Anciet Egyptian SCience Vol2
Anciet Egyptian SCience Vol2
Anciet Egyptian SCience Vol2
aflM
ANrlcan Philosophial1 Sodtty
Held 01 Philadelphia
for Promoling UsifuJ Knowledge
Volume 214
Clagett, Marshall
Ancien! Egyptian Science, Volume 2
includes bibliography and iodellOes
iIIuslraled
ISBN 0-87169-214-7
Preface
This volume is the second of the three volumes on
Ancient Egyptian Science which I hope to complete. I
have not included everything which I projected for
Volume Two in the Preface to Volume One. The
chapter and documents regarding mathematics are
missing. It would have greatly increased the length of
the volume to have included them here and accordingly
I decided to shift them 10 Volume Three. That shih
maKes no difference in the progression of subjects
originally planned for the whole worlc. for I believe that
the lack of theoretical discussions of mathematics by
the ancient Egyptians in their rudimentary science made
it imperative first to outline the principal uses of
mathematics by the dwellers on the Nile before
discussing its structure and content. One possible
benefit of including mathematics in Volume Three is
that it can be more closely related to my discussion of
Egyptian techniques of representing nature and within
that topic to appraisals of the ancient Egyptian lad: of
a direct angular or arcal measure to quantify stellar
displacements and thus produce more accurate celestial
diagrams. of the absence of an effective method of
geometric projection. and finally of their lack of any
extended use of perspective (which. however. surely
did not hamper their considerable artistic skilD.
The organization of the current volume is
self-evident. Again I have given a lengthy introductory
chapter which attempts to synthesize the three main
subjects included in the volume: calendars, clocks. and
astronomical monuments. It summarizes the principal
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PREFACE
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PREFACE
its Associate Editor. and to Susan Babbitt. who
skillfully copy-edited this volume. All have contributed
to its appearance. its accuracy. and its publication.
Once: again I have provided the Society with
camera-ready copy. using Printrix to print the copy and
Fontrix to create special fonts (see the Preface to
Volume One). But since the publication of the Cirst
volume. I have prepared addition!!l. smaller fonts to
represent the consonantal. phonetic transcription of
hieroglyphs and to indicate 8 large collection of
accented letters and letters with various diacritical
marks in order to print accurately the nolcs and
bibliography. My hieroglyphic fonts are those of the
first volume designed by me and greatly improved and
extended by Ann Tobias. though many more glyphs
have been rashioned ror this volume.
Marshall Clagcu
Proressor Emeritus
The Institute ror Advanced Study
Princeton. New Jersey
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CONTENTS
Table of Contents
Preface yll
Pari I, Chaptu Thr«' Cattod.rs, Clocks, and Astronomy
Ell.ypllan Calendars, Introductlon to EgyptIan C",ltndars 1
Parker', Accollnt or the Old lunar Calendar 7
Th,. I al"r I liner Calendar 23
The Orilio of the CIvil Calendar 28
Solblc Dales and the Eberl Calendar 37
The Nlr.kl HouTi 48
Deanal Clock. 53
Transll Dcnoal aocks 56
The Rlme-ulde SII[ Clock 59
Qul[]a,", Waler Clocks 6S
Inflow Water Clocks 77
Shadow Clock. 83
ElYpllan Sundial. 95
Tracts of .. 24-hour Day .... lIb Equal HOUri 98
Astronomical erllla&1 and Other Monument. 106
The Ceiling of the Secret Tomb of Seam"l III
The Va.,lttd Cellini of Han K In Sell 1'. Tomb 121
Egyptian Zodiac. 126
ConciudoD 127
Notto to Chapler Three 131
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Chapter Three'
Chapter Three
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civil year about one day later aher being on the same
day for four years and thus in the course of about 1461
civil years it fell successively aher every four years on
each day of the civil year until finally once again the
rising of Sirius took place on New Year's day of the
civil year. This long-term procession is called a Sothic
cycle. Now if a sixth epagomenal day were to be added
to the civil year at the end of every fourth year in
order to halt this march almost entirely, the civil year
so modified would then be known as a Sothic fixed
year, and the disparity of Sothic and civil years would
almost disappear (again see footnote 5). Despite the
belief of some earlier Egyptologists that the so-called
Ebers Calendar (Doc. 11I.2) is evidence of such a fixed
Sothic year, there is no sure evidence that the
Egyptians widely or regularly used a separate calendar
of the fixed year to which a sixth epagomenal day was
formally added every fourth year, lit least not before
the time of Augustus. (We may except from this
statement the abortive fixed-year calendar of Ptolemy
III promulgated by means of the Decree of Canopus in
238 B.C.. see Doc. 11I.10,) Still the Egyptians obviously
knew that the New Year's Day of the civil year,
initially set or better reset as I Akhet I by the rising of
Sothis. was, quadrennium by quadrennium, steadily
receding from the day of the rising of Sothis, appearing
almost always one day earlier than that rising after
each quadrennium, for at times they recorded (most
surely as the result of observation during most of the
Pharaonic period but perhaps occllsionally by
calculation by the time of the Ptolemaic period) the
rising of Sothis on different days of the diHerent civil
years, liS we shall see later when discussing Document
11I.10.6 Furthermore, it could well be that, as was
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Order of reasts
(l) wp rnpt
(2) [}Qwtyr
(3) tpy rnpt
(4) wi'
(5) Vb 5kr
(6) fJb wr
(7) rk(l
(8) prt Mn
(9) (/bc/J (n) 5t!
(10) (tp) 1M
(II) tp smdt
(12) fJb nb r C nb or variant....
