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2016, Poster Tagung der Astronomischen Gesellschaft Bochum, Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte 2016
For the first time we have published this idea in: Himmelsscheibe, Sonnenwagen und Kalenderhüte – ein Versuch zur bronzezeitlichen Astronomie. Acta Praehistorica et Archaeologica 40, 2008, S. 93-126, insbesondere S. 105-106. At the end of the 1st century a new exotic cult appeared in the Roman Empire - the Mithras cult. The name refers to the Persian sun god Mithras. In Persia, however, there was no cult of the sun god Mithra that resembled the later Roman cult. Merkelbach suspects a creation of the cult from the surroundings of the imperial house. We would associate the idea of the cult with the procession of Tiridate. The new Armenian ruler moved through the Roman Empire with a troop of thousands of Parthian horsemen. In gold-decorated Rome he threw himself at Nero's feet, worshipped him as his god Mithra and received his reign from Nero. Through this propagandacoup a threatening war between Rome and Parthia for the rule in Armenia could be prevented. As a sign of the solidarity between the two peoples, there could have been an agreement that a Persian god should also be worshipped in Rome. The cult image of the bull-killing Mithras gives puzzles away. This picture cannot be understood from Persian mythology - but from the Roman imperial propaganda: Since Julius Caesar the Roman rulers increasingly connected their power with the sun. Thus the Egyptian solar calendar was introduced by Caesar in Rome, Augustus sacrificed Apollo after his decisive victory in Actium and erected an Egyptian obelisk as a sign of victory and pointer of a sundial in Rome. Nero received Tiridates disguised as sun god and Aurelian introduced in the 3rd century the December 25th as feast day of the invincible sun god in Rome. In the Mithras relief, the sun-god kills a bull, that is curved to a (thick) crescent moon. The portrait is full of astral allusions. It is often framed by the zodiac and the participating animals partly represent the celestial equator. The zodiac and celestial equator together symbolize the whole cosmos, which is dominated by the sun god. In the calendar the sun replaces the triad sun, moon and stars. In a Babylonian leap rule, which enjoyed wider distribution, the thickness of the crescent moon in the Plejades in the constellation of Taurus in the supposed spring month is used to conclude the necessity of switching on a month. Thus sun, moon and stars (in particular the Pleiades) regulate the calendar and thus the order of the sky. However, this regulation had begun to waver around 500 BC. Due to the precession of the Earth's axis, the validity of the leap rule moved slowly from the spring month towards summer. An adaptation of the leap rule in the spring month would have led to a thicker moon crescent, than indicated in the Babylonian tradition. If one measures the cult images of the Mithras, then quite uniform "thicknesses" of the moon crescents result from the bull body. Converted into the age of the moon they correspond to a lunar thickness, which one would have had to use adapted in this time for the Babylonian leap rule - which however would have been clearly wrong for all experts. Thus the cult picture symbolizes the "falling" switching rule to the initiate and thus the failure of the triad moon, sun and stars. Only the sun alone could be relied upon. Thus the Mithras cult supports the supremacy of the sun over all other gods and thus also the legitimacy of the emperors, who increasingly referred to the sun. Just as the sun orders the cosmos, so does the emperor on earth. The Mithras cult was thus appropriated for the rule of the emperors - the Mithras relief contributed its part to this.
