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The decans are 36 groups of stars used in ancient Egyptian astronomy to conveniently divide the 360 degree ecliptic into 36 parts of 10 degrees each, both for theurgical and heliacal chronometrical purposes. The decans each appeared, geocentrically, to rise consecutively on the horizon throughout each daily Earth rotation. The rising of each decan marked the beginning of a new decanal "hour" of the night for the ancient Egyptians, and they were used as a nocturnal beginning by at least the Ninth or Tenth Dynasty of Egypt in the 21st century BC.

Ancient Egyptian origins
showing various decans, as well as the personified representations of stars and constellations Decans first appeared in the First Intermediate Period of Egypt on coffin lids. The sequence of these star patterns began with Sirius ("Sothis"), and each decan contained a set of stars and corresponding divinities. As measures of time, the rising and setting of decans marked 'hours' and groups of ten days, which comprised an Egyptian year. The Book of Nut covers the subject of the decans. There were 36 decans (36 × 10 = 360 days), plus five added days to compose the 365 days of a solar-based year. Decans measure sidereal time and the solar year is six hours longer; the Sothic and solar years in the Egyptian calendar realign every 1460 years. Decans represented on coffins from later dynasties, such as Pharaoh Seti I (d. 1279 BCE), compared with earlier decan images, demonstrate the Sothic cycle shift. According to Sarah Symons, ==Later developments==
Later developments
These predictable heliacal re-appearances by the decans were eventually used by the Egyptians to mark the divisions of their annual solar calendar. Thus the heliacal rising of Sirius marked the annual flooding of the Nile. This method led to a system of 12 daytime hours and 12 nighttime hours, varying in length according to the season. Later, a system of 24 "equinoctial" hours was used. After Hellenistic astrology arose in Alexandria, recorded principally in the work of Ptolemy and Vettius Valens, various systems attributing symbolic significance to decans arose and linked these to the classical planets: the "wandering stars" Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn and the "lights", the sun and moon. Decans were connected, for example, with the winds, the cardinal directions, the sect (day or night) male and female, as well as the four humours (elements;) also these were hermetically considered linked with various diseases and with the timing for the engraving of talismans for curing them; with decanic "faces" (or "phases"), a system where three decans are assigned to each zodiacal sign, each covering 10° of the zodiac, and each ruled by a planetary ruler (see Decan (astrology)); and correlated with astrological signs. ==Descriptions of the decans==
Descriptions of the decans
Decans are named in various Greco-Egyptian sources, many Hermetic writings, the Testament of Solomon, the Tabula Aristobuli (Codex Palatinus) attributed to Aristobulus of Paneas, and the writings of Julius Firmicus Maternus, Cosmas of Maiuma, Joseph Justus Scaliger, and Athanasius Kircher. or Indian form possibly from adding the twelve animals of the Chinese zodiac to a list of twenty-four hour stars. They were most common between the Kamakura and Edo periods. The first original decan position due to the precession in ancient times started at 0° of Cancer when the heliacal rising of Sirius (Egyptian Sepdet; Greco-Egyptian: Sothis) before sunrise marking the Egyptian New Year which fell at 0° of Leo at July 20 in the Julian calendar, that is July 22/23 on the Gregorian calendar. == Ancient India ==
Ancient India
In India, the division of the zodiac into 36 ten degree portions is called either the drekkana (drekkāṇa), the dreshkana (dreṣkāṇa), or the drikana (dṛkāṇa). The iconography and use of the drekkanas is mentioned earliest by Sphujidhvaja in Yavanajataka (269–270 CE), and given detailed treatment by Varahamihira in his Brihat-Samhita (550 CE). Modern scholars believe the decans were imported into India through the Greeks, who learned about them from the Egyptians. ==See also==
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