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ANTHROQUEST
The L.S.B.
Leakey Foundation Newsletter



ASTRONOMY IN EAST AFRICA
The Borana-Cushitic Calendar and
Namoratunga
Laurance Reeve Doyle
Space Sciences Division, N.A.S.A.
Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, California |
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While
Western thought has always prided itself on scientific objectivity, it
has often been found unprepared for such surprises as an intellectually
advanced yet seemingly illiterate society. In the face of apparent
primitiveness, the possibility of significant intellectual development
may not be fully investigated. |
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This
was certainly the case when, in the early 1970’s, Dr. A. Legesse first
found that the Borana people of southern Ethiopia were indeed using a
sophisticated calendrical system based on the conjunction of seven stars
with certain lunar phases. Previous calendrical investigations into the
area up to this time had superficially stated that the Borana
"attach magical significance to the stars and constellations,"
incorrectly concluding that their calendar was based, as ours is, on
solar motion.
What Dr.
Legesse found was an amazing cyclical calendar similar to those of the
Mayans, Chinese, and Hindu, but unique in that it seemed to ignore the
sun completely (except indirectly by way of the phases of the moon). The
workings were described to him by the Borana ayyantu
(timekeepers) as follows.
There are
twelve months to a year, each month being identifiable with a unique
(once a year) astronomical observation. The length of each month is
either 29 or 30 days – that is, the time it takes the moon to go
through all its phases. (This time is actually 291/2 days and
is called a synodic month, but the Borana only keep track of whole
days). Instead of weeks, there are 27 day names. Since each month is 29
or 30 days long we will run out of day names about two or three days
early in the same month. The day names can therefore be recycled and for
day 28 we use the first day name again, the second day name for day 29,
and start the next month using the third day name. Thus each month will
start on a different day name. Whether the particular month is to be 29
or 30 days long would depend on the astronomical observations, which are
quite ingeniously defined. |
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The
seven stars (or star groups) used to derive the calendar are, from
northernmost to southernmost, 1) Beta Triangulum – a fairly faint
navigation star in the constellation of the Triangle, 2) Pleiades – a
beautiful, blue star cluster in the constellation of Taurus the Bull,
and sometimes referred to as the seven sisters, 3) Aldebarran – a
bright, red star that represents the eye of Taurus, 4) Belletrix – a
fairly bright star that represents the right shoulder of the
constellation Orion the Hunter, 5)Central Orion – the region around
Orion’s sword where the Great Orion Nebula may be found, 6) Saiph –
the star representing the right knee of Orion, and finally 7) Sirius –
the brightest star in the night sky and the head of the constellation
Canis Majoris, the Great Dog.
The New
Year begins with the most important astronomical observation of the year
– a new moon in conjunction with Beta Triangulum. (this day is called
Bitotesa, and the next month is called Bitokara). The next month starts
when the new moon is found in conjunction with the Pleiades. The third
month starts with the new moon being observed in conjunction with the
star Aldebarran, the next with Belletrix, then the area in between
Central Orion and Saiph, and finally with the star Sirius. So the first
six months of the calendar are started by the astronomical observations
of the new phase moon found in conjunction with six specific locations
in the sky marked by seven stars of star groups. |
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The
method is now switched and the final six months are identified by six
different phases of the moon (from full to crescent) being found in
conjunction with only one position in the sky – the one marked by Beta
Triangulum. Thus the whole Borana year is identified astronomically and
when the new phase moon is again finally seen in conjunction with Beta
Triangulum the New Year will start again. Since there are 12 such
synodic months of 29 ½ days each, the Borana year is only
354 days long.
Now, in
the latter part of the 1970’s another interesting development was to
take place regarding the astronomy of this region. In 1977 Drs. B.M.
Lynch and L.H. Robbins, who were working in the Lake Turkana area of
northwestern Kenya, came upon what they believed was the first
archaeoastronomical site ever found in sub-Saharan Africa. At
Namoratunga, it consisted of 19 stone pillars, apparently man-made, that
seemed to align toward the rising positions of the seven Borana calendar
stars as they had appeared quite some time ago. (their suggested date
from the various archaeological considerations, which still requires
corroboration, was about 300 BC). Due to precession (the slow, wobbling
of the pointing direction of the rotation axis of the Earth), the stars
will seem to move from their positions over the centuries, although the
moon’s position would not vary on this time scale. (Such an example is
the alignment of certain features of the Egyptian pyramids with the star
Thuban in the constellation Draco the Dragon, which was the north polar
star about 5000 year ago; today it is Polaris and in several thousand
years it will be Vega). If the date that Drs. Lynch and Robbins
suggested was correct, the site would then correspond to the time of the
extensive kingdom of Cush, referred to as Ethiopia in the Bible but
actually centered about present day Sudan. One would then conclude that
the Borana calendrical system was old indeed, having been developed by
the Cushitic peoples in this area about 1800 years before the
development of our present day Western Gregorian calendrical system. |
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In
1982, a number of significant questions arose concerning the site, the
calendar, and archaeoastronomy of East Africa in general. The pillars
were remeasured by an anthropologist in Kenya (Mr. Robert Soper) and
found to be magnetic in nature. The original measurements had to be
modified but, again, alignments with the seven Borana stars were found.
