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Another thread on stars.
#1
Something I picked up from alternative research as that we don't all see the same stars..it should be obvious.

Speaking about Sirius, this is pretty close to what I see from where I am. If you are in the north you probably barely see the star.

[Image: 4kwMSVh.jpeg]

A little bit curious what would happen if I went around rotating old star maps and runes around.  There are questions around idles also.

Just grasping at whatever comes first, the issue is probably the controversy on when exactly sea travel stared.

I know this isn't new info or thinking as usual, just found it interesting as it popped up.
#2
Canopus
The dog head - the captain of the ship
The term canopic reflects the mistaken association by early Egyptologists with the Greek legend of Canopus – the boat captain of Menelaus on the voyage to Troy – "who was buried at Canopus in the Delta where he was worshipped in the form of a jar".[sup][2][/sup] In alternative versions, the name derives from the location Canopus (now Abukir) in the western Nile Delta near Alexandria, where human-headed jars were worshipped as personifications of the god Osiris

Dog star rising in summer.

Heliacal rising is a significant astronomical event where a star or planet first becomes visible in the dawn sky shortly before sunrise. In Jyotisha, it indicates the reappearance of the star Canopus, impacting water clarity and the purity of Sadhus’ minds, and is used for predicting rain. Historically in India, it involves brief observations of the horizon and ecliptic, signaling a critical phase in celestial cycles, and can even indicate childbirth if certain astrological conditions are met.
#3
(05-02-2025, 12:26 PM)sahgwa Wrote: Canopus
The dog head - the captain of the ship
The term canopic reflects the mistaken association by early Egyptologists with the Greek legend of Canopus – the boat captain of Menelaus on the voyage to Troy – "who was buried at Canopus in the Delta where he was worshipped in the form of a jar".[sup][2][/sup] In alternative versions, the name derives from the location Canopus (now Abukir) in the western Nile Delta near Alexandria, where human-headed jars were worshipped as personifications of the god Osiris

Dog star rising in summer.

Heliacal rising is a significant astronomical event where a star or planet first becomes visible in the dawn sky shortly before sunrise. In Jyotisha, it indicates the reappearance of the star Canopus, impacting water clarity and the purity of Sadhus’ minds, and is used for predicting rain. Historically in India, it involves brief observations of the horizon and ecliptic, signaling a critical phase in celestial cycles, and can even indicate childbirth if certain astrological conditions are met.

This stuff is all fascinating and fun.

"The Earth's Magnetic North Pole is actually considered the "south pole" in terms of a typical magnet" Up and down flipped around. South star is the north star.

A big problem for me is allot of this stuff is written from a northern perspective, so some of it doesn't make sense or the context changes. Seasons everything it's all backwards research  [Image: seeingstars.gif]

Canopus and Sirius is directly above me in summer in the evening and then I watch them set through the night in the west. Both swing by...The lady stands on Rigel...you have to be high and then you can never unsee it.
#4
(05-02-2025, 01:04 PM)Sirius Wrote: This stuff is all fascinating and fun.

"The Earth's Magnetic North Pole is actually considered the "south pole" in terms of a typical magnet" Up and down flipped around. South star is the north star.

A big problem for me is allot of this stuff is written from a northern perspective, so some of it doesn't make sense or the context changes. Seasons everything it's all backwards research  [Image: https://denyignorance.com//images/addsmi...gstars.gif]

Canopus and Sirius is directly above me in summer in the evening and then I watch them set through the night in the west. Both swing by...The lady stands on Rigel...you have to be high and then you can never unsee it.

you just have to stand on your head and then make sure you dont fall through the hole to france.
#5
(05-02-2025, 10:49 AM)Sirius Wrote: Something I picked up from alternative research as that we don't all see the same stars..it should be obvious.

Speaking about Sirius, this is pretty close to what I see from where I am. If you are in the north you probably barely see the star.

