Jumaluste lemmikloomad ja ennustamine elundite põhjal

Foretelling fate, course of disease, the weather, etc. has always been considered important. An important role in mantic lore has always been played by forecasts based on the bones and internal organs of the sacrificial animal or the pet of a deity. Based on the changes of the liver, less commonly h...

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Main Author: Enn Ernits
Format: Article
Language:Estonian
Published: Eesti Kirjandusmuuseum 2006-01-01
Series:Mäetagused
Online Access:http://www.folklore.ee/tagused/nr31/ernits.pdf
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spelling doaj-19ec4263891e44e6b007e8f5c64bf2da2020-11-25T00:58:14ZestEesti Kirjandusmuuseum Mäetagused1406-992X1406-99382006-01-0131Jumaluste lemmikloomad ja ennustamine elundite põhjalEnn ErnitsForetelling fate, course of disease, the weather, etc. has always been considered important. An important role in mantic lore has always been played by forecasts based on the bones and internal organs of the sacrificial animal or the pet of a deity. Based on the changes of the liver, less commonly heart and lungs of ruminants and other mammals, for example, the Etruscan haruspices foretold who is depicted on a gravure by means of a trachea, lungs and liver (4th c BC). Observation of the liver was probably studied with the help of models. In 1877, a bronze lamb liver was found in Italy featuring many details. The internal surface of the liver is divided into sectors dedicated to favourable and unfavourable deities. Etruscan methods of divination may originate from Ancient Orient. Professor of anatomy, Ludwig Stieda (1900) compared the Etruscan liver diagram with a Mesopotamian find a thousand years older. From there, the art of liver observation spread via the Hetites to Greece and Etruria. Before the cuneiform writing was deciphered, hints on Bablyonian hepatoscopy could be read in the Bible. Babylonian liver models resemble the Etruscan bronze liver. The Ninive library texts name more than a dozen liver-related terms. In the prostasis Babylonians considered the individual features and pathological changes of the liver. The more rare the change in the liver, the more weight the apodoses had. Babylonians also studied the intestines of sheep, paying attention to the positioning of the organs. There are many records of different peoples using the liver and spleen of various domestic and wild animals to forecast weather. There are hundreds of ancient architectural objects, labyrinths composed of cobblestones in the northern countries that are considered to be a model of the intestines of the sacrificial animal, i.e. the colon of ruminants. In ancient China, forecasts were based on mammalian bones and the cracks of a turtle's shell. Wide popularity was enjoyed in earlier times by omoplastoscopy or forecasting by the shoulder-blade (e.g. in North America, Ireland, Siberia, Mongolia, China). The Khazakhs distinguished at least seven subsections and a number of regions on a fire-heated shoulder-blade, the cracks at angles forming in different regions expressing various groups of omens.http://www.folklore.ee/tagused/nr31/ernits.pdf
collection DOAJ
language Estonian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Enn Ernits
spellingShingle Enn Ernits
Jumaluste lemmikloomad ja ennustamine elundite põhjal
Mäetagused
author_facet Enn Ernits
author_sort Enn Ernits
title Jumaluste lemmikloomad ja ennustamine elundite põhjal
title_short Jumaluste lemmikloomad ja ennustamine elundite põhjal
title_full Jumaluste lemmikloomad ja ennustamine elundite põhjal
title_fullStr Jumaluste lemmikloomad ja ennustamine elundite põhjal
title_full_unstemmed Jumaluste lemmikloomad ja ennustamine elundite põhjal
title_sort jumaluste lemmikloomad ja ennustamine elundite põhjal
publisher Eesti Kirjandusmuuseum
series Mäetagused
issn 1406-992X
1406-9938
publishDate 2006-01-01
description Foretelling fate, course of disease, the weather, etc. has always been considered important. An important role in mantic lore has always been played by forecasts based on the bones and internal organs of the sacrificial animal or the pet of a deity. Based on the changes of the liver, less commonly heart and lungs of ruminants and other mammals, for example, the Etruscan haruspices foretold who is depicted on a gravure by means of a trachea, lungs and liver (4th c BC). Observation of the liver was probably studied with the help of models. In 1877, a bronze lamb liver was found in Italy featuring many details. The internal surface of the liver is divided into sectors dedicated to favourable and unfavourable deities. Etruscan methods of divination may originate from Ancient Orient. Professor of anatomy, Ludwig Stieda (1900) compared the Etruscan liver diagram with a Mesopotamian find a thousand years older. From there, the art of liver observation spread via the Hetites to Greece and Etruria. Before the cuneiform writing was deciphered, hints on Bablyonian hepatoscopy could be read in the Bible. Babylonian liver models resemble the Etruscan bronze liver. The Ninive library texts name more than a dozen liver-related terms. In the prostasis Babylonians considered the individual features and pathological changes of the liver. The more rare the change in the liver, the more weight the apodoses had. Babylonians also studied the intestines of sheep, paying attention to the positioning of the organs. There are many records of different peoples using the liver and spleen of various domestic and wild animals to forecast weather. There are hundreds of ancient architectural objects, labyrinths composed of cobblestones in the northern countries that are considered to be a model of the intestines of the sacrificial animal, i.e. the colon of ruminants. In ancient China, forecasts were based on mammalian bones and the cracks of a turtle's shell. Wide popularity was enjoyed in earlier times by omoplastoscopy or forecasting by the shoulder-blade (e.g. in North America, Ireland, Siberia, Mongolia, China). The Khazakhs distinguished at least seven subsections and a number of regions on a fire-heated shoulder-blade, the cracks at angles forming in different regions expressing various groups of omens.
url http://www.folklore.ee/tagused/nr31/ernits.pdf
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