The use of calendars A common justification for the need for astronomy is the need to develop an accurate
calendar for
agricultural reasons. Ancient texts like
Hesiod's Works and Days, an ancient farming manual, would appear to partially confirm this: astronomical observations are used in combination with
ecological signs, such as
bird migrations to determine the seasons. Ethnoastronomical studies of the
Hopi of the
southwestern United States indicate that they carefully observed the rising and setting positions of the Sun to determine the proper times to plant crops. However, ethnoastronomical work with the
Mursi of
Ethiopia shows that their
luni-solar calendar was somewhat haphazard, indicating the limits of astronomical calendars in some societies. All the same, calendars appear to be an almost universal phenomenon in societies as they provide tools for the regulation of communal activities. One such example is the ''
Tzolk'in'' calendar of 260 days. Together with the 365-day year, it was used in
pre-Columbian Mesoamerica, forming part of a comprehensive calendrical system, which combined a series of astronomical observations and ritual cycles. Archaeoastronomical studies throughout Mesoamerica have shown that the orientations of most structures refer to the Sun and were used in combination with the 260-day cycle for scheduling agricultural activities and the accompanying rituals. The distribution of dates and intervals marked by orientations of monumental ceremonial complexes in the area along the southern Gulf Coast in Mexico, dated to about 1100 to 700 BCE, represents the earliest evidence of the use of this cycle. Other peculiar calendars include ancient
Greek calendars. These were nominally
lunar, starting with the
New Moon. In reality the calendar could pause or skip days with confused citizens inscribing dates by both the civic calendar and
ton theoi, by the
moon. The lack of any universal calendar for ancient Greece suggests that coordination of panhellenic events such as
games or rituals could be difficult and that astronomical symbolism may have been used as a politically neutral form of timekeeping. Orientation measurements in Greek temples and Byzantine churches have been associated to deity's name day, festivities, and special events.
Myth and cosmology drawn by
Johannes Hevelius in 1690 Another motive for studying the sky is to understand and explain the
universe. In these cultures
myth was a tool for achieving this, and the explanations, while not reflecting the standards of modern
science, are
cosmologies. The
Incas arranged their empire to demonstrate their cosmology. The capital,
Cusco, was at the centre of the empire and connected to it by means of ceques, conceptually straight lines radiating out from the centre. These ceques connected the centre of the empire to the four
suyus, which were regions defined by their direction from Cusco. The notion of a quartered cosmos is common across the
Andes. Gary Urton, who has conducted fieldwork in the Andean villagers of Misminay, has connected this quartering with the appearance of the
Milky Way in the night sky. In one season it will bisect the sky and in another bisect it in a
perpendicular fashion. The importance of observing cosmological factors is also seen on the other side of the world. The
Forbidden City in
Beijing is laid out to follow cosmic order though rather than observing four directions. The Chinese system was composed of five directions:
North,
South,
East,
West and
Centre. The Forbidden City occupied the centre of ancient Beijing. One approaches the Emperor from the south, thus placing him in front of the
circumpolar stars. This creates the situation of the heavens revolving around the person of the Emperor. The Chinese cosmology is now better known through its export as
feng shui. There is also much information about how the universe was thought to work stored in the mythology of the
constellations. The Barasana of the
Amazon plan part of their annual cycle based on observation of the stars. When their constellation of the Caterpillar-Jaguar (roughly equivalent to the modern Scorpius) falls they prepare to catch the pupating caterpillars of the forest as they fall from the trees. The caterpillars provide food at a season when other foods are scarce. The Northern
Dene peoples of Alaska and northwestern Canada recognize
Traveller constellations that incorporate large portions of the night sky. These constellations represent a culture hero known as the Traveller who, according to oral tradition, journeyed around the world before his spirit became embodied in the stars. The constellations are composed of multiple smaller star groups named using body-part terminology, with the
Milky Way identified as the Traveller's trail. Knowledge of these constellations is traditionally acquired through personal discovery rather than direct instruction, and they serve roles in navigation, timekeeping, and spiritual practice. A more well-known source of constellation myth are the texts of the Greeks and Romans. The origin of their constellations remains a matter of vigorous and occasionally fractious debate. The loss of one of the sisters, Merope, in some Greek myths may reflect an astronomical event wherein one of the stars in the Pleiades disappeared from view by the naked eye.
Giorgio de Santillana, professor of the History of Science in the School of Humanities at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Hertha von Dechend, professor at
Goethe University Frankfurt, argued that the old mythological stories handed down from antiquity were not random fictitious tales but were accurate depictions of celestial
cosmology clothed in tales to aid their oral transmission. The chaos, monsters and violence in ancient myths are representative of the forces that shape each age. They argued that ancient myths are the remains of preliterate, late
Neolithic astronomy that was lost. Santillana and von Dechend argued in their book ''
Hamlet's Mill: An Essay on Myth and the Frame of Time'' (1969) that ancient myths have no historical or factual basis other than a cosmological one encoding astronomical phenomena, especially the
precession of the equinoxes. Santillana and von Dechend's approach is not widely accepted.
Displays of power was aligned on the midwinter solstice. By including celestial motifs in clothing it becomes possible for the wearer to make claims the power on Earth is drawn from above. It has been said that the Shield of
Achilles described by
Homer is also a catalogue of constellations. In North America shields depicted in
Comanche petroglyphs appear to include Venus symbolism.
Solsticial alignments also can be seen as displays of power. When viewed from a ceremonial plaza on the
Island of the Sun (the mythical origin place of the Sun) in
Lake Titicaca, the Sun was seen to rise at the June solstice between two towers on a nearby ridge. The sacred part of the island was separated from the remainder of it by a stone wall and ethnographic records indicate that access to the sacred space was restricted to members of the
Inca ruling elite. Ordinary
pilgrims stood on a platform outside the ceremonial area to see the solstice Sun rise between the towers. In Egypt the temple of
Amun-Re at
Karnak has been the subject of much study. Evaluation of the site, taking into account the change over time of the
obliquity of the ecliptic show that the Great Temple was aligned on the rising of the midwinter Sun. The length of the corridor down which sunlight would travel would have limited illumination at other times of the year. In a later period the
Serapeum of Alexandria was also said to have contained a
solar alignment so that, on a specific sunrise, a shaft of light would pass across the lips of the statue of
Serapis thus symbolising the
Sun saluting the god. == Major sites of archaeoastronomical interest ==