The exceptions to be found are cerlainly
insufficient to weaken the overwhelming
evidence of II strict order to the calendar of
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Deeana! Clocks
Now we are prepared to examine in somewhat more
detail the early diagonal clocks based on the risings of
deCORS. Our generalized decaRal clock given in Figure
1JI.l3 is based on the detailed analysis of twelve father
incomplete and defective clocks on cornn lids that date
from about the time of Dynasty 9 or 10 to that of
Dynasty 12. The twelve clocks can be placed into five
groups, each of which has been cleverly dated by
Neugebauer and Parker.54 The least corrupt of the
texts on the various lids are those of Coffins I and 2
(sec particularly the coffin of Meshet given in
Document III.II and also Fig. 11I.16 for Coffin 2), which
have 34 decans instead of the full 36 decans. Indeed in
Document IIUI we are told in column 40. lines 1H2.
that 36 decans ought to be there (Iotal of those who
are "'in their places', the gods of the sky, 36").55 The
first line of the diagonal clocks, labelled T on the model
clock of Fig. 111.13 and reading from right to left,
contains the headings for the thirty-six decades or
IO-day periods we conventionally call "weeks" of each
month (labelled "first: "middle: or "last">. The months
are grouped into the three seasons of four months
which we have described above when discussing the
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movements of the two disks (j,e., the sun and the moon)
and of every star to its abode; for the ka of the
hour-....alcher amy wnw/} Hor. son of Hor-wedja: 71
Still, even if the title had a morc general meaning. one
would suppose that the astronomer might have assisted
in overseeing the remains of the old star clocks that
were added 10 temple monuments.
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month or that for the rirst month was used to tell the
hour during the epagomenal days. Under each month
the hour scale consists, as I have S1Iid. of a linearly
distributed series of small circular depressions each
about 1/5" in diameter.BS When the water level is at
one of the depressions it indicates the hour at that time
of the year to which the scale belongs. While the
depressions of each scale are by no means precisely
placed, the total lengths of the scales were quite
accurately measured, as we shall see later. The longest
scale is about 14 ringerbreadths. which is applicable to
the· month containing the winter solstice and thus the
longest night of the year. The shortest scale is about
12 ringerbreadths and is used for the month containing
the summer solstice and thus the shortest night. Each
fingerbreadth is equal to 18.75mm (j.e., about 3/4"). The
14,12 ratio is not a very good approximation of the
length of longest night to shortest night for Egypt.
The ratio 14,10 would have been a betler one. I shall
have more to say about the 14,12 ratio later. But we
should observe now that. since the civil year was about
1/4 day shorter than the rixed seasonal year, such a
clock progressively becomes out of synchronism with
the solar seasons (j,e., a shih of one month in about 120
years). Hence as time went on the scales were
necessarily being applied to months other than those to
which they were assigned in the clock. In fact, since
the shortest scale of 12 ringerbreadths was applied in
the Karnak clock to the civil month II Shemu, i.e.. the
tenth month of the civil year. it is evident that when
the clock was built in Amenhotep Ill's time it was
already out of date. since the assignment of its shortest
scale to the tenth month was not valid for the period
of Amenhotep III but rather for that of Amenhotep I
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autumnal-equinox scale placed over the
cynocephalos orifice seems to indicate that the
maker of the clock was trying to copy II
diagram which originated on the inside of a
prismatic clock of the 'chevron' type. CEIK.
where the cynocephalos orifice was placed. for
reasons of symmetry. below a solstitial scale:
the engraver of the Edfu diagram did not
realize that the h2:3 count of distances
between the scales must begin at a solstitial
scale. and that the position of the
cynocephalos orifice is irrelevant: he saw that
the diagram he was trying to copy started the
1=2:3 count from the orifice. and he faithfully
reproduced this irrelevant detail. The lengths
of the Edfu scales increase and decrease by
the traditional amounts, 1112, 1/6. and 1/4 of
the difference between the longest and the
shortest night. but the wrong starting point of
the 1,2,3 count leads to slow changes of the
lengths of the scales ncar the cquinoxes. and
to rapid changcs ncar thc solsticcs-an
absurdity which failed to shock the maker of
the Edru clock..Iwhol did not understand the
meaning or the 1,2,3 diagram.
While there is no archaeological evidence to
support Pogo's ingenious reconstruction other than the
existence or models or prismatic inrJow clocks (which
or course had no interior grids), it seems to me
inherently probable. However. we might well temper
somewhat his judgment that the inflow clock with its
interior grid was a truly original discovery and thus an
outstanding event in the history or science (sce note
103 below). for he does not mention the fact that the
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Shadow Clocks
The determination of hours in the daytime during
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Egyptian Sundials
The sun clocks described in the preceding section
measured shadow lengths projected by the sun orr the
edge of a vertical upright and they depended on the
altitude of the sun. The other major kind of sun clock
found in ancient Egypt was the vertical-plane sundial.
which. of course. measured the hours by the changing
angular direction of the shadow of a gnomon produced
by the sun during its daily motion. I shall consider
here two examples which are clearly of Egyptian origin.
The fragment of a third dial found at Dendera. which
includes only the radial lines marking the six hours
arter noon (Fig. 111.558). seems to be completely similar
to the rirst two examples and so I shall not examine it.
The rirst of the Egyptian sundials is 8 small ivory
disk found at Gezer in Palestine l11 (see Fig. 1II.55bl It
dates from the reign of Merenptah (ca. 1224-1214 o.c.).
whose cartouche it bears on the back of the disk and
who is also pictured there making an offering to Tholh.
Above the scene are the cartouches of the king. On the
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nighttime. 12
III Alchet. Day I, daylight .• 12 1/4;
nighttime. II 3/4
Oil Akhet. [Oayl IS, daylight....; nighttime.
... )
(IV) Alchet. Day II daylight. 13 3/4;
nighttime, 10 1/4
IV Akhet, <Day IS, daylight, ... 1 nighttime,
_. )
(1 Per)el, Day I: daylight. 14; nighttime. 10
I Perct. Day 1(5), (daylight•...; nighttime.
