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Encyclopedia of society and culture in the ancient world ( PDFDrive ) 157

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In general, the ancient Chinese classifi ed astronomical events into two categories: predictable and unpredictable.. Predictable events included the shift ing of the phases of the moon a

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understanding of astrology Kings, in fact, restricted such

study to scholars under royal employment, in hopes of

main-taining a sure hold on power that was oft en secured through

accurate predictions Into medieval times ordinary citizens

were punished for possessing or using objects associated with

the measurement of celestial bodies or with divination based

on such measurements Th e importance ascribed to the study

of astronomy is refl ected in the fact that the Chinese

record-ed a number of observations before either the Greeks or the

Babylonians

In general, the ancient Chinese classifi ed astronomical

events into two categories: predictable and unpredictable

Predictable events included the shift ing of the phases of the

moon and the rotation of the constellations around the North

Star Unpredictable events of particular note included the

wandering of the planets (whose orbits were long

undeter-mined in geometric terms), the appearance of comets, and

instances of sunspots, which were especially observable when

dust storms in northern China screened the sun’s glare A

great deal of attention was paid to these unpredictable events,

which wise men, particularly those in the service of rulers,

interpreted in order to extract cosmic meaning

Knowledge regarding predictable events, then, was

val-ued largely for its providing the frame of reference against

which unpredictable events occurred Th e origins of an

impe-rial almanac, which served as a register of these predictable

events, are so ancient as to be obscure Th e almanac

delin-eated the annual astronomical cycle, including the lengths

of the months (which were based on the phases of the moon

and thus varied from year to year) and the dates of the

equi-noxes (the two times of the year at which the sun crosses the

equator and day and night are of relatively equal length) and

solstices (the times of year when the sun is at the greatest

dis-tance from the equator and the day is either at its shortest or

at its longest, depending on the season) Th e year began at

the winter solstice, when the yang force—a Chinese

concep-tion associated with warmth, among other qualities—was at

its nadir Since the winter solstice oft en proved to be a cloudy

day, its date was calculated based on that of the summer

sol-stice, which was determined through the measurement of the

shadow of an 8-foot stone pillar Th e length of the year was

estimated to be 366 days until the fourth century b.c.e., when

the fi gure was revised to 365¼ days; further corrections were

made continually thereaft er

According to legend, basic star charts were fi rst compiled

sometime before 1000 b.c.e by a shaman named Xian, who

identifi ed the Big Dipper, among other constellations Th e

revolution and rotation of the Big Dipper around the North

Star, rather than the movement of the sun, provided the

ba-sis for many Chinese astronomical computations Records

still exist of the star charts compiled in the fourth century

b.c.e by the early astronomical observers Shi Shen and Gan

De—whereas charts compiled by Timocharis (ca 320– 260

b.c.e.), of Greece, have never been found Much later, in the

fi ft h century c.e., Qian Lezhi incorporated the fi ndings of his

Covered jar, from the second to fi rst century b.c.e., China; the scene is

of a blue beast (the star Sirius) with bared fangs lunging at a mounted archer (the adjoining constellation, Bow) (Copyright the Metropolitan Museum of Art)

128 astronomy: Asia and the Pacific

three regional predecessors into a single chart, coding their

fi ndings with the colors white, red, and black

Comets, eclipses, and supernovae (explosions of stars) were seen as especially momentous astronomical

occurrenc-es Records of comets are more extensive in China than in anywhere else in the ancient world, and these records pro-vided the original basis for determining the orbit of Halley’s comet, which was sighted in China fi rst, in 240 b.c.e Records

of eclipses extend back even further in time, as inscriptions were found on oracle bones— animal bones that were used for divination—dating back to the Shang Dynasty, which ended around 1045 b.c.e Th us, Chinese records predate Babylonian ones by some seven centuries Starting in the third century b.c.e eclipses were carefully registered Supernovae, which are stellar explosions that can make distant stars visible to the naked eye for the fi rst time, were referred to as inexplicable

new stars or stranger stars.

Th e Chinese made a number of advances in the design

of astronomical equipment Th e Han Dynasty, which lasted from the second century b.c.e to the second century c.e.,

witnessed the invention of a stmapping tool called the ar-millary sphere, a fi xed set of rings demarcating the sectors of

the sky Th e ring representing the skyward extension of the

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