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Ancient night sky recreated to date 2,500-year-old Greek poem

The researchers used advanced software called Starry Night, to identify the earliest date that the Pleiades would have set at midnight or earlier in local time in 570 BC. Photo: AFP

Washington: Scientists have recreated the ancient night sky over Greece by using advanced astronomical software to accurately date lyric poet Sappho’s 2,500-year-old Midnight Poem.

Sappho’s Midnight Poem describes a star cluster known as the Pleiades having set at around midnight, when supposedly observed by her from the Greek island of Lesbos.

“Estimations had been made for the timing of this poem in the past, but we were able to scientifically confirm the season that corresponds to her specific descriptions of the night sky in the year 570 BC,” said lead author Manfred Cuntz, professor at the University of Texas at Arlington (UTA).

The researchers used advanced software called Starry Night, to identify the earliest date that the Pleiades would have set at midnight or earlier in local time in 570 BC.

The Planetarium system Digistar 5 also allows creating the night sky of ancient Greece for Sappho’s place and time. “Use of Planetarium software permits us to simulate the night sky more accurately on any date, past or future, at any location,” said Levent Gurdemir, director of the Planetarium at UTA.

“This is an example of how we are opening up the Planetarium to research into disciplines beyond astronomy, including geosciences, biology, chemistry, art, literature, architecture, history and even medicine,” said Gurdemir.

The Starry Night software demonstrated that in 570 BC, the Pleiades set at midnight on 25 January, which would be the earliest date that the poem could relate to. As the year progressed, the Pleiades set progressively earlier.

“The timing question is complex as at that time they did not have accurate mechanical clocks as we do, only perhaps water clocks,” said Cuntz. “For that reason, we also identified the latest date on which the Pleiades would have been visible to Sappho from that location on different dates some time during the evening,” he said.

Researchers found that the last date that the Pleiades would have been seen at the end of astronomical twilight—the moment when the Sun’s altitude is minus 18 degrees and the sky is regarded as perfectly dark—was 31 March.

“From there, we were able to accurately seasonally date this poem to mid-winter and early spring, scientifically confirming earlier estimations by other scholars,” Cuntz said.

Sappho was the leading female poet of her time and closely rivalled Homer. Her interest in astronomy was not restricted to the Midnight Poem. Other examples of her work make references to the Sun, the Moon, and planet Venus.

“Sappho should be considered an informal contributor to early Greek astronomy as well as to Greek society at large,” Cuntz said.

“Not many ancient poets comment on astronomical observations as clearly as she does,” he said. The study was published in the Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage.

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