... )
(II Peret,> Day 11 daylight. 14; nighttime. 10
II Peret. Day 15, daCylight .... 1 nighttime•
... )
(III Peret. Day., daylight. 13;) nighttime. 11
III Perel, Day 15, daylight. 12 1/4 1/6:
nighttime. (II 113 114)
(IV Peret, Day I, daylight, ...; nighttime.
... )
(IV Peret. Day) 15, daylight. 12; nighttime.
12
I Shemu. Day I: (daylight, ...1 nighttime.... )
(J Shemu, Day 15: daylight. II 1/3 1/4;
nig)httime 12 1/4 116
II Shemu, Day I: daylight. 22 (sic);
nighttime. C. )
(J) Shcmu. Day 15: daylight•...; nighttime.
... )
(III Shemu. Day I, daylight•...; nighttime.
... )
(III Shemu. Day 15: daylight. 9 1/3;
nighttime 1)4 112 1/6
IV Shemu. Day I: daylight. L; nighttime.
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... )
(IV Shemu. Day J5l daylight•...; nighttime.
...
)
Clere suggests that unlike the Ramesside table,
which is a schematized table where the values seem to
have been arbitrarily chosen, with their succeeding
increments and decrements being 8 fixed two hours
each month. the Tanis table despite its gross
incompleteness and inaccuracies has no trace of
schematization of the values. In elaboration he
continues: 128
One does not rind either regular progression or
parallelism in the sequences. The few
observable concordances (for example, the
same duration of 12 h. 25 m. for the daylight
one month before. and for the night one
month afler the autumnal equinox. 15.IV.prd
are certainly fortuitous-except. doubtless. for
the duration of 12 hours. which. placed at a
6-month interval and a mid-distance between
the solstitial days. ought to have been
intentionally regularized to bear witness of
the understanding that the Egyptians had of
the phenomenon of the equinoxes"..The
duration-values of the text of Tanis certainly
rest upon observations and. if they differ from
the actual values. it could only be that some
of the errors were owing to the imperfection
of the measuring instruments employed to
determine them. There could, of course, also
have been copyist crrors.
It was also observed by Clere that the use of fractional
hour measurements in this table demonstrated that the
Egyptians did not simply use successive divisions by
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triangle decans used in the old star clocks for the hours
during the epagomenaJ days: these triangle decans were
also accompanied by stars. their associated gods. and
less frequently other material (such as a depiction of
the constellation of the Two Tortoises under the decan
§/lVy). After the last regular decan, that of Isis-Sothis
(j.e.. Sirius). and before the triangle deities the names of
the three outer planets <Jupiter, Saturn, and Mars, or
sometimes only Jupiter and Saturn, Mars being omitted)
were given and following the triangle decans the two
inferior planets Mercury and Venus were added. As
depictions of the exterior planets we find two or three
figures of Horus in a bark. For Venus the deity names
b l/) and lVslr (Osiris) are given and a heron is depicted.
So much then for the celestial bodies south of the plane
of the ecliptic (those of the decanal belt) and the bodies
which in their motions intersect the plane of the
ecliptic Cthe planets). All of the decanal and planetary
material ordinarily occupies one grand southern panel.
In addition, many of the monuments include in a
northern panel a group of constellations oriented about
the Big Dipper. These are usually called the "Northern
Constellations: though the changing arrangements of
these constellations and their accompanying deities from
monument to monument makes their identification
(except for the Big Dipper) extremely difficult if not
impossible. Hence without II sure identification of these
constellations, we cannot assert that all of them are
necessarily circumpolar. as is usually said. though I
suspect that they are since the Egyptians
conventionally distinguish two groups of stars, namely
the Imperishable stars, which are the circumpolar stars
that do not set, and the Unwearying Stars, which are
the decans and planets (see Volume One, Index of
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Egyptian Zodiacs
One last kind of astronomical decoration on
monuments (temples. coffins. and tombs) needs to be
treated, Egyptian zodiacs. all of which originated in the
Greco-Roman period. The earliest known Egyptian
zodiac (the so-called una A zodiac) was 8 rectangular
one hom the temple of Khoum 2 1/2 miles northwest of
Esna, that is. from the part of the temple originating in
the reigns of Ptolemy III-V. Hence it dated from about
200 D.C. That temple was destroyed in 1843 to build a
canal and the zodiac disappeared along with it. But the
zodiac is still preserved in a plate from the Description
de I'~gypte (see Document 111.17 and Figs. 111.758 and
1II.75bJ.
The pictorial representations of the zodiacal signs in
the Egyptian zodiacs (though nol their full range of
Hellenistic additions) were surely of ultimate
Babylonian origin. This is true of both the early
rectangular form of the zodiacs and of the round
zodiacs where the signs constitute a circular belt (as in
the Dendera B zodiac presented in Document 111.17 and
depicted in Figs. JII.76a and 1II.76b). Though it is
tempting to think that the Egyptian round zodiacs
represented the divisions of the zodiac in terms of
degrees (as some of the earlier investigators seem to
have assumed). it is evident from the analysis of the
celestial diagrams I discussed above that there was no
use of a system of degrees in ancient Egypt to measure
celestial arcs. The Egyptian zodiacs not only included
the signs of the zodiac but the old hour decans. the
planets. and other Egyptian stars or constellations as
well (like the Big Dipper and the Hippopotamus). By
the time of the preparation of these zodiacs. the risings
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Conclusion
So far I have discussed the principal Egyptian texts
and monuments bearing on aSlronomy. The reader may
have been conscious of the fact that almost all of the
documents have been anonymous. A spectacular
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(I.e., day and night). the months, lind the yeln: See H. BrulSCh.