However, this brought up the question of whether pillar alignments are
significant at all, since the Borana ayyantu certainly can
recognize the phases of the moon and when it is in conjunction with the
appropriate seven stars. It was time to approach the question
astronomically, and ask the moon and the stars how the calendar worked.
First, we
could take the New Year’s observations, a new moon in conjunction with
the faint star Beta Triangulum. What is meant by the term
"conjunction" which is astronomically defined as the closest
approach between two celestial objects? A new moon means that the moon
is very close to the sun, being at best only a very small crescent, and
therefore can only be seen just before sunrise or just after sunset.
Interestingly enough, it turns out that during this twilight time the
sky is too bright to be able to see the star Beta Triangulum so that
seeing the new moon next to Beta Triangulum, the most important
observation of the Borana calendar, was impossible!
In
addition, assuming that the new moon and Beta Triangulum could be
somehow seen rising together, the next month’s new moon rises
significantly behind Pleiades, the newt conjunction star group. The
third new moon rises with Belletrix, having skipped the third star,
Aldebarran, completely. This is certainly not how the Borana described
their calendar. If we were to continue to try to work the calendar in
this way, by the start of the sixth month the new moon would be rising
almost four hours after Sirius. |
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How
could the calendar work then? Suppose (as we did), that one takes the
term "conjunction" to mean "rising at the same horizon
position" instead of "rising horizontally next to at the same
time." Thus one could mark the horizon rising position of Beta
Triangulum, with pillars for instance, and once a year a new moon will
rise at that position on the horizon. Let us suppose that this
astronomical event marks the start of the New Year. We must add that we
are taking the horizon rising position of these seven stars as they were
in or around 300 BC, since present day Beta Triangulum has precessed too
far to the north over the centuries and the moon will never rise there.
However, the position of 300 BC Beta Triangulum, as well as the other
Borana stars, was quite within the realm of the moon’s orbit.
Now where
will the next new moon rise? It turns out to rise at precisely the
rising position of Pleiades! The next new moon, marking the start of the
third month, rises at the Aldebarran horizon position, the next at
Belletrix, the next in between Central Orion and Saiph, and finally the
sixth new moon rises at the horizon position that Sirius rose at during
the night. During the next six months one can tell what month it is only
in the middle of the month, since one has to wait to see what phase the
moon is in when it appears at the Beta Triangulum horizon position.
During the seventh month, as described, a full moon will be observed at
the Beta Triangulum position. The next month a gibbous waxing moon, then
a quarter moon, and successively smaller crescents will be seen there
until, at the time when the 13th or first month should start
the new year again (exactly 354 days later), a new moon is again
seen rising at the Beta Triangulum position on the horizon. |
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It
is interesting that one can draw some significant anthropological
results from the astronomical derivation of this calendrical system. It
would appear that the calendar would have had to have been invented (to
use the stars correctly) sometime within a few hundred years of 300 BC,
a time when the Cushitic peoples were dominant in this part of the
world. Hence we would call it the Borana-Cushitic calendar. In addition,
although the seven Borana-Cushitic stars no longer rise in the correct
horizon positions to be correctly marked by pillars for observing the
monthly rising position of the new moon, the present day Borana people
nevertheless use this system of timekeeping. The implication is that the
Borana require ancient horizon markers in their present derivation of
the calendar.
Concerning
the site at Namoratunga, and considering that the use of pillars is
apparently necessary to the derivation of the calendar, such horizon
markers as are found there may, indeed, have been an ancient
observatory. Petroglyphs on the pillars at Namoratunga may also hold the
possibility of being ancient and, if Cushitic, may represent the
alignment stars or moon. Cushitic script has never been deciphered and
any hints as to the meaning of tits symbols could be significant clues
with very exciting prospects indeed! |