Bibcode
Belmonte, J. A.; González-García, A. C.
Referencia bibliográfica
Inspiration of Astronomical Phenomena VIII: City of Stars. Proceedings of a Conference held at American Museum of Natural History, New York, United States 7-12 July 2013. Edited by Brian Patrick Abbott. ASP Conference Series Vol. 501. San Francisco: Astronomical Society of the Pacific Edited by Brian Patrick Abbott., p.249
Fecha de publicación:
1
2016
Número de citas
0
Número de citas referidas
0
Descripción
The sky is a very important component of the landscape that has been
lost in our modern, overcrowded, and excessively illuminated cities.
However, this was not the case in the past. Astronomy played a highly
relevant role in urban planning, especially in the organization of
sacred spaces which were later surrounded by extensive civil urban
areas. Today, archaeoastronomy approaches the minds of our ancestors
studying the starry landscape and how it is printed in the terrain by
the visualization and the orientation of sacred buildings. The sun was
indeed the most important component of that celestial landscape and was
the primary focus within a large set of unique cultures of great
historical significance. In particular, we will study and compare the
case of three sun cities: Thebes (Belmonte et al. 2009, Belmonte 2012),
Hattusha (Gonzalez-Garcia & Belmonte 2011), and Petra (Belmonte et
al. 2013), capitals of Egypt in the Middle and New Kingdoms, the Hittite
Empire, and the Nabataean Kingdom, respectively. We will briefly discuss
each of these cultures and will scrutinize their capital cities, showing
how their strategic geographical position and orography were of key
importance, but also how solar observation, and related hierophanies,
played a relevant role in the orientation and location of some of their
most significant monuments. In particular, we will focus on the great
temple of Amun-Re in Karnak, Temple 1 in Hattusha (presumably devoted to
the Solar Goddess of Arinna), and the “Monastery” at Petra.