According to my reconstruction so far of the G text the last 5 days on side a of the tablet began where at the time of Gregory XIII the Sun would have reached day 285 counted from 0h. And the Full Moon would have been at Wasat (Middle) - at glyph number 227 (π) - which was 185 right ascension days later:
And at my assumed time for the G text - i.e. 4 precessional days later - Wezen (Weight) would have been 107 right ascension days after 0h, with Aludra (Virgins) 4 days later. Although I have primarily mapped the heliacal stars in parallel with the G glyphs we should notice the position of Wasat (Middle) - in the center among these 5 final days - at Ga8-24 (where 8 * 24 = 192 and where its glyph number suggests half a cycle). Ga8-24 is a hanau (birth) type of glyph: ... Nut, whom the Greeks sometimes identified with Rhea, was goddess of the sky, but it was debatable if in historical times she was the object of a genuine cult. She was Geb's twin sister and, it was said, married him secretly and against the will of Ra. Angered, Ra had the couple brutally separated by Shu and afterwards decreed that Nut could not bear a child in any given month of any year. Thoth, Plutarch tells us, happily had pity on her. Playing draughts with the Moon, he won in the course of several games a seventy-second part of the Moon's light with which he composed five new days. As these five intercalated days did not belong to the official Egyptian calendar of three hundred and sixty days, Nut was thus able to give birth successively to five children: Osiris, Haroeris (Horus), Set, Isis and Nepthys ... 185 = 740 (number of glyphs on the C tablet) / 4. At the time of the Bull heliacal Wasat ought to have been 45 days (360 / 8) after 0h (as much later was defined by Gregory XIII). *227 + 183 - 365 = *45. My initial choice to map the heliacal stars was based on the distance 181 days from Aldebaran to Antares and on the curved tail of the Scorpion compared to the straight appearance of the Aldebaran vaha mea 'fish':
However, as later experience taught us nakshatra stars probably influenced the design of at least some of the glyphs, for instance:
Perhaps the explanation could be that the heliacal versions of these stars had already been 'used up' at the back side of the tablet:
This idea ought to be investigated.
|