Slumber, watcher, till the spheres,
Six and twenty thousand years
Have revolv'd, and I return
To the spot where I now burn.
Other stars anon shall rise
To the axis of the skies ;
Stars that soothe and stars that bless
With a sweet forgetfulness :
Only when my round is o'er
Shall the past disturb thy door.
(Polaris by H. P. Lovecraft: an alternative view of the
precession of the equinoxes)
The fifth lecture completes the ancient astronomy part on
this course. So much to tell, so little time! For me personally, knowing how I
got here is as important as seeing where I’m going next. And I like to think
that I haven’t lost that curiosity and wonder my ancestors had for the sky,
even if I now pretty well know how it all works.
There are many good books on archeoastronomy available. If
you plan to purchase one, it’s a good idea to google for reviews as many books
look pretty on the outside but are full of esoteric nonsense on the inside. I
have accidentally laid my hands on some of these in the past, and yet I am
still not convinced, despite the precise methods of cracking the codes embedded
in ancient funeral paraphernalia, that Tutankhamon is one of the lost
supergods, together with Lord Pacal of Palenque.
Then again, one can only admire the vivid imagination of Erich von Däniken (and
I have certainly read all his books, classics as they are in their own genre). However,
I have checked out the following books and can recommend them.
G. Magli: Mysteries and discoveries of archeoastronomy
E. C. Krupp: Echoes of the ancient skies
These books are excellent introductions to archeoastronomy. They discuss the most
important topics and sites. I particularly like the latter one as it
occasionally probes the human mind and cultural history rather deeply.
“Exploring ancient skies. A survey of ancient and cultural
astronomy” by David. H. Kelley & Eugene F. Milone is a specialist book,
written as a textbook for an archeoastronomy course at the university of Calgary.
It is very detailed in many aspects, with a through introduction to the
celestial phenomena and archeoastronomical calculations, too, but it lacks the
general intro to archeoastronomy. In fact, it fails to mention many of the
topics and sites, but rather goes deeply into selected details. For example,
the chapters on ancient Egypt
were a dire disappointment (to me). The book is also rather expensive. Unless you truly require in-depth information, this is probably not
your book –at least it is not the first one you should get!
Other books:
B. E. Penprase: The power of stars –how celestial
observations have shaped civilization (a very general introduction to archeoastronomy )
S. Milbrath: Star gods of the Maya –astronomy in art,
folklore, and calendars (for hardcore maya astronomy fans only)
A. Pöyhönen: Yläkuu ja alakuu –ajoituksen taito
suomalaisessa kansanperinteessä (Finnish lunar folklore)
G. Magli: Architecture, astronomy and sacred landscape in ancient Egypt (a specialist book on Egyptian archeoastronomy)
There are lots of references to earlier (and classic) work
in the field, check them out, too.
“Star names, their lore and meaning” by Richard Hinckley
Allen is a classic book on exactly what it says in the title. It covers the
myths and facts behind star and constellation names from several cultures
(Western, Arabic, Hellenistic, Chinese etc).
The first book on archeoastronomy was published in 1894 by
Sir Norman Lockyer “The dawn of astronomy”.
It is heavily outdated, and in many aspects totally incorrect, but as a
peep to the history of archeoastronomy, priceless.
A short list of links where you can find more information on
some of the topics:
Photo archive of megalithic monuments: here and here.
Temples in Malta: Unesco World Heritage site
Article about giant's churches in Finland (in Finnish)
My first contact to megaliths was via a comic book in
the Non Stop series (published in Finland in the mid-seventies)
called “Ison Karhun taikuri”. Just look at the first page (this in in French,
the original language); isn’t that just brilliant. And the whole story gets
really crazy towards the end…