20:11 and Isaiah 38:8 while the detailed positions
of the poles before and after the last three pole shifts have been established
by Charles Hapgood et.al.. For more details, please
cf. this link!
Although I have not found support for
the exact year of the last one of a series of interplanetary catastrophes in
the ninth through seventh centuries BCE suggested by Immanuel Velikovsky’s
works, the mechanism of action he proposes is an interesting one.
Indeed, if there was a worldwide planetary catastrophe at that time, how
would the people then living best go about learning the ropes of the newly
established paths of the heavens, if not by a strict following of actually
observed new moons etc. while avoiding as much as possible any assumptions of
their own, such as for instance a default New Moon on the 30th of
any lunar month upon inclement weather etc.?
I believe that these considerations also find support in the words of
line 8, obverse: “the moon became visible…it was thick…,”that is, while
recognizing also the translator’s Remarks on
Translation as quoted above and his added words within parenthesis in line
8. I suppose the chief
objection to a 31 day long Month I in that year is the translation “Month III…
the 30th” on line 12 obverse. However, if the corresponding Akkadian
word is understood as carrying the meaning “something not yet perfected,” as in
the 30th day being the day prior to a complete and perfect 30 day
long month, then it wouldn’t matter if the new moon crescent was first seen at
the beginning of the 29th day or at the beginning of the 30th
day and that objection would then be resolved! Consider also the perfection
commonly associated with the triangle and the associated numbers 3, 30, etc..!
Re the words “the moon became visible behind the Bull of
Heaven…:” At first it seemed to me that that would indicate that the moon was
behind the prominent horn of the Bull of Heaven and that, from studying the
details of “VAT 4956” in comparison with Starry Night Backyard software, the
first observations of the
first New
Moon crescent
seemed to have occurred one day later than I would
have
anticipated
from the NASA Phases of the Moon tables, and from my prior studies of current
comparable observations from the horizon of the Holy Land. (Cf. e.g. footnotes
##31 and 32.)
However, upon my discovery of a firm basis (cf. footnote #20) for establishing the beginning of month #1 on the evening of April 22,
I came to realize that the use of that Akkadian word, translated ‘behind,’ as
used in line 12, obverse, (cf. footnote #56,) makes most sense when applying it, whatever Akkadian word it may be,
relative to the “normal star” as suggested in ADT I.
[Had the evening of
April 23, 568 BCE been the beginning of month #1 - as I used to believe prior
to having a viable understanding of the event recorded for the 14th
day of this 1st month - then one might consider why the proximity
between the New Moon and Venus is not being recorded also on this clay
tablet, thus, the absence of such a record re Venus also becomes evidence
against April 23 as constituting the beginning of month #1. However, even that
argument may be countered by the fact of missing words due to the tablet being
broken at that point…]
That the dates used in the tablet began at sunset is confirmed by the
order of the relative statements in line 3 of the cuneiform tablet: “Night of
the 9th…, beginning of the night, the moon stood 1 cubit in front of
β Virginia. The 9th. the sun in the west (was surrounded) by a halo,” that is, the
darkness of the evening and night preceding the subsequent day are all part of
the same 9th day.
[7] See the
translator’s Comments re Obverse, line
1: ”1: The last sign visible can be any number from
14 to 18.” - This Comment becomes meaningful upon realizing that the distance
between the Moon and the Sun at the time between “[sunset and moonset]” on
April 22, 568 BCE was 14°+! That is, yet another piece of evidence
against April 23 being day one of the month, obviously so, because on April 23
the corresponding distance was 26°+!
Ann O’Maly in her work is exchanging
VAT 4956’s record in terms of degrees for minutes. Certainly, that distance
could not have been measured at the time of sunset, that is, before the New
Moon could even be visualized. Measuring the time from sunset to moonset should
be much more doable, though one may question the astronomer’s ability to
observe the New Moon until it actually hid behind the horizon,
that is, not just disappeared in the haze over the horizon. What I seem
to find is, however, that the measurements recorded do correspond quite
accurately with my Starry Night Backyard astronomy software measurements upon
measuring from the front end of the setting or rising sun until the last of the
Moon is being seen. It would have been an easy, and quite accurate, way of
measuring said distance by means of measuring the time first and then
converting it to degrees. Thus, Ann O’Maly’s use of time rather than degrees
may well represent a more primary measurement. Nevertheless, doing so is a
matter of reverse translation, which by its nature makes it more distant from
the original than would a direct literal translatio,n of the record as it stands.
[8] “The Swallow” corresponds with the southern Fish
within Pisces (that is, the fish pointing towards the right, west) extending
even unto ε Pegasi. Cf. these illustrations of
“the Swallow:” 1,
2, 3, and 4…
Cf. “the great Swallow” as referenced in Wikipedia under Pisces: “Pisces
originates from some composition of the Babylonian
constellations Šinunutu4 "the great
swallow" in current western Pisces, and Anunitum the
Lady of the Heaven, at the place of the northern fish.” An earlier edition
of the Wikipedia entry read: “According to J. H. Rogers the fish symbol
originates from some composition of the Babylonian constellations Zibatti-meš (maybe Šinunutu4
"the great swallow" in current eastern Pisces) and KU6
("the fish, Ea", Piscis Austrinus).”