Nuncius Hamburgensis 29. Hg. von Gudrun Wolfschmidt. Hamburg: tredition. S. 160 - 177
Der Stern von Bethlehem und Persien2013 •
Popularisierung der Astronomie Unsere Tagung findet dieses Mal ausnahmsweise nach dem Annual Meeting der Astronomischen Gesellschaft (12. bis 16. September 2016) statt, deren Thema lautet The Many Facets of Astrophysics – Photons, Particles, and Spacetime (https://www.ag2016.de/). Die Tagung des Arbeitskreises Astronomiegeschichte in Bochum steht 2016 unter dem Thema Popularisierung der Astronomie. Es gibt im Ruhrgebiet zahlreiche Planetarien, Volkssternwarten und astronomische Vereine, die berücksichtigt werden können. Aber das Thema soll nicht nur die moderne Zeit sowie auch „oral history“ umfassen, sondern auch die Popularisierung in der Geschichte, also Beispiele der früheren Jahrhunderte und natürlich auch nicht regional – also nicht aufs Ruhrgebiet – begrenzt. Ein Thema könnte z.B. die Astronomische Uhr in Münster sein. Insbesondere sollen auch Beispiele aus der Archäoastronomie einbezogen werden. Außerdem sind bei der Tagung auch freie Vorträge möglich; es wäre natürlich gut, wenn viele sich mit dem umfangreichen Thema Popularisierung der Astronomie beschäftigen würden. Von der Tagung soll ein Proceedings-Band erscheinen, vgl. hier: http://www.hs.uni-hamburg.de/DE/GNT/research/nuncius.php Nuncius Hamburgensis; Band 41 (2017); hier sollen alle Vorträge aufgenommen werden, die im weitesten Sinne zum Thema passen.
Nuncius Hamburgensis 31. Hg. von Gudrun Wolfschmidt. Hamburg: tredition. S. 488 - 517
Ostern ohne Plejaden (Plejaden II)2015 •
We found on the sky disc of Nebra the Babylonian Pleiades intercalary rule encoded in a double manner. It gives a practical instruction, when one month must be switched on in a luni-solar calendar. In this iconographic program the golden disc symbolizes the sun as well as the full moon. This double interpretation arises from the meaning of the Babylonian Akitu New Year feast at full moon in the spring month necessarily: The full moon in the spring month symbolizes the new-year at the beginning of spring. Therefore, one finds in Near East often the symbol of a circle (beside figurative representations) for the sun AND moon, not seldom with the Pleiades. At the reign of Hammurabi – possibly also the production time of the sky disc – in 1800 B.C. the last visibility of the Pleiades in the evening sky occurred in such a way that when they disappeared and at the same time the First Crescent Moon appeared (the „ideal situation“) the following full moon decorated the sky at the beginning of spring: The full moon as a symbol of the sun! Thus three elements (First Crecent Moon, Pleiades and full moon / sun) symbolize the spring feast (today Easter). Nowadays no Pleiades appear in the Easter rule. The „Plejadenschock“ led to the fact that the Pleiades disappeared from that rule. In 600 B.C. the sky constellations had moved on account of the precession so far that the intercalary rule was not valid any more in the spring month. Exemplarily at the example of Persepolis we indicate the reaction to the „Plejadenschock“. We look in addition at orientations and at symbols of Persepolis. We discuss the effects of the „Plejadenschock“ in the Persian’s empire, thus with the Jews, Syrians and Arabs.
Nuncius Hamburgensis 29. Hg. von Gudrun Wolfschmidt. Hamburg: tredition. S. 250 - 277
Erste Ideen zum Einfluss der Astronomie auf das Aufkommen des Monotheismus, speziell das Auslaufen der Plejaden-Kalender-Schaltregel2013 •
The origin of our deliberations was the question why in the Arabian cultural spherea pure lunar calendar became popular with the introduction of Islam. We found aspecial date as a point of fixation. The first of Muharram in the year 10 of the hedgraor the ninth of April 631 A.D. This date is connected with the introduction of thenew and purely lunar Islamic calendar. As it turns out, this date is highly significantastronomically and allows seeing a connection with an old Mesopotamian leap yearrule.Parting from this observation we analyzed the Old Testament with regard towhether we can find similar indications there too. For that purpose we first hadto identify specific dates given in the Old Testament. As it turned out such datesare partially exact to the day. Thereupon we investigated if these data exist within acontext which can be interpreted in an astronomical or calendarical manner. In thisprocedure emerged parallels to our findings regarding the Arabian cultural sphere.Also a certain key occurrence within Babylonian history could be integrated intothis interpretational pattern. The general connection between astronomical observa-tion and religious change could also be present in an example of different nature inEgyptian history.
