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The Fool, Alef and Orion
by Stephen John Mangan [Kwaw]
The first image is detail of Ninurta/Orion
standing next to a Lion [sacred animal of Innana and
symbol of Sirius], 2nd image the complete picture from
the ancient Sumerian Seal of Adda. 3rd is of Ninurta
enthroned with image of double headed eagle, 4th Orion
and Canis Major detail from cylinder seal. Further details
at end.

Ninurta (Orion) with
Lion (Sirius)
Alef ℵ , which leads the letters, is attributed
to the constellation Orion [and also the fixed star Aldebaran,
the eye of the bull in the constellation of Taurus], which
leads the starry hosts and is called in Hebrew KSYL,
which in plural form also means 'constellations' in general,
but in singular 'fool'. The root also means fool, loins,
flank, hope, confidence.
The words in bold below are all translations of the root
KSL [hope, flank, confidence, folly, loins]:
Job 8:14 Whose hope shall be
cut off, and whose trust shall be a spider's web.
Job 15:27 Because he covereth his face with his fatness, and maketh collops
of fat on his flanks.
Job 31:24 If I have made gold my hope, or have said to the
fine gold, Thou art my confidence;
Ps 38:7 For my loins are filled with a loathsome disease:
and there is no soundness in my flesh.
Ps 49:13 This their way is their folly: yet their posterity
approve their sayings. Selah.
Ps 78:7 That they might set their hope in God, and not forget
the works of God, but keep his commandments:
Pr 3:26 For the LORD shall be thy confidence, and shall keep
thy foot from being taken.

(Click to enlarge)
Seal of Adda
Those in bold below of KSYL [folly, orion, constellation]:
Ec 7:25 I applied mine heart to know, and to
search, and to seek out wisdom, and the reason of things,
and to know the wickedness of folly, even
of foolishness and madness:
Isa 13:10 For the stars of heaven and the constellations thereof
shall not give their light: the sun shall be darkened
in his going forth, and the moon shall not cause her
light to shine.
Am 5:8 Seek him that maketh the seven stars and Orion,
and turneth the shadow of death into the morning, and
maketh the day dark with night: that calleth for the
waters of the sea, and poureth them out upon the face
of the earth: The LORD is his name:
Job 9:9 Which maketh Arcturus, Orion,
and Pleiades, and the chambers of the south. Job 38:31
Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or
loose the bands of Orion?
Orion is one of the oldest known constellations. The bands
of Orion refer to the three apparently equally spaced stars
that form the belt of Orion, an easily identifiable locational
aid, followed North they lead the eye to Aldebaran, South
to Sirius, two bright stars of calendrical and navigational
importance as directional and seasonal markers. Above to
the right is the constellation of Taurus, to the left,
Gemini.
The constellation was thought of as a cosmic giant
His arms extended measure half the skies:
His stride no less.
Another name for his belt [and for the central star in particular]
was 'the string of pearls'. Perhaps we may see reference
to this in the giant stature and string of balls in the pseudo "CHARLES
VI" OR "GRINGONNEUR" deck.

aka 'Charles VI' Fool
Kesil has also the meaning of arrogance, and in relation
to Orion has particular relevance in relation to these
three stars as they are identified in
Hebrew tradition with Nimrod, and the band of stars
represent the bonds with which God bound him to heaven
for his arrogance. Perhaps there is some unknown relevance
to the seat of the TdM [Tarot de Marseille] fool's pants
being torn, revealing his buttocks, as with the Nimrod
figure of the Sola Busca?
In Egyptian star lore Orion is the abode of the soul of
mummified Osiris, God of the underworld and of the dead.
Among his symbols were two red feathers worn in his white
atef crown, to which we might see a reference in the red
feather in the hat of the Waite/Smith fool card [feathers
are also referenced in C. De Gebelin, and the Bolognese
and Visconti-Sforza decks].
The Sola Busca Matto too has the feathers in his hair,
a string with three balls attached to his waist, but also
the black bird on its shoulder may allude to a connection
with Orion:
Do you know that the Hare, Canis Major and Canis
Minor have forty three stars in the Southern part of the
heaven, and are so rewarded for only two or three trivial
reasons not less unimportant than the reason that causes
the Hydra, the Saucer, and the Raven to be next to Orion
and to receive forty-one stars to commemorate the occasion
when the gods sent the Raven to obtain some drinking water?
[Bruno, 1584]
Due to having the gift of 'walking on water' bestowed
upon him by his father Neptune, in the renaissance Orion
was used as an allegory of Christ, and it was through such
an allegorical use that Giordan Bruno was accused by the
inquisition of attacking the divinity of Christ in his The
expulsion of the triumphant beast.
This is because he [Orion] knows how to perform
miracles, and, as Neptune knows, can walk over the waves
of the sea without sinking, without wetting his feet, and
with this, consequently, will be able to perform many other
fine acts of kindness. Let us send him among men, and let
us see to it that he give them to understand all that I
want and like them to understand: that white is black,
that the human intellect, through which they seem to see
best, is blindness, and that that which according to reason
seems excellent, good and very good, is vile, criminal
and extremely bad. I want them to understand that Nature
is a whorish prostitute, that natural law is ribaldry,
that Nature and Divinity cannot concur in one and the same
good end, and that the justice of one is not subordinate
to the justice of the other, but that they [Nature and
Divinity] are contraries, as are shadows and light...
I want him to go down to earth; and I shall command
that he lose all power of performing bagatelles, impostures,
acts of cunning, kind actions, and other
miracles that are of no worth, because I do not want him together with the
other to be in a position to destroy whatever excellence and dignity are
found and exist in things necessary to the commonwealth
of the world. I see how easy
it is for it to be deceived, and consequently inclined towards acts of madness
and prone to every corruption and indignity. I do not however, however, want
out reputation to depend upon the discretion of him or similar to him. For
if a king be mad who gives so much power and authority to one of his captains
and generous leaders to make him superior to himself...how much more senseless
and deserving of a disciplinarian and tutor will he be if he should put or
leave in the same authority an abject, vile and ignorant man, by whom everything
will be depreciated, slighted, confused and thrown into disorder, ignorance
being placed by the latter where knowledge is customary, nobility where there
is contempt, and villainy where there is reputation!" [Bruno]

