Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Where is the Kimah Constellation located?

Is it a galaxy is it near the Ash Constellation or the Mazzaroth constallation? Could it be confused with the Kesil so I do not know any more information than that. It was known by the men of old.Where is the Kimah Constellation located?Here's part of what Wikipedia says:



Only a few stars and constellations are named individually in the Old Testament, and their identification is not certain. The clearest references include:



"Kes卯l"[8], usually understood to be Orion, a giant angel.

"Kimah"[9], which may be the Pleiades, Aldebaran, Arcturus, or Sirius.

"'Ash" or "'Ayish"[10], possibly the Hyades or Ursa Major, or even the Evening Star (Venus when seen after sunset).

"Mezarim"[11], which may be Ursa Major and Ursa Minor, or a synonym for "mazzalot," in which case it would refer to the planets or the constellations of the zodiac.



The planets

"Mazzalot"[12] as already indicated, can refer to the planets collectively. But only two planets are named in the Old Testament:



Saturn, called "Chiun" in Amos 5:26, closely related to the Assyrian "K茅van" or "kaiwanu."

Venus, called "Meleket ha-Shamayim," "the queen of heaven," in Jeremiah 7:18 and elsewhere. That the latter means Venus is shown by the cakes which are said to have been baked for her. Among the Assyrians and Babylonians the cake offerings were called "the bread of Ishtar."

"Helel," the "son of the morning," in Isaiah 14:12, is also thought by some to be the morning star (Venus when visible before dawn). This identification is better known to many English speakers as Lucifer, the "light-bearer.Where is the Kimah Constellation located?the 4 opposite corners of heavenWhere is the Kimah Constellation located?Harbour Classic Builders LLCWhere is the Kimah Constellation located?
I researched it and what I found was from jewishencyclopedia.com I'm not jewish but I study the constellation stories and I know that is not an astronomical one.



I wrote "Kimah Constellation" in google and found this...



http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.j鈥?/a>

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