Rabu, 22 Juli 2009

Eclipse; Myth, Ancient Stories..

Ancient China


The earliest record of a solar eclipse comes from

an ancient Chinese story. Historians believe that

the eclipse referred to in this story might

have been visible from China around 2134 B.C.

The Chinese once believed that an eclipse was caused

by an invisible dragon eating the Sun.

They believed that if they created a great commotion

with drummers drumming and archers shooting

arrows in the sky, the dragon would be frightened away

and daylight would return.

When this eclipse occured, however, the two royal astronomers,

Hsi and Ho, failed to predict the eclipse, a

nd the emperor became very angry because he was not prepared

to scare the dragon away. Although daylight returned,

the emperor ordered the two astronomers beheaded.

The Middle East

The eclipse of May 28, 585 B.C., ended a war between

two Middle Eastern nations. During the fighting,

“the day was turned into night.” The eclipse stunned

both nations into declaring peace and the fighting stopped.



Medieval France

Emperor Louis, son of the great European ruler Charlemagne,

died after observing the eclipse of May 5, 840.

It was said that he was so confused by the five minutes of darkness

during the eclipse that he died from fright.

Japan

In Japan, the people once believed that poison drops from the sky

during an eclipse.

To prevent the poison from dropping into their drinking water,

they covered all the wells during an eclipse.

India

In India, the people also believed that a dragon was

responsible for eclipses. During an eclipse,

the people “immersed themselves in water up to their necks,”

hoping that this kind of worship would help

the Sun and the Moon defend themselves against the dragon.

England

Some historians believe that the ancient builders of

Stonehenge in England developed a method of

predicting eclipses by observing the cycles of the Moon.

The structure of Stonehenge reveals that

these ancient builders knew the actual motions of both the Sun and the Moon.

Christopher Columbus

On Christopher Columbus’ last voyage to America in 1503,

he and his crew were stranded on the island of Jamaica

for over a year. With his ship badly damaged and

the food supply low, Columbus traded with the Native

Americans for food. The natives soon grew tired of feeding

Columbus and his crew and refused to supply him with any more food.

Columbus knew that a lunar eclipse would soon occur

on February 29, 1504. On the night of February 29th,

Columbus told the natives that God was angry with them

for not providing him with food.

He told them that God was going to make the Moon disappear.

At that moment, the natives witnessed the beginning of a lunar eclipse.

They begged Columbus to ask God to forgive them

and bring back the Moon. After an hour passed and

the lunar eclipse was ending, Columbus told the natives

that God had forgiven them and the Moon would be returned.

And of course, the natives looked into the sky

and saw the Moon returning.


sources : http://www.earthview.com

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