(click to enlarge)
Ninurta
In relation to star lore we may also note that Aldebaran
is one of the four fixed stars known as the Guardians of
Heaven, the Four Watchers, Royal Stars or Four Archangels,
the other three being:
Regulus - in the constellation
Leo [currently at end of tropical sign Leo]
Antares - in the constellation Scorpio
[currently 'in' tropical sign Sagittarius]
Fomalhaut - in the constellation Pisces
Austrinus, the 'Southern Fish', [currently 'in' tropical
sign Pisces]
Their astronomical positions form a cross in relation
to each other; so each rises after the other at approximately
6 hour intervals. And "Persian astrologers used them, instead
of cardinal points, to mark the four quarters of the heavens
as early as 3000 BC." [Astrology, ed. Kim Farrel,
Starfire 2002].
Aldebaran was the Watcher of the East,
Antares was the Watcher of the West,
Fomalhaut was the Watcher of the South
and,
"
Regulus was one of the four stars of
the Persian monarchy when, as Watcher of the North, it
marked the Summer Solstice." [Farrel, 2002].
We have had available the research of Daana Mindon [aka:
Diane O'Donovan] for over 10 or so years ago now, which
has shown through a study of medieval atlases and navigation
maps, that the suit signs are connected with the Star Lore
of the Persians as emblems of the directions:
sticks - east
gold discs - south
swords - north
whips/cups -west
These Four Guardians or Watchers were also called the
archangel stars. In kabbalistic tradition the four corners
of the protective tau : : represents the
'good impulse' by which man shall inherit the world to
come. The 'good impulse' that hovers overthe pious is represented
by four archangels that descend with the soul at birth
and accompany the pious:
Before all this, there are four angels that descend
with the soul of the pious....One of these angels is
Michael, in remembrance of Abraham; one Gabriel, in remembrance
of Isaac; one Uriel, in remembrance of Jacob; and one
Raphael,
in remembrance of Adam; and the good impulse hovers over
him...Now all men are formed of four elements, but on
the order in which these elements are found - that is,
the
order of the planets with which each person is connected-depends
the order of the angels who accompany him..."
"
...Thus, if the ruling planet be the Lion, Michael will
lead, and be followed by Gabriel, then Rapheal and then
Uriel. If, however, his planet is the Ox, first comes
Gabriel, then Michael, then Uriel, then Raphael. If the
Eagle be the planet by which he is influenced, Uriel
will be first, then Michael, Gabriel and Raphael. And
should the planet be Man, then will Raphael lead, with
Michael, Gabriel and Uriel coming after in that order." [Zohar,
Bo (exodus) 42a, c.13th century]
So 'mixing' the star lore of the persians and hebrews
we candeduce a set of correspondences as follows that can
be traced back to before the 13th century [and probably
as far back as the 10th]:
Lion - Michael - Regulus - North - Swords - Summer Solstice
Ox - Gabriel - Aldebaran - East - Sticks - Spring Equinox
Eagle - Uriel - Antares - West - Cups - Autumn Equinox
Man - Raphael - Fomalhaut - South - Coins - Winter Solstice
Note in the seal of adda:
Enki with two flowing rivers from his shoulders, reminiscent
of the sign for aquarius, in whom we may see the image
of Man: below him is the Bull: from
Enki's arm flies the thunderbird or Eagle: and
next to Ninurta is the Lion.

