The creator of the C text placed a prominent full stop sign at vero hia,
at the glyph which is halfway from the beginning of side b to
354 = 12
* 29½:
te hokohuki |
te moko |
vero
hia |
tagata honui |
e
ha mata |
Honui. 1. Person worthy of
respect, person of authority. 2. Livelihood,
heirloom, capital; ka moe koe ki toou
hônui, you must marry to ensure your livelihood
(said to a little girl); he hônui mo taaku poki,
this is the heirloom for my son. Vanaga. Great (hoonui);
honui, chief T.; tagata hoonui,
personage; hakahonui, to praise, to commend.
Churchill.
... They took (the material) for
the stone heaps (pipi horeko) and piled up
six heaps of stone at the outer edge of the cave.
Then they all said to the stone heaps, 'Whenever he
calls, whenever he calls for us, let your voices
rush (to him) instead of the six (of us) (i.e., the
six stone heaps are supposed to be substitutes for
the youths). They all drew back to profit (from the
deception) (? ki honui) and listened. A short
while later, Kuukuu called. As soon as he had
asked, 'Where are you?' the voices of the stone
heaps replied, 'Here we are!' All (the youths) said,
'Hey, you! That was well done!' ...
Ha. 1. Four. 2. To breathe.
Hakaha'a, to
flay, to skin. Vanaga. 1. Four. P Mgv., Mq., Ta.: ha, id.
2. To yawn, to gape. 3. To heat. 4. Hakaha,
to skin, to flay; unahi hakaha, to scale
fish. Mgv.: akaha, to take to pieces, to take
off the bark or skin, to strip the leaves off
sugarcane. 5. Mgv: ha, sacred, prohibited.
Mq.: a, a sacred spot. Sa.: sa, id.
Churchill. |
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Cb8-4 |
Cb8-5
(172 + 4) |
Cb8-6
(177 = 6 * 29½) |
Cb8-7
(392 + 178 = 570) |
Cb8-8
(1½ * 314 + 100) |
CLOSE TO THE FULL
MOON: |
γ Hydrae (201.0), ι Centauri (201.4) |
Al Simāk-12 (Lofty) /
Chitra-14 (Bright One) /
Horn-1 (Crocodile) /
Sa-Sha-Shirū-20
(Virgin's Girdle) /
ANA-ROTO-3 (Middle pillar)
MIZAR = ζ Ursae Majoris
(202.4),
SPICA
= α Virginis,
ALCOR
= 80 Ursae Majoris
(202.7)
SADALMELIK (α Aquarii)
*161.0 = *202.4 - *41.4 |
71 VIRGINIS
(203.6) |
no star
listed (204) |
HEZE = ζ Virginis
(205.0),
Southern Pinwheel Galaxy = M83 Hydrae
(205.7) |
... Proclus
informs us that the fox star nibbles continuously at
the thong of the yoke which holds together heaven
and earth; German folklore adds that when the fox
succeeds, the world will come to its end. This fox
star is no other than Alcor, the small star g
near zeta Ursae Majoris (in India Arundati,
the common wife of the Seven Rishis, alpha-eta Ursae
... |
... Mons
Maenalus, at the feet of Boötes, was formed by
Hevelius, and published in his Firmamentum
Sobiescianum; this title coinciding with those
of neighboring stellar groups bearing Arcadian
names. It is sometimes, although incorrectly, given
as Mons Menelaus, - perhaps, as Smyth
suggested, after the Alexandrian astronomer referred
to by Ptolemy and Plutarch. The Germans know it as
the Berg Menalus; and the Italians as
Menalo. Landseer has a striking
representation of the Husbandsman, as he styles
Boötes, with sickle and staff, standing on this
constellation figure. A possible explanation of its
origin may be found in
what Hewitt writes in his Essays on the Ruling
Races of Prehistoric Times: The Sun-god thence
climbed up the mother-mountain of the Kushika race
as the constellation Hercules, who is depicted in
the old traditional pictorial astronomy as climbing
painfully up the hill to reach the constellation of
the Tortoise, now called Lyra, and thus attain the
polar star Vega, which was the polar star from 10000
to 8000 B.C.
May not this modern companion constellation, Mons
Maenalus, be from a recollection of this early Hindu
conception of our Hercules transferred to the
adjacent Bootes?
|
Oct 8
(240 + 41) |
9 |
10 |
11 (364 - 80) |
12 (285) |
'Sept 11 (354 - 100) |
12 |
13 (256
= 4 * 64) |
14 |
15 |
"Aug 28
(240) |
Hora iti 29 |
30 (242
= 2 * 11 * 11) |
31 |
"Sept 1 |
AHU
AKAPU |
PU
PAKAKINA A IRA |
CLOSE TO THE
SUN: |
April 8 |
9 |
10 (100) |
11 |
12 |
no star
listed (18) |
ADHIL
(Garment's Train) = ξ Andromedae
(19.3),
θ
Ceti (19.7) |
KSORA (Knee) = δ Cassiopeiae
(20.1),
ω
Andromedae (20.6),
γ
Phoenicis (20.8) |
δ
Phoenicis (21.5) |
υ Andromedae (22.9) |
'March
12 |
13 |
14 (73) |
15 |
16 |
"Febr 26 |
27 |
28 (59) |
29 |
"March 1 |
However, there are only 348 (= 12 * 29) glyphs on side b of the
C tablet. Therefore it is necessary to move a further 6 glyphs
ahead, which will bring us to glyph number 6 on side a.