Th~saurus loscrlpt/anum ~gyptillclI,.um. 2. Abthellunl 10r.oz, 1968.
unaltered repro of Leipzig ed. of 1885-911. p. SIt. Parker noler lhlt
pusage as one indlcattnt. the relationship of the moon to the yeu
ICalendar" 32). The only reeron I quote II here Is the posslblllty
that puhaps the dual form of "lime" or "perIod" (drllli or trwlJ
Indicated here rather peculiarly by the addition of 1.... 0 .olar sign,
surmounting the normal plunl form of three Ilroke. (~:f ,e,)
instead of the common dual form of two Slroke. might be an error
for the form wllh one lolar Ilgn lurmounllnll the three .troke•. If
10. then It would bream.... plural form for "seasons" and ....e could
Iransl.le the end of the plluage as • .... ho dlvldu the seasons, the
months, and the yean: and Indeed that Is ho.... Brugseh translated
It. But In any cue. the hymn Is 100 laic 10 be of any slgnlncance
as evIdence for the old lunar calendar.
4. J. Cerny. "The Origin of the Name of the Monlh Tybl:
ASAE. Vol. 43 (19431, pp. 173-81. CHing A. Erman.
"Monatlnamen aus dem neuen Reich: Z)(S. Vol. 39 (l9OU. pp.
128-30, he says (p. 173), "Only more recently has It been possIble 10
trace thele month-namu back to aclual names occurring In bUllneu
teKtl of the Ramenlde period: He also mentions the earlier
monlhly festival names of Ihe Eben calendar and those of the
Calendar of Lucky and Unlucky Days that Abd el-Mashen Baklr
....al later to edit, The Cairo Calendar No. 86637 (Cairo. 19661. p.
54, Veno XIV. The usC' of the month name Instead of lis number
In a rC'gnal date occurs only latcr. An Inscription on a statue of III
(an offlclal of the reign of KlnS Shabah of the 25th dynutyJ In
the British MusC'um (No. 244291 may be the first recorded rC'gnal
date In .... hlch a month (Paynl! Is named. See T.G.H. James and
W.V. Davies. Egyptian Sculpture (London, 19831. p. 53.
5. I remind the reader of the followIng more precise values,
The Julian Year Is 365.25000 dayl. Becaule of the aSlronomlnl
eondltlons during the whole Egypllan period, the 50thle year Is
virtually Identlnl In length to the Julian year !the total delay of
the riling of Sot his bet ....een 4231 B.C. and 231 B.C. Is aboUI one
day, after that time the progrcsslon of delay accelerates 10 that by
1926 A.D. an IIddltlonal delay of about 2.64 days hal occurred, see
also the data mentIoned In note 7 of the Introductlon to Document
111.101. The solar, natural (better, troplcall, year, I.e., the Interval
between two consecutive solstices. Is 365.24220 days. The
difference bet ....een the Julian and tropical yun Is 0.00780 days
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ANCIENT EGYPTIAN SCIENCE
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•
NOTES-CHAPTER THREE
may ....ell r"neet the Yery ancient view that Ihe )lnr war to begin
with the .udden rl.lng of the Nile. In Ihe many rcf"ren".... liven
for I Akhet I by Scholl, he 0;11.... Hat.hepsul's remark IUrl:unfhn IV
2611 thai her r.ther -knew that. crownlns on New Yur', Day
....ar good Ii.e., hvonbld: thus lending mrne support to Gardiner',
Idea thai New Year', Day war considered an appropriate day for
Ihe accession Clf the king, and .. sueh produced .. feul
dl.llngulsh"ble from other fealts on that day. For Ihe "oonection
of Thoth with the reckoning of time. IU the eollecUon of hll
epllhets thai I hIve assembled In Volume One. p. 304.
26. Ie Set he, "Ole Z"ltrec:hnung der alten Xgypler 1m
Vuhllinl. zu der der andern Vlilker," N.chrkhlen von der
K6nl611chen Geullsch.rt du Wluenschaften zu G6ttlngen.
Phllologl«h-hlstorl$Ch~J:la~ au, d~m Jah~ 1920 (Berlin. 192m,
pp.I30-38.
27. Ca/~ndal7, p. 13.
28. O. Neui~baue~ and A. Volten. 'Unl<trsuchunp,en zu~
antlken ASlronomle IV: Qu~II~n unci Stud/~n zur (k~hlcht~ tier
Math~matfk, Astronomle, und Physik, Abt. B, Vol. 4 119381. pp.
401-02.
29. Pa~ke~, C./~nd.r~ pp. 15-16.
30. Ibid.. pp. 17-22. He conclude' (p. 221 by saylnp, that 'Of
Ihe enll~e HYenleen calculallon., nIne Ilndlutel month. Ithall .tl~t
on Ihe mornlnp, of old crneent Invl.lbillty, fIve on the day of neW
c~escent YI.lblllty, Iwo on the day In between. Ind one on the day
before the mornlnp, of InYblblllty. Thl. I. p~ecliely Ihe .art of
l~relular1ty that one "'ould expe<:t f~om a cycle scheme, ~lgldly
adhffed 10, In contnst 10 a method of strict obse~vallon for
slartlng the month ....!n my mind thue I. not the .llghtest doubt
thai the cyclIc calendar Wa' In use during Ihe pedod coYe~ed by
the lunar dues:
31. O. Neulebauu In hi. laler ,.,o~k A History of Ancient
Math~matlcal Astronomy. Pari 2 (Berlin, Heldelbera, and New
York. 19751, pp. 563-64, accepl. bolh Ihe Ylew of Ihe redonlna of
lunar monlh. from thO" lime of InYI.lblllty and Parker'. aenenl
t~ellmenl and dating of the 25-yur cycle. He does. however, add
Ihe follo""lna .tltemenl' "As "'e hlye ~emarked before, the dales
furnished by the cycle ag~ee with the bellnnln,. of Ihe Egyptian
luna~ month. In lhe fourth cenlury B.C. Since dales p~oYldcd by
Ihe cycle Ind Iclual lunar date. ,.,111 only .gr~e In the mean and
.Ince the dIfference. belween cycl~ dates and faCti wlll vary only
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ANCIENT EGYPTIAN SCIENCE
v~ry .Io....ly, one cannot exclude. date of orlsln of the cycle. "y,
In the firth nntu...)' B.C. If Ihl. dale ....er.. correct II would
con,tltute • curlou. parall"l to the c:onlemporuy development of
mathematical astronomy In Mnopolaml.. In "either case I. tkere
the .llghte.t lodlc.llon of Greek Or any olher forell" Influence.