In addition, Wikipedia
provides us with the transliterated version of the Babylonian cuneiform name
“The Great Swallow”: “MULŠÍM.MAḪ šinūnūtu "The Great
Swallow" (SW Pisces and Epsilon Pegasi.)”
Obviously, in VAT 4956 we find a much abbreviated form of this in the form of
simply “ŠÍM.”
I do not find anything in the ADT I list of Normal Stars
corresponding to “the Swallow” or to any of the Akkadian words that I see in
the transcription of VAT 4956. However, the sequence of events described in
lines 19’ and 20’ on the reverse of the tablet seems quite instructive in
defining a certain portion of “the band,” or the wing?,
of the Swallow!
[9] How often is
Saturn in the Swallow?
Stepping
monthly forwards in time from Mars -596; and next April 23, -567, I find that
once having left this celestial area Saturn does not return until January, -537
and after that not until March, -508, then May -479, i.e. every 30 years or so.
Cf. footnotes #41
and #58 and
notice the absence of concurrent events competing with the record in
Nebuchadnezzar’s 37th year of reign! And that’s looking at only
three of these twenty-one celestial events!
“A complete cycle of Saturn phenomena in
relation to the stars takes 59 years. But when that cycle has to be fitted to
the lunar calendar of 29 or 30 days then identical cycles recur at intervals of
rather more than 17 centuries. Thus there is no difficulty in determining the
date of the present text… [p. 63]
“The Babylonian calendar was luni-solar with an additional “intercalary” month being
added on average 7 times in 19 years to bring the lunar and solar cycles into
line. In the seventh century B.C. the later “Metonic”
pattern of regular intercalations was not yet in place and it is a matter of
interest to establish in which years the intercalary months were inserted.
“The synodic period of Saturn is 378.09
days. Hence phenomena recur about 24 days later in the Babylonian calendar than
in the previous year (Schoch [1928], 109).” (Swerdlow, N. M., Editor, Ancient Astronomy and Celestial
Divination, Chapter
3 by C. B. F. Walker, Babylonian Observations of Saturn during the Reign of
Kandalanu, p. 63, 69.)
What exactly is “the Swallow”?
“The Swallow was actually composed of a portion of
Pisces together with epsilon Pegasi” (http://www.maverickscience.com/History/Retrocalculations/retrocalculations.html.)
“SIM.MAH
= shinunutu: "The Swallow"; Western
fish of Pisces” (http://www.astronomy.pomona.edu/archeo/outside/starlog.html.)
“MUL.SIM.MAH [sim.mah] (The
"Great Swallow (SW Pisces [+ epsilon Pegasi);"
later to be one of the 12 ecliptic constellations.) (Greek zodiac: Pisces (the Fish).)” (http://members.optusnet.com.au/~gtosiris/page9a.html)
[10] The day beginning in the evening of
April 23, 568 BCE. (Primary anchor point for this date is the 14th
day events and more… cf.
footnote #4.)
[11] The day beginning in the evening of
April 24, 568 BCE. (Primary anchor point for this date is the 14th day
events and more… cf. footnote
#4.)
[12] Measured along direction of stars
moving across the night sky (cf. line #11 of the obv[erse side of the clay table where a distance of “1 cubit” is being
most precisely defined,] and also line #3 obv. re
direction of measurement) the Moon was about 2 cubits, i.e. about 3° in front
of δ Gemini. Looking at the “normal stars” listed in ADT I, I find it curious that
the star closest to the ecliptic, one of the brighter and more prominent of the
Gemini constellation, δ Gemini or Wasat, is not
listed among the “normal stars.” Nevertheless, on that particular evening of
the 3rd, April 24th, 568 BCE, the one star most likely to
be referenced as being located 2 cubits behind the Moon, measured along the
direction of the sky’s movement, at the time of oncoming darkness, is none
other than δ Gemini, i.e. Wasat! (More
at this
link…)
[13] The day beginning in the evening of
April 30, 568 BCE. (Primary anchor point for this date is the 14th day
events and more… cf. footnote
#4.)
[14] The day beginning in the evening of April 29, 568 BCE. (Primary anchor point for this date is the 14th day
events and more… cf. footnote
#4.)
Seeing that the words on line 3 do
not fit the reality that I find on my Starry Night Backyard astronomy software,
my challenge is to correctly identify and ascertain the identity of that error.
Is the translator correct in assuming that the error is an original “[scribal]
error,” or else, is the error in the eyes of the translator? If the latter,
then what part(s) of line 3 is/are in error? I believe the best approach is to
fall back upon the original Akkadian cuneiform to the best of my ability:
“9 SAG GE6 1
KÚŠ sin ina IGI mulxGÍR ár ša UR-A GUB”
Taking the Akkadian at face value I
find as follows:
1.
“9” = ”the 9th;”
2.