Probably this explains the very special design of Ca1-6:
no glyph |
koia |
ki te hoea |
ki te henua |
te rima te hau tea |
haga i te mea ke |
ki te henua -
tagata honui |
Hoe. Hoe 1. Paddle. Mgv.:
hoe, ohe, id. Mq., Ta.: hoe, id.
2. To wheeze with fatigue (oeoe 2). Arero
oeoe, to stammer, to stutter; Mgv. oe, to
make a whistling sound in breathing; ohe, a
cry from a person out of breath. Mq.: oe, to
wheeze with fatigue. 3. Blade, knife; hoe
hakaiu, clasp-knife, jack-knife; hoe hakanemu,
clasp-knife; hoe pikopiko, pruning knife. 4.
Ta.: oheohe, a plant. Ma.: kohekohe,
id. Churchill.T. Paddle. E hoe te heiva =
'and to paddle (was their) pleasure'. Henry. Hoea,
instrument for tattooing. Barthel. |
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Ca1-1 |
Ca1-2 |
Ca1-3 |
Ca1-4 |
Ca1-5 |
Ca1-6 |
CLOSE TO
THE SUN: |
Sept 20
(263) |
21 |
Equinox |
23 |
24 |
25 (84 + 184) |
26 |
ALCHITA
= α Corvi,
MA WEI (Tail of the Horse) = δ Centauri
(183.1),
MINKAR = ε Corvi
(183.7), ρ Centauri (183.9) |
PÁLIDA (Pale) = δ Crucis
(184.6),
MEGREZ (Root of the Tail) =
δ
Ursae Majoris
(184.9) |
Hasta-13 (Hand) /
Chariot-28 (Worm)
GIENAH (Wing) = γ
Corvi
(185.1),
ε
Muscae (185.2),
ζ
Crucis (185.4),
ZANIAH (Corner) = η Virginis
(185.9)
*144.0 = *185.4 - *41.4 |
CHANG SHA (Long
Sand-bank) = ζ Corvi
(186.3) |
INTROMETIDA (Inserted) =
ε
Crucis
(187.4),
ACRUX =
α
Crucis
(187.5)
*146.0 =
*187.4 - *41.4 |
γ
Com. Berenicis (188.0),
σ
Centauri (188.1),
ALGORAB = δ
Corvi
(188.5),
GACRUX
= γ Crucis
(188.7) |
γ
Muscae (189.0),
AVIS SATYRA (Bird of the Satyrs) =
η
Corvi
(189.3),
ASTERION (Starry) =
β
Canum Ven.
(189.5),
KRAZ = β Corvi,
κ Draconis (189.7) |
... Raven gazed up and down the beach. It was
pretty, but lifeless. There was no one about to
upset, or play tricks upon. Raven sighed. He crossed
his wings behind him and strutted up and down the
sand, his shiny head cocked, his sharp eyes and ears
alert for any unusual sight or sound. The mountains
and the sea, the sky now ablaze with the sun by day
and the moon and stars he had placed there, it was
all pretty, but lifeless. Finally Raven cried out to
the empty sky with a loud exasperated cry. And
before the echoes of his cry faded from the shore,
he heard a muffled squeak. He looked up and down the
beach for its source and saw nothing. He strutted
back and and forth, once, twice, three times and
still saw nothing. Then he spied a flash of white in
the sand. There, half buried in the sand was a giant
clamshell. As his shadow fell upon it, he heard
another muffled squeak. Peering down into the
opening between the halves of the shell, he saw it
was full of tiny creatures, cowering in fear at his
shadow ... |
CLOSE TO THE FULL
MOON: |
March 21
(80)
Al Fargh al Thāni-25 (Rear Spout)
0h (365.25)
CAPH (Hand) =
β
Cassiopeiae,
SIRRAH (Navel of the Horse) =
α
Andromedae
(0.5),
ε
Phoenicis,
γ³
Oct.
(0.8) |
22
Uttara Bhādrapadā-27 (2nd of the Blessed Feet) /
Wall-14 (Porcupine)
ο Oct. (1.3),
ALGENIB PEGASI = γ Pegasi
(1.8) |
23
χ Pegasi (2.1), θ Andromedae (2.7) |
24
σ
Andromedae (3.0), ι Ceti (3.3), ζ Tucanae (3.5), ρ
Andromedae, π Tucanae (3.7) |
Julian equinox
no
star listed (4) |
26 (85 =
185 - 100)
ANKAA = α Phoenicis,
κ Phoenicis (5.0)
ALPHARD (α
Hydrae)
|
27
λ
Phoenicis (6.3), β Tucanae (6.4)
*148.0
+ *183.0 = *331.0 = *6.4 - *41.4 + *366.0 |
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