Nuncius Hamburgensis 38. S. 124 - 129
Ären und Astronomie im 7. Jhd.: In: Astronomie im Ostseeraum – Astronomy in the Baltic. Nuncius Hamburgensis Band 38 (Hg.) Gudrun Wolfschmidt. Hamburg: tredition 2018, S. 124-129. Digital version see web-link in the print edition and link here2018 •
Abstract In this work, we turn to the eras of the 7th century. The two Persian Yazdegird-eras to his accession (632) and after his death (652) are not well known, but they were very important in their time and are partly still used today. The Arab era (622) is now known as Islamic era of Higra. It is related to the lunar calendar. However the lunar calendar was introduced according to the tradition only 632 by Mohammed. The exclusion of the pagans from the Hagg was already proclaimed by Ali at the Hagg 631 in Mecca on behalf of the Prophet. About the location of the first day of the year 10 (1st Muharram 10 AH) = 9.4.631, the narrators are unanimous. As intercalation has been omitted at the end of 9 AH, the lunar calendar in fact started this day. This date is characterized in three ways: 1.) There is an ideal situation. So we call the conjunction of first crescent with the last visibility of the Pleiades. 2.) The moon reaches its greatest northern (ecliptic) latitude and can thus repeatedly eclipse the Pleiades this year. 3.) A pure lunar calendar and lunisolar calendar, both starting with the Seleucid era, come again this year together in the same season. We show how you can use these observations argumentative, to switch from the lunar solar calendar to lunar calendar. This change is most likely linked to a new religion. We conclude that the lunar calendar was actually introduced 631/632. Only after the introduction of the lunar calendar, the 622 era is introduced (638). We point to a scenario how (war between Persia and Byzantium and attempt to unify the different Christian movements by the Byzantine Emperor Heraclius) this sequence could be explained in time circumstances. Double dating on a papyrus dating back to 642 and an inscription in the bathroom nearby Gadara in 662 show that in both cases in the Arab era a lunar calendar is based. If one understands the 622 era, as do some researchers, as an originally Arab-political era, this nevertheless must have been associated with the religious movement (lunar calendar 631) very early. These results support some statements of the tradition literature.
Nuncius Hamburgensis 8. Hg. von Gudrun Wolfschmidt. S. 130 - 167
Kalender und Finsternisse - einige Überlegungen zur bronzezeitlichen Astronomie2008 •
Based upon principle considerations, the following article attempts to trace the development of Bronze Age astronomy in Central and Northern Europe. Starting with the time of the Nebra sky disk, the moon seems to have played a greater role in the creation of a calendar. A leapyear rule that observes the moon’s crescent near the Pleiades in a spring month leads to a luni-solar calendar, which is regulated through observation. In addition, the common expectationof the necessary intercalated months can be coordinated with those made and thereby formthe basis for a better prediction and, thus, a better calendar. In consequence, the developmentseems to have run independently and in part differently, even more successfully, than that inMesopotamia. In the attempt to work out an eclipse cycle with the help of common expectation,a new theory about the celestial cycles appears on the sun chariot of Trundholm, which finallyleads to the recognition of the Saros cycle. This cycle appears also on the gold hats. With theirhelp and those of eclipses of the moon the calendar can further be improved. This could haveled to the very detailed calendar of Coligny, which with its thirty-year periodicity is reminiscentof the thirty-two-year cycle of the Nebra sky disk.
Nuncius Hamburgensis 28. Hg. von Gudrun Wolfschmidt. Hamburg: tredition. S. 400 - 430
Die Zahlenkombination 32/33 als Indikator für einen plejadengeschalteten Lunisolarkalender (Plejaden I)2014 •
This article shows the pleiades’ importance for the calendar, for determining feasts, for mythology and religion. We take a close look on texts, poems, symbols and numbers. The Pleiades' leap year rule is of great importance. What we call the “Ideal Situation” is the one when the first cresent of the moon corresponds with the last visibility of the Pleiades in the evening sky. During the time of Hammurabi the following full moon corresponded with the spring equinox. We present a chronology of Hammurabi with the “Ideal Situation” as basis. The movement of the “Ideal Situation” out of the spring month caused the so called “Plejadenschock”. As a consequence of the “Plejadenschock” the monotheistic religions emerged.