Nevertheless U look. aI If the creation of the Persian empire
.Ilmul.ted intellectual life c ...ery.... here In Ihe anclent world of
which Ihe HellenistIc world was to become the heir: Regardlnl the
beslnnlnl of Ihe lunar month ""uh ,"re'unl Invl.lbUUy h" says Ip.
563, n. 31 that it -'I In .n probability C:lIund by the EJyptl.n
reckonlnl of the day from lunrlse.• procedure .... hlch In itself LI
mOil n.tunl and d~1 not re:qulre any •• tronoml".1 motlvaUon:
32. Cillmd.rs. pp. 24-26.
33. IbId.. p. 26.
34. Ibid.• pp. 27. 29.
35. Parker. Ibid.. pp. 27-29. rejeel. the schemn prnenled by
L. Borchudt and G. Whl:l:ll:r. W. Buta. "OIl: Jgyptlschl:n
Mondaten und del' 25-Jahr'Zyklus dl:. Papyrus earlobeI'I 9: ZXS.
Vol. 106 119791. p. 10 (full artlcll:, pp. HOl nSC'nually a,rl:e.....Ith
Parku and doubt. E. Hornun,'s opinion that Ihe 25-yur cycle
mll!.ht havl: alrudy Ml:n kno .... n In Ihl: 18th dynasty.
36. Ed. of K. Scothe, Ole .lllgyptf«hm Pyr.mldmteKle, Vol. 2
lulpzlg. 191OJ, UtteranCe' 669. Sut. 1961b-c, p. 472. Scol: alJO
refl:rencu to thl: I:p.gomen,,1 day. In the Introduction to Doc. lll.l
nn. 2-3, and 10 the document 1t.l:lf. Mid. Kln,d .. Il:ct. I, from Ihl:
tomb of Khnumhopll:p al Benl Ha.an and that of Amenemhet at
TheM•.
37. Xgypllsche ChronologIe IBerlln. 1904l; N.chlrlge zur
Xilyptlschen Chronologie (Berlin. 1908).
38. De die nal./I, ceo 18. 21. See Document IIlJO. Sut. 6, for a
translallon of the Latin teltl of Cen.orlnus· dl.cunlon. of thl:
Sothic year. There has Men a ,rut dul or dl.cuulon of thue
pa.sa'.... and I rcfu the ruder to R. lepslus. Ole Chronologie dcol"
Acogypur. Eln/coltung del" corrlCOI" Theil. Kr/tlt dcor Quco/Icon (BerlIn,
1849l, pp. 167-71: Ml:yu. Xgypllsche Chrono/oglco, pp. 23-29; l.
Borchardt, Quellen und Forschungen zur Zellbntlmmung der
Igyptlscht'n Gl:schlehle, Vol. I. Dlt' Ann./con und die ze/tllehco
Fat/egung des .lten Reichel del" 'gyptlschen Geschlchtco. p. 55; and
10 Wl:lIl. Chronologk l-gyptlenne. pp. 9-15. 59-60. 65-66.
39. 1 say "polilble quadnnnial datn" since thl: filled Sothle
yur Is 365 1/4 days and hence thl: ri.lng of Sirius markin, the
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ANCIENT EGYPTIAN SCIENCE
every yeu: the aver_ling of the execsr num~r of days over any
interval of conlt.n! lenllih lny twelve lunar months} ,II/n the
lame rcsult. This equal dlstribullon of counllng-marks finally
mahs It dear that no fraction .....Ill be the relult of the
process....lpp. 401-02, n. 17), When I revle .... ed thlt c:onten! of lhl.
paper al the meetlo. of the American Oriental Society In Botlon.
Profusor H. FranHort ..ked whether the Instltutlon of the
","hematic calendar c:auld be a..umed to belonl to the relao of
Djoser. I think that no "rioul objectlQn can be ral.ed a,alnsl luch
an allumption. because the only eondltlon for the nUlion of the
schematic calendar Is • lufflclently well-organized and dCYeloped
Konamlc life. On the other hand, muns 10 determine luch • date
by a.tronomful cansidcrllUanS do not exlsl. The problem of the
inl/entlon of the .chematlc month. mUlt nat be confulll!d ...lth the
problem of the period In which the 365-day year wa. Introduud.
The t....o in.llIullon. ue IlbsoJutely Indepo:ndcnl - lit leal! In
principle. The 365-day year mu.t have been created al a period
... hen the Inund.Uon ..oln..lded rouahly ....lth the Rasan ...lIed
'InundatIon'. Su..h a ...,lncidcn"l! hl!ld for thl! unlurll!" Ilraund
4200 and aallin for Ihe cl!'nlurle. around 21KXl. The lalter date
Ii.e., the time of DjolerJ h.. been "onlldered by Winloc:k...•• the
dalc of Ihe deflnlle establllhmeni of the ElJ,ypUan year: At this
point Neugeb'auer refer. to the paper of A. St:huff. HI.torl«he
Z"ft«hrJft, Vol. 161 (J9391, pp. 3-32.....hlch araun Ilgalnlt the
earlier date.
