Friday, 24 May 2013

Cassiopeia

A Greek Myth

An ancient queen of Ethiopia, Cassiopeia was very beautiful. She also was very vein and spent her time bragging about her beauty. She boasted one day that she was more beautiful than the maidens of poseidon, the sea god who, when hearing of this got very angry. Poseidon punished the queen by placing her on her thrown in the heavens to be mocked. Every half night Cassiopeia swings around the North Star upside down and must hold on with her hands so she doesn't fall of. For one so proud of her Beauty it is a most humiliating position. 

Hercules- The 12 labours

Hercules, the Greek hero was commanded by the Delphic Oracle to complete 12 labours. These labours were represented amongst the stars.The Nemean lion (Leo), the hydra and the crab (Hydra and Cancer), Hercules wrestling Apollon (Gemini) and the Cretan Bull (Taurus) are some of the adventures of Hercules 




Wednesday, 22 May 2013

The Dog and the Fox

A Greek Myth

Laelaps was a magical dog destined to never surrender his chase. The dog was first owned by Zeus who passed it on to Minos, his son. Eventually Cephalus and Procris told it to hunt down the fox Teumessian who was destined never to be caught. To resolve this Zeus placed them among the Canis Major to chase each other across the stars forever. 


ARGO- The Silver Ship

A Greek Myth

A ship of Argonauts, a group of heroes was constructed by Argus and Athena and placed a talking beam on the prow. After the ship returned from the search of the Golden Fleece it was placed among the stars.


Wednesday, 15 May 2013

One Who Walks All Over The Sky


A myth from the Tsimshian Tribe and Pacific Northwest Coast

Long ago, when the sky was completely dark there was a chief and his two sons, the eldest son, The One Who Walks About Early and the youngest son, One Who Walks All Over The Sky. The sky was so dark at night so the youngest son made a mask (the sun) out of pitch and wood and then lit on fire. Each day the younger sun travels across the sky and sleeps under the horizon. When he snores sparks fly across from the mask and create stars. The eldest brother was jealous so he smeared charcoal and fat on his face (the moon) and made his own path across the sky.

The three Legged Rabbit

From the Western Rocky and Crow Tribes

One day the three legged rabbit made himself a leg of wood. He was afraid that the sun wood set his wooden leg on fire so he decided something must be done. At night he went east to where the sun would rise. The sun was halfway up the rabbit pierced it with an arrow. The rabbit then took the black portion of the eyes and made them into the sky and the white part the clouds. He made the kidneys into the stars, the liver into the moon and the heart into the night. The rabbit, satisfied with what he'd done yelled to the sun "there you will never be to hot again." And that is how the sky was made.

Saturday, 11 May 2013

The Hunters and the Bear

A woodland Indian Myth 

One Spring a bear awoke from its Winter nap and wondered about in search of food. Three hunters saw the bear. The first hunter held a bow and arrow the second one held a big pot and the third brought firewood. The three hunters chased the bear through the sky all Summer and eventually the bear was shot in Autumn. The hunters ate the bear in the pot over the fire leaving all the bones alive. While the skeleton of the bear remained visible in the sky, the spirit of the bear crept into the body of another sleeping bear and so the cycle goes every year.