Profile / Characteristics
English translation | Latin declination and pronunciations | Size/ °² | # stars (visible) |
the Shield | Scutum – SCOOT-um, SCYOOT-um Scuti – SCOOT-eye, SCYOOT-eye | 109 | 29 |
Main Star (brightest one):
Designation | HIP number | name in IAU-CSN | brightness |
α Sct | HIP 91117 | – | 3.83 mag (V) |
Our (modern) Explanation
Scutum isn’t known for its faint stars but for the ratherr bright cloud of the Milky Way that is visible here. It waas invented by Hevelius (published 1690) to commemorate the victory of the Europeans over the Turks that ended the siege of Vienna.
Ancient Globes
Farnese Globe
Kugel Globe
Mainz Globe
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Ancient Lore & Meaning
Aratus
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Reference:
English translation by Douglas Kidd (1997).
Aratus: Phaenomena, Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries, Series Number 34
Pseudo-Eratosthenes
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References:
French translation by:
Jordi Pàmias i Massana and Arnaud Zucker (2013). Ératosthènes de Cyrène – Catastérismes, Les Belles Lettres, Paris
English version in:
Robin Hard (2015): Eratosthenes and Hyginus Constellation Myths with Aratus’s Phaenomena, Oxford World’s Classics
Early Modern Interpretation
Contemporary
As one of their first tasks in the 1920s, the newly founded International Astronomical Union (IAU) established constellation standards. The Belgian astronomer Eugène Delporte was assigned to the task to define borders of constellations parallel to lines of declination and right ascension. They were accepted by the General Assembly in 1928. The standardized names and abbreviations had already been accepted in 1922 and 1925.