Capella traditionally marks the left shoulder of the constellation's eponymous charioteer, or, according to the 2nd-century astronomer
Ptolemy's
Almagest, the goat that the charioteer is carrying. In Bayer's 1603 work
Uranometria, Capella marks the charioteer's back. The two
Haedi had been identified as a separate constellation by
Pliny the Elder and
Manilius, and were called
Capra,
Caper, or
Hircus, all of which relate to its status as the "goat star".
Ptolemy merged the Charioteer and the Goats in the 2nd-century
Almagest. In
Greek mythology, the star represented the goat
Amalthea that suckled
Zeus. It was this goat whose horn, after accidentally being broken off by Zeus, was transformed into the
cornucopia, or "horn of plenty", which would be filled with whatever its owner desired. Though most often associated with Amalthea, Capella has sometimes been associated with Amalthea's owner, a
nymph. The myth of the nymph says that the goat's hideous appearance, resembling a Gorgon, was partially responsible for the
Titans' defeat, after Zeus skinned the goat and wore it as his
aegis. In medieval accounts, it bore the uncommon name
Alhajoth (also spelled
Alhaior,
Althaiot,
Alhaiset,
Alhatod,
Alhojet,
Alanac,
Alanat,
Alioc), which (especially the last) may be a corruption of its Arabic name, ,
al-cayyūq. cAyyūq has no clear significance in Arabic, but may be an Arabized form of the Greek αίξ
aiks "goat"; cf. the modern Greek Αίγα
Aiga, the feminine of goat. To the
Bedouin of the
Negev and
Sinai, Capella ''al-'Ayyūq ath-Thurayyā
"Capella of the Pleiades", from its role as pointing out the position of that asterism. Another name in Arabic was Al-Rākib'' "the driver", a translation of the Greek. To the ancient
Balts, Capella was known as
Perkūno Ožka "Thunder's Goat", or
Tikutis. Conversely in Slavic Macedonian folklore, Capella was
Jastreb "the hawk", flying high above and ready to pounce on Mother Hen (the Pleiades) and the Rooster (Nath).
Astrologically, Capella portends civic and
military honors and
wealth. In the
Middle Ages, it was considered a
Behenian fixed star, with the stone
sapphire and the plants horehound, mint, mugwort and mandrake as attributes.
Cornelius Agrippa listed its
kabbalistic sign with the name
Hircus (Latin for
goat). In
Hindu mythology, Capella was seen as the heart of
Brahma,
Brahma Hṛdaya. In traditional
Chinese astronomy, Capella was part of the
asterism (; English:
Five Chariots), which consisted of Capella together with
Beta Aurigae,
Theta Aurigae and
Iota Aurigae, as well as
Beta Tauri. Since it was the second star in this asterism, it has the
Chinese name (; English:
Second of the Five Chariots). Capella's name in the
Persian astronomy is "Soroush". In
Quechua it was known as
Colça; the Incas held the star in high regard. The Hawaiians saw Capella as part of an asterism
Ke Kā o Makaliʻi ("The canoe bailer of Makali'i") that helped them navigate at sea. Called
Hoku-lei "star wreath" (or "star that rises like a cloud" In the
Marshall Islands, this star is Lōktañūr, the mother of ten sons represented by other stars. In
Inuit astronomy, Capella, along with Menkalinan (
Beta Aurigae),
Pollux (Beta Geminorum) and
Castor (Alpha Geminorum), formed a constellation
Quturjuuk, "collar-bones", the two pairs of stars denoting a bone each. Used for navigation and time-keeping at night, the constellation was recognised from
Alaska to western Greenland. The
Gwich'in saw Capella and Menkalinan has forming ''shreets'ą įį vidzee
, the right ear of the large circumpolar constellation Yahdii'', which covered much of the night sky, and whose orientation facilitated navigation and timekeeping. In
Australian Aboriginal mythology for the
Boorong people of Victoria, Capella was
Purra, the
kangaroo, pursued and killed by the nearby Gemini twins,
Yurree (
Castor) and
Wanjel (
Pollux). The
Wardaman people of northern Australia knew the star as
Yagalal, a ceremonial fish scale, related to Guwamba the
barramundi (
Aldebaran).
Namesakes • and
USNS Capella (T-AKR-293), both
U.S. Navy ships •
Mazda Capella, a model of automobile manufactured by
Mazda ==See also==