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TOPIC: Minoan Calendar
Anonymous

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Minoan Calendar
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Well, it's not true we know nothing.  Everyday we learn a little more about it and if you look at my pages on the Phaistos Disk, you can know a lot more about it than ever imagined.  diskoftheworld.com

 

Claire Watson, M.S.T.

Ed ~ The Phaistos Disk has been decoded as a hymn to a Mother Goddess of Crete, and has seemingly no connection (as some people had previously theorised) to any Minoan Calendar.



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L

Posts: 131433
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Minoan astronomy
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Title: Evidence of Minoan astronomy and calendrical practices
Authors: Marianna Ridderstad
(26 Oct 2009)

In Minoan art, symbols for celestial objects were depicted frequently and often in a religious context. The most common were various solar and stellar symbols. The palace of Knossos was amply decorated with these symbols. The rituals performed in Knossos and other Minoan palaces included the alteration of light and darkness, as well as the use of reflection. The Minoan primary goddess was a solar goddess, the 'Minoan Demeter'. A Late Minoan clay disk has been identified as a ritual calendrical object showing the most important celestial cycles, especially the lunar octaeteris. The disk, as well as the Minoan stone kernoi, were probably used in relation to the Minoan festival calendar. The orientations of the central courts of the palaces of Knossos, Phaistos, Mallia and Gournia were to the rising sun, whereas the Eastern palaces Zakros and Petras were oriented to the southernmost and the northernmost risings of the moon, respectively. The E-W axes of the courts of Knossos and Phaistos were oriented to the sunrise five days before the vernal equinox. This orientation is related to the five epagomenal days in the end of a year, which was probably the time of a Minoan festival. One of the orientations of the Knossian Throne Room is towards the heliacal rising of Spica in 2000-1000 BCE. Spica rose heliacally at the time of vintage in Minoan times. The time near the date of the heliacal rising of Spica was the time of an important festival related to ctchonic deities, the Minoan predecessor of the Eleusinian Mysteries. The myths of Minos, Demeter and Persephone probably have an astronomical origin, related to Minoan observations of the periods of the moon, Venus and Spica. These celestial events were related to the idea of renewal, which was central in the Minoan religion.

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L

Posts: 131433
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Minoan Calendar
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Imagine over 100 years of scientific digs into the foundations of Minoan Crete, and we knew nothing of how Minoan people reckoned the days of the year and the flow of time. No advanced and prosperous society could manage its agriculture, foreign trade and ritual life without a calendar. And yet, till now, little was known except that the 4-year timing of Olympic Games (first recorded in 776 BCE) was based in a much older calendar that began each year at Winter Solstice.

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