[Image: https://i.imgur.com/4kwMSVh.jpeg]

A little bit curious what would happen if I went around rotating old star maps and runes around.  There are questions around idles also.

Just grasping at whatever comes first, the issue is probably the controversy on when exactly sea travel stared.

I know this isn't new info or thinking as usual, just found it interesting as it popped up.

Well we know what constellations were important to the Norse. Canis Major is typically too far south, but Orion isn't. Precession made Polaris The North Star around 500, and they used that and the great bear for North.

As far as runes connected to constellations, the most documented are:

Bercano - Ursa Major (Great Bear) - Birth/Rebirth
Naudhiz - Eridanus (The River) - Controlling fates
Thurisaz - Orion (The Giant) - Linked to Thor
Eihwaz - Pisces - Iðunn - Goddess of youth
Kenaz - also Pisces - Loki's Rune

I think every idol had a corresponding rune and constellation. Pretty much EVERY culture with a written language and a pantheon has something similar. Either letters or symbols.

Like your name, Sirius (Sothis) is associated with Sopdet is earlier Egyptology and her daughter Isis in later egyptology. The Heliacal rising in August was a huge deal. That's why their crazy bicameral minds credited sky goddesses, who lived as stars, as bringers of the annual flood.
[Image: 708880338595ab08c831fe3fc615f4d0.jpg]
#6
(05-02-2025, 07:39 PM)IdeomotorPrisoner Wrote: Well we know what constellations were important to the Norse. Canis Major is typically too far south, but Orion isn't. Precession made Polaris The North Star around 500, and they used that and the great bear for North.

As far as runes connected to constellations, the most documented are:

Bercano - Ursa Major (Great Bear) - Birth/Rebirth
Naudhiz - Eridanus (The River) - Controlling fates
Thurisaz - Orion (The Giant) - Linked to Thor
Eihwaz - Pisces - Iðunn - Goddess of youth
Kenaz - also Pisces - Loki's Rune

I think every idol had a corresponding rune and constellation. Pretty much EVERY culture with a written language and a pantheon has something similar. Either letters or symbols.

Like your name, Sirius (Sothis) is associated with Sopdet is earlier Egyptology and her daughter Isis in later egyptology. The Heliacal rising in August was a huge deal. That's why their crazy bicameral minds credited sky goddesses, who lived as stars, as bringers of the annual flood.

Thank you, got some info here I need to follow up on  [Image: ats2508_cheers.gif]

Don't read to much into the Norse stuff...there is back story of following the Serpent river to Lugg when something buzzed me and the runes was around. It's gratitude.

My name Sirius Sothis Sopdet is a different story and just a lens or gateway into this one.

I currently believe we where more prosperous and well traveled in ancient times and the context of all changes then. When you cross the equator allot of firmly held believes no longer makes sense. The hemisphere you live in casts a vail over perception.

When I read some stories about Sirius rising and setting my brains goes "wat? huh?" because it's right above me, not on the horizon.

I saw bull horns above Venus the other day, the north didn't see that at all.  The keys we assign to symbols get's all weird when crossing over the equator.

What I really hope is that this maybe helps someone out there stuck on research. Just flip what you are looking at around.
#7
There's actually two versions of the Egyptian constellations -- the one that's shown in the Dendera temple (built under the Ptolemies, around 50 BC0 and the much older one that shows up in the coffins and tombs before the New Kingdom.

The Dendera depiction has a number of Egyptian symbols in it, but many familiar modern (i.e. Greek) constellations show up as well.[Image: death-symbol.htm] (Link (because DI doesn't like the photo for some rason)

The older version lumped stars into groups of three and didn't name most of them in the sky.  (Senenmut ceiling)  They were used mostly for time telling.  At one point they divided Orion into two constellations, one of which was the head of Isis.

Amusingly, most of the planets were named "Horus" or "Ra."  That changed late in their history after invasions and battles with other Mesopotamians.