Nuncius Hamburgensis 31. Hg. von Gudrun Wolfschmidt. Hamburg: tredition: Astronomie in Franken. S. 468 - 487
Astronomie vor 400.000 Jahren an einem idealisierten Beispiel aus Libyen2015 •
Recent excavations (until 2009) may shed a new light on the beginnings of astronomy. The research done by Ziegert and colleagues discovered and partly investigated a village of Old Acheulian time at the Shore of the first Mega-lake Fezzan (ca. 400,000 years ago). The permanent settlement of Homo erectus people is proved in different activity zones from the shallow water of the shore to south: a village working place with many hand-axes probably as women’s multitools, a cooking place and the housing area and a burial ground. South of the village test excavations were carried out to investigate a ritual-place with stone structures on former surfaces. It consists of a rectangular stone in east west orientation, a dugout round pit and a layering of large stone plates. Nearby on top of the escarpment Ziegert found a straight row of stone-heaps that, if 13 heaps, may be of astronomical significance (due to the political circumstances in Libya, further research was not possible). Thinking of the deviation range in absolute dating sites of this age an interval of ±20.000 years was chosen. The astronomical question is what one can state about this time with this given insecurity. There are discussed different phenomena (proper motion of the stars, changes of the earth’s axis and the fluctuating of the earth orbit). The outcome of this is that one can give no star constellations and rising and setting points of the sun and moon are not exactly known. Only the equinoxes are dependable in there east west adjustment. It is shown how the finding complex could be interpreted astronomically and to what details should be paid attention with further excavations from an astronomical point of view.
There is intenral evidence for post-mortem expectations in the Roman cult of Mithras. Despite Robert Turcan's Demonstration in 1975 of the biases of the Neo-platonist reports of Mithraic belief, it continues routinely to be supposed that, as a 'mystery-cult', the cult of Mithras must have had expectations about the after-life. This paper suggests an alternative model, and offers three 'thought-experiments' as to possible evocatory 'nodes' that individual Mithraic Fathers might have started thier own speculations.
Sonne, Mond und Sterne - Meilensteine der Astronomiegeschichte. Zum 100jährigen Jubiläum der Hamburger Sternwarte in Bergedorf.
Sonne, Mond und Sterne - Meilensteine der Astronomiegeschichte. Zum 100jährigen Jubiläum der Hamburger Sternwarte in Bergedorf. Hamburg: tredition (Nuncius Hamburgensis - Beiträge zur Geschichte der Naturwissenschaften; Band 29) 2013. ISBN 978-3-8495-7419-2 (376 Seiten)2013 •
Anläßlich des 100jährigen Jubiläums der Hamburger Sternwarte in Bergedorf 2012 fand die Tagung des Arbeitskreises Astronomiegeschichte in der Astronomischen Gesellschaft (AKAG) „Kometen, Sterne, Galaxien – Astronomie in der Hamburger Sternwarte“ vom 23. bis 24. September 2012 statt, organisiert von Gudrun Wolfschmidt, ferner gab es eine Vortragsreihe Meilensteine aus 100 Jahren Forschung an der Hamburger Sternwarte in Bergedorf, organisiert von Gudrun Wolfschmidt und Matthias Hünsch, schließlich tagte die Antique Telescope Society (ATS) vom 28. bis 29. September 2012 in der Sternwarte, organisiert von Gudrun Wolfschmidt und Walter Stephani. Alle diese Beiträge zum Jubiläum sollten in einem Buch zusammengefaßt werden, die Resonanz war so groß, daß zwei Bände entstanden. Dieser Band Sonne, Mond und Sterne – Meilensteine der Astronomiegeschichte enthält nun die Beiträge über 400 Jahre Astronomie in Hamburg, über Sternwarten, Astronomen und Instrumente, ferner Artikel zur Astronomie in Altona (STRUVE-Bogen) und Kiel (Radioastronomie), ferner weitere allgemeine astronomiehistorische Artikel von der Bronzezeit bis ins 20. Jahrhundert, da das Zentrum für Geschichte der Naturwissenschaft und Technik auch zur Hamburger Sternwarte gehört."
