Babylonian House Numbers and Squares of Zodiacal Signs: The Origin of the Quadruplicities, Part I

Author:

Brack-Bernsen Lis

Abstract

BM 47762 is the rest of a circular tablet, which was divided into 12 sectors by lines from the center to the rim. Each sector was labelled by a zodiacal sign. Our tablet consists in part of the sectors IX, X, XI, and XII, which are concerned with the zodiacal signs of Sagittarius (month IX), Capricorn (month X), Aquarius (month XI), and Pisces (month XII). In lines 2 to 5 of each sector, some four numbers are written, which in pairs can be understood as a date (month, day) or as a position (sign, degree)—just as in the Dodecatemoria and its inverse, the Calendar Texts (Kalendertexte). The combination of number pairs on BM 47762 do not appear in those schemes. However, the difference between the pairs in lines 3, 4, and 5 is always equal to 277, a very special number which is known from the Calendar Texts. Evidently, our number pairs must somehow be connected to those number schemes. This paper investigates and finds a very interesting connection. It shows that all number pairs stand for dates, for which the Dodecatemoria scheme will give the position of the schematic Moon in its four important phases. The second number pairs refer to the months of the section, while the first pairs give the dates of the four important lunar phases three months earlier. The two dates on each line correspond to lunar positions taking place at almost the same position in the zodiac. The zodiacal signs of the lunar phases on days 7, 14, 21, and 28 join to squares which are mostly known from Greek astrology. For example, for month XI, the signs of the Moon have the numbers 2, 5, 8, and 11, i.e., the zodiacal square with 11 as one of the corners. Maybe we here have found the origin of the quadruplicities of the zodiacal signs. Published Online (2022-07-31)Copyright © 2022 by Lis Brack-Bernsen Article PDF Link: https://jps.library.utoronto.ca/index.php/aestimatio/article/view/39087/29776 Corresponding Author: Lis Brack-Bernsen, University of RegensburgE-Mail: lis.brackbernsen@ur.de

Publisher

University of Toronto Libraries - UOTL

Reference10 articles.

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2. BrackBernsen, L. 2021. “The Babylonian Dodecatemoria and Calendar Texts: Inverse Schemes for Determining Position and Times for the Schematic Sun and Moon”. Aestimatio: Sources and Studies in the History of Science 2.1: 59–80.

3. BrackBernsen, L. and H. Hunger. 2008. “BM 42282+42294 and the Goal-Year Method”. SCIAMVS 9: 3–23.

4. BrackBernsen, L. and J. M. Steele. 2004. “Babylonian Mathemagics: Two Mathematical Astronomical/Astrological Texts”. Pp 95–125 in C. Burnett, J. P. Hogendijk, K. Plofker, and M. Yano edd. Studies in the History of the Exact Sciences in Honour of David Pingree. Leiden.

5. Horowitz, W. and J. M. Steele. 2017. “A Mysterious Circular Tablet with Numbers and Stars”. Pp. 225–232 in John M. Steele and Mathieu Ossendrijver edd. Studies on the Ancient Exact Sciences in Honour of Lis BrackBernsen. Berlin.

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1. Babylonian House Numbers and Squares of Zodiacal Signs;Aestimatio: Sources and Studies in the History of Science;2023-09-30

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