Orion and Interactive Constellation Overlay

Orion Across Cultures, Interactive Constellation Overlay

The stars above don’t change; they are simply called by different names from culture to culture and time period to time period. Vedic, Chinese, Arabic, Greek, Mayan, different names, but the same Orion over your roof tonight. What changes is the figure laid across them. Press a name and watch one culture’s reading draw itself onto the stars, hold a moment, then dissolve so the next figure can take its turn.

Same Sky, Many Cultures

The stars never move. Only the way we read them.
Same Sky, Many Cultures — an interactive constellation overlay
Bare sky — the constant, before any culture is laid upon it.

What you’re looking at

Every figure here is drawn over the same forty-odd stars: Orion’s rectangle of shoulders and feet, the three belt stars in a row, the V of the Hyades, and the tight knot of the Pleiades off to one side.

The Greeks saw them as a hunter; Ptolemy labeled them not with star names but with body parts: the shoulder, the belt, the foot. The Chinese overlay doesn’t draw one figure at all. It creates mansions, the stations the moon passes through, with Orion’s box becoming Shēn, the Three Stars, and the Pleiades becoming Mǎo. The Vedic overlay traces the moon’s path through three nakshatras and sees a deer, whereas the Greek overlay sees a hunter. The Persian and Arabic overlays keep the giant and add Arabic names. These names persist; the West still uses them without knowing them: al-Dabarān, the follower; the belt as a string of pearls.

Same stars, four readings. None more correct than another.