Belmonte, J. A.; González-García A. C.
Referencia bibliográfica
Journal of Skyscape Archaeology 1.1 (2015) 8–37
Fecha de publicación:
5
2015
Número de citas referidas
0
Descripción
Some cities were built with the idea of establishing cosmic order. The sky used to be
a very important component of the landscape that has been lost completely in our modern,
overcrowded and excessively illuminated cities. However, this was not the case in the past.
Astronomy actually played a most relevant role in urban planning, particularly in the organization
of sacred spaces which were later surrounded by extensive civil urban areas. Today, archaeoastronomy
approaches the minds of our ancestors by studying the skyscape and how it is printed
in the terrain by the visualization and the orientation of sacred buildings. The Sun was indeed
the most conspicuous component of that skyscape and was the primary focus within a large set
of unique cultures of great historical significance. In particular, in this review paper, we will study
and compare the case of four “solstitial” cities: Thebes, Hattusha, Carthago Nova and Petra, capitals
of Egypt in the Middle and New Kingdoms, the Hittite Empire, the Carthaginian dominions
in the Iberian Peninsula and the Nabataean Kingdom, respectively. We will briefly analyse solar
aspects of the religions of these cultures and scrutinize their capital cities, showing how their
strategic geographical position and orography were of key importance. We will also look at how
solar benchmarks, and related hierophanies, played a most relevant role in the orientation and/
or location of some of their most significant monuments. Finally, we will incorporate a frame of
analysis for this data in order to come to our conclusion that different Mediterranean societies
where solar cults or symbolism are strongly substantiated display common characteristics in the
orientation and location of these cities connecting them with solstitial orientations.
Proyectos relacionados
Arqueoastronomía
Este Proyecto tiene como objetivo fundamental determinar la importancia de la astronomía como parte integrante de la cultura y de la civilización desde el Paleolítico a nuestros días. El interés del grupo se centra, en especial, en los pueblos del antiguo ámbito Mediterráneo desde el Atlántico al Oriente Medio, con una dedicación especial a España
Juan Antonio
Belmonte Avilés