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Nuncius Hamburgensis 38. Hg. von Gudrun Wolfschmidt. Hamburg: tredition. S. 98 - 101
Astronomische Ausrichtungen Äthiopischer Kultbauten: In: Astronomie im Ostseeraum - Astronomy in the Baltic. Hg. von Gudrun Wolfschmidt. Hamburg: tredition (Nuncius Hamburgensis; Band 38) 2018, S. 98-101. Digital version see web-link in the print edition and link here2018 •
Booklet of Abstracts, Astronomy in Franconia - Simon Marius and his Time - From the Beginnings up to Modern Astrophysics - 125 Years Dr. Remeis-Observatory Bamberg (founded in 1889).
Booklet of Abstracts, Astronomy in Franconia - Simon Marius and his Time - From the Beginnings up to Modern Astrophysics - 125 Years Dr. Remeis-Observatory Bamberg (founded in 1889). Bamberg, 21.-22. September 2014. Hamburg: GNT 2014.2014 •
aus dem Institut für Geschichte der Naturwissenschaften, Mathematik & Technik Uni Hamburg
Das aktuelle IGN-Nachrichtenblatt Nr. 38-42 (2012) - Chronik für 2008 bis 2012.2013 •
Booklet of Abstracts. Astronomy in the Baltic- Astronomie im Ostseeraum.
Booklet of Abstracts. Astronomy in the Baltic- Astronomie im Ostseeraum. Colloquium of the Working Group History of Astronomy in the Astronomical Society. .Hg. von Gudrun Wolfschmidt. Hamburg: Zentrum für Geschichte der Naturwissenschaft und Technik 2015.Nuncius Hamburgensis 28. Hg. von Gudrun Wolfschmidt. Hamburg: tredition. S. 378- 399
Die Finsternisvorhersage von Thales aufgrund der mitteleuropäischen bronzezeitlichen Astronomie2014 •
Preprint: Orientierung, Navigation und Zeitbestimmung - Wie der Himmel den Lebensraum des Menschen prägt Orientation, Navigation and Time Keeping - How the Sky Shapes People's Living Space. Hamburg: tredition (Nuncius Hamburgensis, Band 42) 2019.
Preprint: Orientierung, Navigation und Zeitbestimmung - Wie der Himmel den Lebensraum des Menschen prägt Orientation, Navigation and Time Keeping - How the Sky Shapes People's Living Space. Hamburg: tredition (Nuncius Hamburgensisn, Band 42) 2019.2019 •
2014 •
Orientierung, Navigation und Zeitbestimmung - Wie der Himmel den Lebensraum des Menschen prägt. Orientation, Navigation and Time Keeping - How the Sky Shapes People's Living Space.
Wolfschmidt, Gudrun (Hg.): Orientierung, Navigation und Zeitbestimmung - Wie der Himmel den Lebensraum des Menschen prägt. Hamburg: tredition (Nuncius Hamburgensis; Band 42) 2019.2019 •
S. Neef, H. Sussman, D. Boschung (Hrsg.), Astroculture. Figuration of Cosmology in Media and Arts. Morphomata 17
2014i Astromorphomata: Kosmologische Vorstellungen in der Kunst der Antike2014 •
D. Boschung, A. Schäfer (Hrsg.), Römische Götterbilder der mittleren und der späten Kaiserzeit. Morphomata 22
2015b Mithras. Konzeption und Verbreitung eines neuen Götterbildes2015 •
Orientierung, Navigation und Zeitbestimmung - Wie der Himmel den Lebensraum des Menschen prägt.