44. C,'"nd.,... Chllp. IV.
45. C.Jl!nd~rs, p. 53.
46. The'l! posllble datc. for the Inaugur.tlon of the sc:hl!mlltlc
year are b..ed on the coincidence of the hellacal ri.ina of Sirlul
and the New Year'l Day In 2773 B.C. For it II el/ldenl that if the
Ncw Year'. Day of thc cll/ll year .dl/anced 41 day. (I.e., II • 30
day.) It will hal/e beaun that adl/ancement 164 11.c.. 41 X 4)
calcndar yur. earlIer. thai II In 2937 B.C. But If iI adl/anced 12
dayl. It began Ihat adl/ancement 48 (I.e.• 12 x 4) yun euller. that
II In 2821 B.C. But an of thll resll on hi. ,uaaelted mechanllm of
lnterCllllltlan or II thlrtecn month, I.e.. lu..h II month ...... lidded
.... hcn Sirius rOSI! ....ilhin the laot Ii day. of thc twdfth month.
Parker flnd. lupport for hIlI/Ie..... by IInllly'Zlng the 59 dellles that
occur flnt on the baR of II relalll/cly late .tatue of Mut of the
22nd dynlllty lIbld.. 54-561. Ue .uggclli thai Ihe 1111 rCl/ul1 the
dual character or the concept of 'year: R.I(. Kuuss.....haR
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ANCIENT EGYPTIAN SCIENCE
axn may have bee" aUaneod towud specific rl.lnl or KIll"1 Itars,
by using Ihe equations of preCflslon which ilt;COunl for motion of
the earth', axl••bout Ihe North Celestial Pole: Well. note. the
utle of hI. prcllmlnu)' Invnllgallon of the IUuclted method.
Vcry Ilronl support for Ihe usc of s'a.. rlsln'l or tra"slll
with u:aclly m"iJ.ur"d temple .Uaomenl. 10 determine foundation
d",tn II found In the more recent Stud/cn zur l/lypllschcn
AstronomJc (Wlcsbadcn. 1989) of Christian Leitz, who usn this
technique and other ..lranomlc:.1 c:onsldenllon. Independent of the
conYentlonal employment of Ul the hell.cal rlslna of Sirius on liven
days of the civil yur In yulous reigns and (21 known lunar and
clvU-year double dates, lh.l 1_, Ihe main techniques I dncrlbe here
In this volum~. J not~ thaI Leitz bell~"~r thai h~ har rhown that
th~ r~cent effortr of Krau$I and otherr to loat~ th~ place of
obrer"atlon and thul th~ cal~ndar referenc~ point at AI....an .Ire
Incorr~ct (p. VIIl, "DI~ "orl1ea~nd~ Arbelt brlnal 8 "on~lnand~r
unabhlnala~ ntronomlsche Araum~nl~ fUr Unlu'aypl~n, soda" In
d~n Augen der VerfaSRrr dar Probl~m dec "_lend~rbezu&lpunkt~1
all !!.elllst errchdnt -nlcht not ....endl!!.er....elle aber du der absoluten
Chronologie Alt1ayptenr: My flrrt reactIon Ir that I cannot aarM
....Ith all of hlr "ariOUI arrumpllonr and analYln of pertinent lextr,
but I rhould note thai I had completed my "olume when I finally
obtained a copy of Lell",'r book. Hence to be fair. I mUlt Iea"e my
erllmate of the roundnerr of hlr work to a future date. I do nole,
howe"er. that my late colluaue Olto Neup;eb.uer "ehemently
r~..Iected Cfor the morl partl the "alue of templ~ aUgnment data for
there dllcurrlonl,
50. "On the Chronology of Ihe Early Elahteenth Dynasty
CAmenhot~p I 10 Thutmor~ lin: The American Journa' of Semitic
unguagn and Literaturel, Vol. 53 119361, pp. 192-93 Cfull article.
pp. 188·971.
5!. Unt~rruC"hungen zur Chronologie, p. 21.
52, R. Leprlur, DIe Chronologie der Acgypter eBcrlln. 18491, p.
lSI-56, 165-67; H Bruasch, MlI,l-rJ6ux pour serylr. la constrllC"lIon
du ca'endrlu del anc/enl l-gyptlenl ILclpz1a. 19641. pp. 28-29.
L~prlur arau~r from Hor_pollo'r r~ference to Ih~ EaypUanr' "year
of th~ four y~lIrr: .... hlch he CLepslur) takes 10 be Ihc quadrennium
of thr"", yean of 365 daYI and one of 366, and from Ihe referencer
In the EXnl Haran calendar 10 the ferUyal of New Year'l Day. 10
that of the "EX"lnnlna of th~ Sun Year" lhtr tranllallon of "p
rnptl, and to the ferll"all of Ihe areal and Imall yurr lice Doc.
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ANCIENT EGYPTIAN SCiENCE
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NOTES-CHAPTER THREE
IransUs and seasonal hour Un at the base of the stu clocks. That
small partl of " decao were C'on.ldcred slaods 10 rUlon, If the
dlfh'rcnul ..ovcrnl by Ihe chari' werc more than. denn... the
nlronomer should have observed the stu of Ihe nelll or former
dennl The observallon. ue therefore undoubtedly meant to have
an accuracy of fome minutes of sidereal time. As we h,.vc alrudy
lndlcatfl:!. an aJ£umpllOn of • conslanl duration of twlUght Is
Identlcal with removing from observed facti Ihe change In dur.lIon
of the day and night In Ihe automatically con.tant dC'C'anal houn.
Moreover, true star po.ltloru "£ed to Imply Jlu/omat/cally the 11m.:
..quatlon and ;II Neugebauer and Parker neglected this lime
~u;.Uon completely their method of Interpretallon Is completely
ruined by their flrst Issumptlon Ind even If lhls were nOI the case.
1111 Is I"aln ruined by their nealecllnl the time equltlon:
80. See the InVoductlon to Document 1ll.14 Ind Neulebluer
Ind Plrker. Egyptian Astronomical TeJC/~. Vol. 2. pp. Ix'x.