“SAG” = ”head,
top, chief, upper
part, beginning, the
best; ”
3.
“GE6” = ”night,
dark,
black;”
4.
”1” = “1;”
5.
“KÚŠ” = ”skin,
hide, leather, parchment, peel, overlay.” However, upon these astronomical
tablets this word is consistently
used together with a number and translated as “x cubit(s;)”
6.
“sin” = “Moon;”
7.
“ina” = “in
the, of, in;”
8.
“IGI” = “eye,
first,
front,
behold,
recognize, see,
witness,
inspect, reverse/opposite”
9.
“ mulx ” = “star;”
10.
”GÍR” = ”foot;”
11.
”ár” = ”after, behind;”
12.
”ša” = ”that;”
13. ”UR-A”
= ”Leo,” (cf. ADT I;)
14. ”GUB”
= ”stood there.”
Corresponding to “SAG GE6” (cf. items ## 2 & 3 above) in her work Ann O’Maly provides: “rêš
mûši = beginning of the night (onset of complete darkness…)” while
identifying also several other similar terms for other parts of the day and
night.
[15] Please cf. footnote #14 before reading the remainder of this footnote
(which is rendered somewhat superfluous by said footnote #14! Nevertheless…
[19] The day beginning in the
evening of May 3, 568 BCE. (Primary anchor point for this date is the
14th day events and more… cf. footnote #4.)
1.
“Month
II, the 1st (of which followed the 30th
31st of the preceding month…)”
(line 8, obverse;)
2.
“II 0=I 30
31 May
21/22 22/23”
(cf. Calendar entry)
[Historical note
– The following text used to begin this footnote due to a flawed transcription
of mine based upon my search for a viable solution to the problems inherent in
the given translation re “β Geminorum:” Besides the
β Berninorum of the constellation Coma Berenices,
found at zenith of the sky at this time, angular separation from the moon = 62 degrees plus, I have not been able
to identify anything named “Berninorum,” nor have I been able to identify
anything located “4 cubits above,” relative to either the sun or the moon on
May 22, -567. However, on the following day, May 23, 568 BCE, the day when the
New Moon crescent was …]
[39] The day beginning in the
evening of May 25, 568 BCE. (Primary anchor points for this date are the
3rd and 5th day events of this month.)
[40] See
the translator’s Comments re Obverse, line 10: “10: ALLA is used
here not for the whole zodiacal constellation Cancer but only for Praesepe since Mars can pass through it within two days. As was remarked by P.V.Neugebauer and E.Weidner.”
[42] How
often does Mars pass across Praesepe?
and http://www.nexstarsite.com/NexStar50/NexStar50EncyclopediaSignori.pdf.)
[45] Please notice the
sequence of links from 1 to 7 showing Mercury rising (sic!) out of the Little
Twin constellation and in pursuit of Venus, which is likewise rising -
from day to day – towards their highest point above the horizon! Notice,
however, that (per SNB) the brightest star in the Little Twin constellation (δ
Gemini) [which is also the first star (within the entire Twin constellation) showing
up in front of Mercury (in the direction of travel)] is first showing up when
it is 1°+ above the western horizon, that is, only 5 min 22 sec before it set behind the horizon.
[50] Venus
located 1 cubit 4 fingers = 1° 25’ 26” above α Leonis,
Regulus. Given that, per ADT I, 1 finger = 1/24 cubit,
this exact measurement provides a good definition for the relationship between
angular distance and cubits/fingers: 1 cubit = 1.22 degrees; 1 finger = 0.051
degrees or 3.05 minutes; 1 degree = 0.82 cubits=20 fingers; 1 minute = 0.0137
cubits or 0.328 fingers. (More at this link…)
[62] See the
translator’s Comments re Obverse, line 13: “13: One
is inclined to regard åer+tam DIB as an equivalent of and NIM DIB. But this is rendered uncertain by the
occurrence of the latter expression in line 14 and elsewhere: in addition, ana berti is
expected.”
[64] Comparing 1) line 3 obverse and footnote #15 above and the Akkadian words translated “β
Virginia” with 2) this line
14 and the words translated “the
bright star of the end of the Lion’s foot,” I find that the record on
VAT 4956 indicates that the very same star is being referenced in both of those
lines, that is, Porrima
(γ Virginia.) Apparently the ancients considered the star Porrima the
end of the tail of the Lion. As seen by the artwork of the Lion and the
Lion’s coiled tail relative to Porrima upon this
sky map, this situation is quite well described by the words of the
tablet, if the original Akkadian words are understood in terms of ‘the bright star of the end of the Lion’s tail!’
[85] On February
12, 567 BCE at sunset, the angular separation between the sun and the moon was
15° 50’ 16”, measured along the ecliptic, however, the distance between the sun and the moon, as measured
above the horizon, was 14° 30’. Is this an important reference for how to
measure this distance?
[86] See the
translator’s Comments re Reverse of clay tablet, line 5’: “5’: The “elbow of
Sagittarius” was identified as the cluster of stars around π Sagittarii by P.V.Neugebauer. op.cit. 50f.”