Wolfschmidt, Gudrun: Vorwort. In: Wolfschmidt, Gudrun (Hg.): Orientierung, Navigation und Zeitbestimmung - Wie der Himmel den Lebensraum des Menschen prägt. Hamburg: tredition (Nuncius Hamburgensis; Band 42) 2019, S. 16-19.2019 •
Popularisierung der Astronomie. Proceedings der Tagung des Arbeitskreises Astronomiegeschichte in Bochum, 16.-18. Sept. 2016
Wolfschmidt, Gudrun: Popularisierung der Astronomie - Sternwarten, Planetarien, Ausstellungen, Medien. In: Popularisierung der Astronomie - Popularisation of Astronomy. Hamburg: tredition (Nuncius Hamburgensis; Bd. 41) 2017, S. 18-93.2017 •
Popularisierung der Astronomie. Proceedings der Tagung des Arbeitskreises Astronomiegeschichte in Bochum, 16.-18. Sept. 2016.
Wolfschmidt, Gudrun (Hg.): Popularisierung der Astronomie. Proceedings der Tagung des Arbeitskreises Astronomiegeschichte in Bochum, 16.-18. Sept. 2016. Hamburg: tredition (Nuncius Hamburgensis; Bd. 41) 2017.2017 •
A. Bärnreuthner (ed.), Die Sonne. Brennpunkt der Kulturen der Welt
Die Sonne im Alten Orient - Konzeptionen zwischen Mythos und Wissenschaft2009 •
Popularisierung der Astronomie. Proceedings der Tagung des Arbeitskreises Astronomiegeschichte in Bochum, 16.-18. Sept. 2016
Wolfschmidt, Gudrun (Hg.): Popularisierung der Astronomie - Popularization of Astronomy Proceedings der Tagung des Arbeitskreises Astronomiegeschichte in Bochum, 16.-18. September 2016. Hamburg: tredition (Nuncius Hamburgensis; Bd. 41) 2017.2017 •
Popularisierung der Astronomie.
Wolfschmidt, Gudrun: Vorwort: Popularisierung der Astronomie. In: Popularisierung der Astronomie. Hg. von Gudrun Wolfschmidt. Hamburg: tredition (Nuncius Hamburgensis; Bd. 41) 20172017 •
Harald Meller/François Bertemes (Hrsg.), Der Griff nach den Sternen". Internationales Symposium in Halle (Saale) 16.-21. Februar 2005. Tagungen des Landesmuseums für Vorgeschichte Halle 5 (Halle 2010) 439-486.
Die Zeichen auf der Scheibe von Nebra und das altbronzezeitliche Symbolgut des Mitteldonau-Karpatenraumes.2010 •
In Sabine Reinhold und Kerstin P. Hofmann, Hrsgin.: Zeichen der Zeit. Archäologische Perspektiven auf Zeiterfahrung, Zeitpraktiken und Zeitkonzepte (Themenheft). Forum Kritische Archäologie 3, 2014 110–135.
Zyklische Abläufe als Hilfsmittel zur Deutung von Zeit in der ArchäologieZeitschrift Fur Antikes Christentum-journal of Ancient Christianity
Gnostische und andere Bilderbücher in der Antike2005 •
Orientalistische Literaturzeitung 109/4-5 (2014), 381-386.
Review: R. GYSELEN (Hrsg.), Sources for the history of Sasanian and post-Sasanian Iran, Bures-sur-Yvette : Groupe pour l’Étude de la Civilisation du Moyen-Orient 2010 (Res Orientales 19)U. Hackl / B. Jacobs / D. Weber (Hrsg.), Quellen zur Geschichte des Partherreiches – Textsammlung mit Übersetzungen und Kommentaren I, Novum Testamentum et Orbis Antiquus / Studien zur Umwelt des Neuen Testaments 83 (Göttingen / Oakville, CT 2010) 145-154
Jacobs 2010, Quellen zur Geschichte des Partherreiches I: II.4.7.1. Zur Religion der PartherIn: M. Wemhoff/M. M. Rind (Hrsg.), Bewegte Zeiten. Archäologie in Deutschland. (Petersberg 2018) 351–359.
Das Wissen um Zeit und Raum: Himmelsdarstellungen in der Bronzezeit.2018 •