Login

Back Issues & Subscriptions

For details of  back issues and  abstracts, see below.

To purchase single volumes you will need to click on the title of the volume to go to the details page and then please click on the "buy now" button, beside the volume you want.  If you wish to sign up for a subscription to a whole years worth of issues, please click here. If you require more information on the content of our back issues, please click on the title.  You will then be taken to the details page.

Payment can also be made by sterling cheque or money order, or Eurocheque, made out to ‘Culture and Cosmos’, Visa or MasterCard. For credit card payments we need the full card number, address and name on card, and expiry date.

Otherwise subscriptions should be mailed to:
Culture and Cosmos, PO Box 1071, Bristol BS99 1HE, UK.

*Members of the British Astronomical Association, The Astrological Association and The Historical Association are entitled to a discount. Please enquire.

Home » Back Issues » Volume Details
Culture and Cosmos Vol 03 no 1 (1999) Spring/Summer 1999

 Abstracts Vol. 3 no 1

Michael R. Molnar
Firmicus Maternus and the Star of Bethlehem
pp 3-9.
Abstract. The Mathesis of Julius Firmicus Maternus describes astrological aspects responsible for bestowing divinity and immortality. These conditions have been identified as the major astrological components of the Star of Bethlehem.1 Moreover, closer examination reveals that Firmicus juxtaposed pagan and Christian themes, which suggests he was a pagan making the transition to Christianity.

Roger Beck
‘The Astronomical Design of Karakush, a Royal Burial Site in Ancient Commagene: An Hypothesis’
pp. 10-34
Abstract. The explicit astronomical content of the great monument of Antiochus I of Commagene on the summit of Nemrud Dagh warrants the search for astronomical significance in the design of other monuments of this ancient Near Eastern kingdom of the first century BCE. The article advances the hypothesis that the nearby monument of Karakush, built by Antiochus’ son, Mithradates II, as a burial site for the royal women, was astronomically oriented, its three sets of peripheral columns being so positioned that during June Leo would be observed setting behind the lion columns after sunset, Aquila culminating over the eagle columns around midnight, and Taurus rising behind the bull columns before dawn. It is suggested, furthermore, that the astronomical occasion for the foundation of this second monument was a recurrence of significant planetary conjunctions in Leo. The ‘lion horoscope’ of Nemrud Dagh records the conjunctions of 62 BCE; the Karakush site may be related to the conjunctions of 27-26 BCE.

Chantal Allison
‘The Ifriqiya Uprising Horoscope from On Reception by Masha’alla, Court Astrologer in the Early ‘Abassid Caliphate’
pp 35-56

 host @ 09:19 Wednesday 09 ,July ,2008  Category :: Back Issues