Orion and Canis
Major
Explanation of the Royal Cylinder Seal [image 1 and
2 above], notes and references:
Images 1 and 2 the 'Seal
of Adda'
The cuneiform script gives the name 'Adda' and title 'Scribe'.
The seal is in the collection of the British
Museum.
"In the center is the sun god, Shamash/Utu, rising from
behind the mountains. To Shamash/Utu's left stands Inana,
goddess of the morning star [Venus], next to her is Ninurta
and a clearly defined lion with mane. To the right of Uta
is the god of sweet waters, Enki, from whose shoulders
spring the Euphrates and Tigris. Enki holds the thunderbird
on his hand. Directly under Enki is a clearly defined member
of the bovine family with horns and legs tucked under in
typical bovine posture. Behind Enki stands his vizierthe
double headed attendant God Usmu."
[In relation to the Venus and Orion being next to each
other in this sequence, note that while Jerome follows
the tradition associating the Hebrew word 'Kesil' with
the constellation Orion in the Vulgate, it is translated
Hesperus, that is the evening star or Venus, in the Septaguint
- LXX].
Thanks to 'trolldomsstavar' of the Tarot
Study Forum for helping me to clarify the details
of this image with reference to "The Treasures of Darkness:
A History of Mesopotamian Religion" by Thorkild Jacobsen.
Innana on the right of Ninurta represents the Morning
Star, Venus; she is also associated with Sirius and the
sacred animal the Lion, thus my interpretation of the Lion
on the left of Ninurta, taken together with the association
of Ninurta with Orion and their relative positions, with
Sirius [the 'dog star' of the constellation Canis Major],
also associated with the Lion because of its Heliacal rising
when the Sun is in Leo.
The double headed figure to the right of Enki, is his
attendant minister God or vizier the double headed Unsu,
his double headedness, reminiscent of Janus, I suggest
may represent the old and new year; the sequence being
an allegory of beginnings, of creation and of new year.
The whole sequence may be seen as an astronomical representation
of the spring equinox as the start of the New Year. Given
the nature of Sumerian astral religion and the clear references
here to astronomical markers, and remembering this image
is circular and therefore Usmu at the far right of the
image is to the left of Ninurta could represent the constellation
Gemini:
Now near the Twins, behold Orion rise;
His arms extended measure half the skies:
His stride no less. Onward with steady pace
He treads the boundless realms of starry space,
On each broad shoulder a bright star displayed.
And three obliquely grace his hanging blade.
In his vast Head, immersed in boundless spheres,
Three stars less bright, but yet as great, he bears;
But farther off removed, their splendour's lost;
Thus grac'd and armed, he leads the starry Host.
Manilius, trans. Thomas Chrichton.
Image 3 is an image of Ninurta enthroned with double headed
eagle. Image 4 is of Orion (the Hunter) and Canis Major
(the Dog star) from aSumerian cylinder seal of the Neo-Assyrian
Period. A reproduction of which can be found in "Gods,
Demons and Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia" by Jeremy Green.
Other references:
Astrology published by Starfire 2002 General
Editor Kim Farrel.
The Wisdom of the Zohar arranged by Lachower,
F. Tishby, I. Translated by David Goldstein
The expulsion of the triumphan beast Giordano
Bruno, translated by Arthur D. Imerti.
A couple of online essays by Daana Mindon [aka: Diana
O'Donovan] can be found here:
Shipman's
Guide: Early packs and the minor arcana [pdf file]
Michael Scot's
rebus figure of "Juppiter" as prototype for the tarot pack's "Magus"/Bateleur
"Orion Heb. Kesil i.e., "the
fool", the name of a constellation consisting of about
eighty stars. The Vulgate renders thus, but the LXX renders
by 'Hesperus', i.e., "the evening-star" Venus. The Orientals "appear
to have conceived of this constellation under the figure
of an impious giant bound upon the sky." This giant was,
according to tradition, Nimrod,
the type of folly that contends against God. In Isa 13:10
the plural form of the Hebrew word is rendered "constellations".
From The Illustrated Bible by M.G. Easton, 1897.
Fate is a dog, walking always behind
a man, well able to bite. It clings like dirty rags
saying: "Who is my man? Let him know it."
Ancient Sumerian proverb.
Please note: My opinions do not necessarily
reflect those of the sources I have referenced! All errors
are my own.
[A thank you to Stephen 'Kwaw' for permission to reproduce
these living reflections - jmd ed.]
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