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2006-10-30 10:18:55 · 1 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities History

1 answers

Chinese constellation
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Chinese constellations are the way ancient Chinese grouped the Stars. It is very different from the western constellations, due to the independent development of ancient Chinese astronomy.

Ancient Chinese skywatchers divided their night sky into 31 regions, namely Three Enclosures (三垣) and Twenty-eight Mansions (二十八宿). The Three Enclosures occupy the area close to the North Celestial Pole. The stars in the Three Enclosures can be seen all year around.

The Twenty-eight Mansions occupy the zodiac region of the sky. They can be considered as the equivalent to the 12 Zodiac Constellations in the Western Astronomy. Contrary to the Western Astronomy, the Twenty-eight Mansions reflect the movement of the Moon in a lunar month rather than the Sun in a Solar Year.

The Three Enclosures and the Twenty-Eight Mansions are further divided into 283 asterisms. Each visible star is assigned into one of the asterisms. Some of the asterisms only have one star. Traditionally, a star is named by combining the name of its asterism with a number.

Contents [hide]
1 Three Enclosures
2 The Twenty-Eight Mansions
3 The Southern Asterisms
4 Chinese Star Designation
5 External links
6 See also



[edit] Three Enclosures
The Three Enclosures are the Purple Forbidden Enclosure (紫微垣), the Supreme Palace Enclosure (太微垣) and the Heavenly Market Enclosure (天市垣). The Purple Forbidden Enclosure occupy the northernmost area of the night sky. From the viewpoint of the ancient Chinese, the Purple Forbidden Enclosure lies in the middle of the sky, and is circled by all the other stars.

The Supreme Palace Enclosure lies east and north to the Purple Forbidden Enclosure, while the Heavenly Market Enclosure lies west and south. The Three Enclosures are separated by "walls", which are asterisms with their shapes resembling their namesakes.


[edit] The Twenty-Eight Mansions
The zodiac is listed below,

note: all translations of the names of the Xiu are done literally, they may not be the true and original meaning

note 2: the name following the tranlations are the approximate location of the Xiu on the western skymap

four symbols
(四象) "Xiu" (宿)
name pinyin lit. translation vicinity in western sky
The Azure Dragon of the East
(東方青龍) 角 Jiao Horn Spica (alpha vir)
亢 Kang Neck Virgo
氐 Di Root Libra
房 Fang Room Libra
心 Xin Heart Antares
尾 Wei Tail Scorpius
箕 Ji Winnowing-basket Sagittarius
The Black Tortoise (or Xuan Wu) of the North
(北方玄武) 斗 Dou Dipper Sagittarius
牛 Niu Ox Capricornus
女 Nü Girl Aquarius
虛 Xu Emptiness Aquarius
危 Wei Danger Aquarius/Pegasus
室 Shi Room Pegasus
壁 Bi Wall Algenib Pegasus
The White Tiger of the West
(西方白虎) 奎 Kui Legs Andromeda
婁 Lou Bond Aries
胃 Wei Stomach Aries
昴 Mao Hairy head Pleiades
畢 Bi Net Taurus
觜 Zi Turtle beak Orion
參 Shen Three stars Orion
The Vermillion Bird of the South
(南方朱雀) 井 Jing Well Gemini
鬼 Gui Ogre/Demon Cancer
柳 Liu Willow Hydra
星 Xing Star Alphard
張 Zhang Growth Crater
翼 Yi Wings Corvus
軫 Zhen Sadness/Weep Corvus


[edit] The Southern Asterisms
The sky around the south celestial pole was unknown to ancient Chinese. Therefore, it was not included in the Three Enclosures and Twenty-Eight Mansions system. However, by the end of the Ming Dynasty, Xu Guangqi introduced another 23 asterisms based on the knowledge of western star charts. These asterisms were since incorporated into the traditional Chinese star maps.


[edit] Chinese Star Designation
Ancient Chinese astronomers designated names to the visible stars systematically, roughly more than one thousand years before John Bayer did it in a similar way. Basically, every star is assigned to an asterism. Then a number is given to the individual stars in this asterism. Therefore, a star is designated as "Asterism name" + "Number". The numbering of the stars in a asterism, however, is not based on the apparent magnitude of this star as in Bayern designation, but rather its position in the asterism.

For example, Altair is named 河鼓二 in Chinese. 河鼓 is the name of the asterism (literally the Drum at the River). 二 is the number designation (two). Therefore it literally means "the Second Star of the Drum at the River.

Some stars also have traditional name, often related with mythology or astrology. For example, Altair is more commonly known as 牛郎星 or 牵牛星 (the Star of the Cowherd) in Chinese, after the mythologic story of Cowherd and Weaver Girl.

These designations are still used in modern Chinese astronomy. All the stars using the traditional name in English are routinely translated with traditional Chinese designations, instead of the translation of its catalogue names.





[edit] External links
Chinese Zodiac Chart Find your Chinese Zodiac sign based on your date of birth.
http://www.chinapage.com/astronomy/astronomy.html
http://homepages.primex.co.uk/~sproston/sstar9.htm
http://www.ld.nbcom.net/shiji/shu/shu005.htm

[edit] See also
Four Symbols (Chinese constellation)
lunar mansion
Five elements (Chinese)
Nakshatra
Chinese constellations
Three enclosures (三垣):
Purple Forbidden enclosure (紫微垣) | Supreme Palace enclosure (太微垣) | Heavenly Market enclosure (天市垣)
Four Symbols (四象) and Twenty-eight mansions (二十八宿):
East: Azure Dragon (青龍): Horn (角) | Neck (亢) | Root (氐) | Room (房) | Heart (心) | Tail (尾) | Winnowing Basket (箕)
South: Vermilion Bird (朱雀): Well (井) | Ghost (鬼) | Willow (柳) | Star (星) | Extended Net (張) | Wings (翼) | Chariot (軫)
West: White Tiger (白虎): Legs (奎) | Bond (婁) | Stomach (胃) | Hairy Head (昴) | Net (畢) | Turtle beak (觜) | Three stars (參)
North: Black Tortoise (玄武): Dipper (斗) | Ox (牛) | Girl (女) | Emptiness (虛) | Rooftop (危) | Encampment (室) | Wall (壁)

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_constellation"

2006-10-30 10:21:55 · answer #1 · answered by kyle g 4 · 0 0

Don't put your wallet in your back pocket as there are pickpockets DO photocopies your documents such as your passport, plane tickets, documents that can identify you in case of emergency DO copies important phone numbers such as credit card companies and insurance just in case DON'T say anything politically sensitive things like "free Tibet" or other nonesense that you know will get you in jail DON'T try to be nice when someone asks you to "carry" some unidentified things, in other words, don't be a "MULE" DO eat, have fun, and shop!

2016-03-19 01:52:20 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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