81. For I detilled descrlptlon of both types. see L. Borchardt.
Ole I/tlgyptl~"e Zeltmenung {Berlin and leipzig. 19201. pp. 6-26.
To Borchardt's list of fragments of outflow docks {see next note
belowl mlY be Idded Ihose cited by Didier Devluchelle In W. Heick
Ind W. Weslendorf, eds.. LeNllon der A·gyplo/ogle. Vol. 6,
(Wlesbaden. 19861. ee. 1156-57 l"W..seruhr-J. Cr. Neugebauer and
Plrker, Egyptian A.tronomJr:11 TeNt., Vol. 3, pp. 12, 42, Ind 60.
See Iiso R.W. Sloley, "Ancient Clepsydrle: Ancient Egypt, Vol. III
09241, pp. 43-50. Ind by Ihe same luthor, -Prlmillve Methods of
MeasurIng Time with Speclll Reference to EIYP"- The Journ61 of
qypflan Archlt!OJogy, Vol. 17 (19311, pp. 174-76 (full article, pp.
166·78). Incidentally. in FIll.. 1lI.2Ib. I hive ginn conslde",bly
better photographs of the exlerlor, Interior, Ind edge of wlter
clock No. 938 II the Brltl,h Museum In London {Borchardt',
Ausllufuhr 61 lhln Borchardt'l lingle photograph of the exterior.
Note that Borch.rdt 11.1,," • drlwlnll. of those II.radullions of the
Interior surface of Auslaufuhr 6 lhal rem.ln (-my FIll.. 11I.2Icl. I
h....e 01150 .dded. In FIll.. 1I1.21d, exterior and Interior views of I
frlll.ment or I second wlter clock INo. 933) at the Brltllh Museum.
82. Borchardl, Ole altlgyptlsche Zeltmessung, pp. 6-7. On pp.
7·10 Borch.rdl descrlbes brlerly fnll.menls of 12 olher wlter
docks. See al50 the lilt given by Devluchelle In the article
mentIoned In the preceding note. See A. Wiedemann. -Bronze
Clrde:ll and Purlflcallon V"sels In ElI.yplian Temples: PSBA. Vol.
23 (June, 1901l, pp. 270·74 (full arllcle. pp. 263-741. where
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ANCIENT EGYPTIAN SCIENCE
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NOTES-cHAPTER THREE
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ANCIENT EGYPTIAN SCIENCE
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ANCIENT EGYPTIAN SCIENCE
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NOTES-CHAPTER THREE
dlrrerern:c;
during ... SOh month. ... d., Increases b, 1/6 •r ,h•
dlffer!!m:e;
durlnl
difference.
,h. 6.. month. ... d., lncrcues b, 1112 .r ...
The numeratOrl of thue fractlons lall belna unllyl
Immediately sUBaul an Egyptian orlalo of Oeomedes' rule:. A
,I.nu at our dlagrams...sha..... thu these shl f,actlon. ue: the:
direct rClult of the 1,2,3 prD<;UI of dlllributlna the Iwelve: monthly
real" on the four Inside ....all. of • squue: lnflo.... dodt; It ",al the
Intention of the ElypUan Invenlor of the ),2,3 dlagnm to produce
lICale• •howlng .10....er monthly vuleUons near the lolstlces and
hr!"r onel near the equinoxes; the monthly nln, 1/12, 1/6, and
1/4. happen to be an lnevll.ble consequence, for the ardln.ln of
the dla,,.m, of • simple and rymmetdcal geometrical construction
Hred on the f.vorlte Ecyptlan fractions, 1/2 .nd 1/3, .pplled to the
.bsdnae....
...: both the Elyptl.n Inventor of the 1,2,3 dlaKr.m for
prllmatle Inflow docks, .nd the EKypU.n astronomer who rlrst
fOrfl'lu!.ted the duodecimal rule concernlnK the monthly rate. Were
so dOle to the true lolullon of the problem that their .chlevementl
duerve a pl.ce of honor In the history of EKypUan sc:lence:
lOS. "Ancient Clep"ydrae: pp. 49-S0, and "Prlmllive Methodl
of MeasurlnK Time: pp. 176-77.
106. ConcernlnK the word /nl here rendered as "discern lor
mUlure 11: Borchardt, DIe altSgyptische Z ..ltm..rsung. p. 27. and
n. I. uses "zlhh: Thll usuaUy tr.nll.tel /nw ("numberl"', .... here..
the translation "discern" more often renders Jnl. Borchardt was
obvioully looklnl for. meanlnl more precllely connected with the
meuurlnl of Ihadow lenlths, I.e., where the sh.do.... lenlth Irows
conlinually Ihorter up to the time of nOOn. Indeed Borchardt Ices
on to IUllelt th.t the meai'lli'll of the passaiC II th.t becaule of an
edlple of the lun It W.I not ponible to fix the time by means of
shadow lenlth numbers. The p.suKe may however limply mean
that the sun-lad .t the lime or IOCI.I upheaval wllirully projected
too we.k • light to produce. Ih.do..... ay by produclnK overc.st
days. In either case It does .ssume that lime tellln(l, was associated
....lth Ihado.... leolth.
Borch.rdt (Ibid.• pp. 27-321 dlscuslel t ....o leIs or monthly
tablel seemlnKly related to Ih.do.... lengths for the lelllni of tlme.
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ANCIENT EGYPTIAN SCIENCE
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NOTES-CHAPTER THREE
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ANCIENT EGYPTIAN SCIENCE
Flil. SSe-b. A. for the month-names at the end of nth line Ibut
the flnt), I have not attempted to rpectfy ""hal elements of the
month- ....ords and their determinative' are mlssina bUI have limply
used the conventional lpeltlngl. In Ihl. translalion I have in lOme
place•• for typolnphlul rUlon., lubrllluled parenlhet<" for
.quare bracketl. But It should be clear to the reader from the
diagram. of the texl ""hal parts are mlnioa and .... h.t part••re not
readable.
