可借阅:*
图书馆 | 资料类型 | 排架号 | 子计数 | 书架位置 | 状态 | 图书预约 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
正在检索... Science | Paperback | 520.972 M59S | 1 | Stacks | 正在检索... 未知 | 正在检索... 不可借阅 |
链接这些题名
已订购
摘要
摘要
This text begins with an discussion of modern Maya beliefs about atronomy introduces. Subsequent chapters are devoted to Precolumbian astronomical imagery. The author delves into may aspects of the Maya astronomical images including gods and their associated glyphs, astronomical almanacs in the Maya codies, and changes in the imagery of the heavens over time. This investigation yields data and a synthesis of inofrmation about the specific atronomical events and cycles recorded in Maya art and architecture.
评论 (1)
Choice 评论
By the close of the 19th century, archaeologists and historians of science had penetrated the sciences of ancient Egypt, China, and India. By the close of the 20th century, they had done the same with the cultures of the so-called New World. This book is the wholesome fruit of these researches, concentrating on the astronomical lore and learning of the Maya people, their astro-art and traditional calendars. It reveals much of the beauty and reflections of that ancient people, who were regarded, because of lack of books like this, as primitive and unsophisticated. As with other ancient peoples, here too gods and goddesses were seen in stars and planets, symbolism was aplenty, and celestial configurations found terrestrial expression in art and architecture. Milbrath (Florida Museum of Natural History; anthropology, Univ. of Florida) has not only brought together an ample range of scholarly research, but offers new and original interpretations of pre-Columbian deities. There are numerous reproductions of ancient drawings, and diagrams are deciphered. The book appears to be a coffee-table tome, but in fact it is a monumental treatise, appropriate for libraries and for the specialist's desk. But it will also interest and enlighten all levels of readers. V. V. Raman; Rochester Institute of Technology
目录
Introduction |
The Mesoamerican Calendar |
Decipherment of Maya Glyphs |
Archaeoastronomy and Ethnoastronomy |
Overview of Contents |
Contemporary Maya Images of the Heavens |
The Seasonal Cycle |
The Solar Calendar |
Modern Maya Cosmic Diagrams |
How the Sun Moves and Transforms |
The Sun God |
Images of Eclipses |
The Lunar Rhythms |
Lunar Agriculture |
The Celestial Pair |
The Moon Goddess |
Venus among the Contemporary Maya |
The Planets among the Contemporary Maya |
Stars and Constellations |
The Milky Way |
Other Celestial Phenomena |
Contemporary Maya Astronomy in Cultural Context |
Naked-Eye Astronomy |
Tracking the Solar Seasons |
Lunar Positions and Phases |
Eclipses |
The Planets |
The Stars and the Seasons |
Precolumbian and Colonial Period Maya Solar Images |
The Seasonal Cycle and the Solar Calendar |
Solar Orientations in Architecture |
The Sun in Precolumbian Maya Cosmic Diagrams |
Concepts of the Sun's Motion |
The Precolumbian Kin Glyph |
The Sun God in the Colonial and Postclassic Periods |
The Sun God at Chichen Itza |
The Sun King |
Classic Maya Images of the Sun God and Earlier Prototypes |
The Monkey's Sun |
The Solar Bird and Solar Fire |
The Sun and Felines |
Hunahpu and Hun Ahau |
GIII: The Sun as the Middle Brother |
The Sun in the Precolumbian Maya Worldview |
Precolumbian and Colonial Period Lunar Images and Deities |
Lunar Calendars |
Colonial and Postclassic Eclipse Imagery |
The Dresden Codex Eclipse Table |
Classic Period Eclipse Imagery and Events |
Maya Moon Glyphs and Symbols |
Lunar Symbolism of Fish, Frogs, Toads, and Shells |
The Moon and Rabbits |
The Water-lily Jaguar |
The Jaguar War God |
The Jaguar Paddler: The Moon Paired with the Sun |
The Lunar Twin: Xbalanque |
The Classic Period Moon God in Monumental Art |
The Young Moon Goddess in Colonial and Postclassic Times |
The Aged Moon in Colonial and Postclassic Times |
The Moon in the Postclassic Murals at Tulum |
Lunar Deities at Chichen Itza |
The Classic Maya Moon Goddess |
The Ever-changing Moon |
Venus and Mercury: The Body Doubles |
Venus Observations among the Precolumbian Maya |
Venus in the Popol Vuh |
Colonial and Postclassic Images of Venus |
The Dresden Codex Venus Pages |
The Layout of Pages 46-50 |
The Seasonal Aspects of Venus |
Regents and Victims in the Venus Pages |
Quetzalcoatl-Kukulcan: The Venus God from Central Mexico |
Central Mexican Venus Symbols in the Maya Area |
Maya Glyphs and Symbols Representing Venus |
Venus Warfare |
Lineage Founders and the Venus Cult |
Tlaloc and the Storm God |
Chac and God B in Colonial and Postclassic Yucatan |
Classic Period Images of Chac |
Chac and GI in the Classic Period |
The Sidereal Position of Venus |
Venus and the Moon |
Mercury in Maya Imagery and Calendrics |
The Inferior Planets in the Maya Worldview |
The Celestial Wanderers |
Colonial Period Images of the Superior Planets |
Mars among the Precolumbian Maya |
Monkey Deities and the Planets |
God K in the Colonial and Postclassic Periods |
The Classic Period God K and GII |
Jupiter Events and God K on Classic Maya Monuments |
Classic Period Calendar Records Relating to the Superior Planets |
Assembly of the Gods |
The Celestial Wanderers as Planetary Gods |
Stars, the Milky Way, Comets, and Meteors |
Comets, Meteors, and Supernovas |
Images of Stars |
The Maya Zodiac |
The Pleiades |
The Scorpion and Skeletal Snake Constellations |
Orion and Gemini |
The Peccary Constellation |
Bird Constellations |
Cross Constellations and Stellar Trees |
The North Star and the "Dippers" |
Central Mexican Images of the Milky Way |
The Cosmic Monster and the Milky Way |
Serpent Forms of the Milky Way |
Four Roads in the Sky and Four Itzamnas |
Classic Period Monuments with Images of the Milky Way |
Rotating the Milky Way |
The Maya in the History of World Astronomy |
Appendix 1 Guide to Astronomical Identities |
Appendix 2 Table of Classic Period Dates and Associated Astronomical Events |
Appendix 3 Table for Calculating the Tzolkin Intervals |
Glossary |
Bibliography |
Index |
Plates |