122. Neugebauer and Parker. Egyptian A$lronomka' Text$"
Vol. I, p. 120.
123. Ibid. For the earlter rem.r'" of J.J. ellr.:. ue 'Un text.:
ulronomlque de Tanis: Klml. Vol. 10 119491, p. 10 {whole .rllcle
pp.3-271.
124. ellr.:. op. cit. in nole 123. p. 3.
125. Neugebauer and Parker. Egyptian A$lronomleal Texts,
Vol. 3, p. 44.
126. The figure Ibid.. Plate 23. add, column. II and 12 and
marh them a. ITextl 1lI. A brIef treatment of theft column. II
given by Cilre, op. cU. In note 123, pp. 20-21, and by Neugebauer
and Parker. Egyptian A.tronomlca' Text•. Vol. 3, p. 47.
127. Compare the tran.latlons of Cllre, op. cit. In note 123, p.
9. and NeuBebauer and Par hr. Egyptian Artronomlca' Text., Vol.
3. pp. 45-46. Again, 81 In the earlier table. I have used. for
typosr.phle,1 rea.ons, parenthuell Instead of .quare bracket. In my
translations. The reader can easlly see from the figures ...hlch
readlnBs are dlrrlcult to read and ...hlch are .Imply mining hom
the fragment. CIlre', clear discussion {pp. II-18l of the termlnolOlY
u.ed In the lllble I. helpful. He .ho.... the "senllal equivalence of
mtrt, whleh I have rendered a. "daylight" though II commonly
mun. "noon: wilh hrw. the common word for "day used In the
RamelSlde table above. which. Incldentally. I have also translated a.
"dayltght:
128. J.J, Cilre, "Un texle aslronomlque de Tanl.: pp. 10-11.
129. Ibid.. pp. 16·17.
130. EgypUan A.'ronomlcal Tex,.. Vol. 3. pp. 46-47.
131. IbId" Vol. 3, pp. 1-104.
132. Ibid.. pp. 4-5.
133. Brugsch, Thesauru. In~rlptlonum IIlegyptlaCllrum. I. Abt.,
pp. 52-53, relates the name. of the feaus of the protective gods of
the day. of lunar month. and lhe plctorl,l reprelientaUons of these
day'gods at the time of Dynasty 19. In Brugseh·. chari on p,ge 53
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NOTES-CHAPTER THREE
of his volume, th.. Roma" numerals show ""hlch days of the month
Ihe deities belong to. Sn also Document 111.3 (followlna the ~l;lIon
on Ihe Northern ConstellaHons) and nole. to Document JIl.6 below
for the nrller referencC'I to lome of thele' prolc<:tlve god. on the
cellinI'. of Ihe tomb of Sf:nmut and other ulronomlc"l ~llln&l.
134. I have omlued any dllcunlon of Ihe nrller loose boards
from Ihe coffin of Hcny. which probably date from Dyna.ly 11 and
thul IUlp,ul that the I'andud fOl'"m of thl! 8Slronomlclll diagram
Orlllo"led on coffins In Ihe 11th dynasty, or before. For their
dlscoYery In 1922. Ie'," G.A. Wainwright. "A SulnJdlary Burial In
!;Iap-Zerl'. Tomb ,,' Asslut: ASA£ Vol. 26 (1926), pp. 160-66, and
for Ihe IStronomlcal Inscriptions 1« B. Gunn, Ihe Coffins of
lJeny'- Ibid., pp. 166-71. See aim A. Poao. "The Astronomical
Inscriptions on the Coffins of I;teny (Xllh dynnty1): lSI$, Vol. 18
(1932), pp. 7-13, and the brief trealment In Neugebauer and Parker,
Egyptian Astronomical T~xts, Vol. 3, pp. 8-10. Th~ pl!rllnent
ntronomical [nscrlption. are on board nOs. [ (Inside, see Fig. 1ll.62a)
and 4 (Inllde, Fig. 1Il.62b). Board no. I hal the remain. of Ihe
Norlhern Con.lellallons arranged about the Big DlppI!r (with lome
of the flanking day-dellll!lJ and baud No.4. we are laid by Gunn
(p. 169, para. 4, and ue Fig. 1Il.62bl, had "lracu of lhrll!l! regillers
divided up by vertical IlnCI' In the uppl!rmolt, names of Itan or
con.lellatlon•...: In Ihe Rcond reglsler. Illegible Ilgn. In red: In the
lowelt, varying numberl of Ilarl In blue." In the vilible parI of
board no. 4. we can Identify lhe Ilgns 11~ for Sepedet ISpdtJ or
50thll {-Sirius!. The Ilgn. before thll name ousht 10 have lome
relallon.hlp 10 Ihe decans made up from Orlon (bul lhls cannol be
confirmedl, while thOR afler Sirlul appear 10 be partl of the nam...
of the planel Jupiter. Unfortunately the boards appl!u 10 have
be...n reburied afler Ih...lr In.crlptlon. were tran.crlbed by Gunn
and hence are not now available.
135. Aside from the description In Neugebauer and Parker
(Ibid., pp. 10-12, and pa•• lm throughoul the volume). we .hould elle
the mosl Imporlanl of Ihe earlier dllCUlllonl, namely that of A.
Pogo, "The Altronomlcal Celling-decoralion In the Tomb of Senmut
(XVllIlh Dynaslyl: Isis. Vol. [4 11(30). pp. 301-25.
136. H.E. Winlock. "The Egyptian El<pedltion 1925-1927,"
Section {{ of the Bufl..t1n of the Metropolitan Mus...um of Arts
(February, 19281, pp. 32-44, full arllcle pp. 3-58.
137. Neugebauer and Parker. Egyptian Astronomical Texts,
Vol. 3, pp. II. 105'06.
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NOTES-CHAPTER THREE
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