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ORION is the most recognizable constellation in the night sky. Beyond linking the northern and the southern hemispheres, this seven star asterism represents many of the popular mythological heroes that are key in revealing the secret language of the sky.
For Egyptian royalty, Orion represented god Osiris. When pharoah (god on earth) died, this half human-half god would use a pyramid as a vehicle of ascension so the ruler of Egypt could take his place among the stars as Osiris (god of heaven). Nearby is the brightest star in the sky, Sirius in Canis Major, which represented Isis.
Further north, the Celtic race called it Herne the Hunter. Legend tells us that Herne walks Windsor Forest in the winter with his hunting dogs and blasts his horn 'round the great oak.
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Who was Herne? It's obvious when you consider these group of asterisms; Herne as Orion, his hunting dogs were Canis Major and Minor and since he is a winter constellation he appears during the last part of the hunting season before the winter solstice. The blasting of the horn is the symbolic announcemnet of his appearance as he walks at tree top appearing to be a giant as he crosses the sky. The giant oak itself is a focal point, a navel of the world for the forest people and is a way of symbolically connecting themselves to the sky. Their source of celestial power. The branches of the oak are a representation of the canopy of the sky like the vault of heavenly stars above their heads.
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Hercules and the Bull .... or .... Jason and the Dragon
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The sky was a storyboard primer for the imaginations of all our ancestors. In this case, Orion represents Hercules as he fought the Cretan Bull (Taurus) and at his feet runs the path he took into the Underworld (Eridanus). In one hand, he holds a mighty club with which to smite his enemies. Draped over the other arm, he proudly wears the skin of a lion he killed with his bare hands. This is a symbol of the house of Judah.
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Here it becomes the Golden Fleece that was the focus of a quest for Jason and the Argonauts. In one hand he holds a shield and in the other a sword to slay the dragon. Jason took a voyage on the Argo with twelve companions. The twelve signs of the zodiac were Jasons shipmates and the dragon he fought to secure the fleece is Taurus. Even his ship Argo is made up of a group of constellations hanging above our heads in the starlit skies.
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Every culture on our planet looked to the heavens as a wellspring of enlightenment before they learned to look within themselves. Those in the northern hemisphere utilized the constellations of the northern sky. Those who lived along the equator did the same with the equatorial asterisms and the southern hemisphere. Many tales were told about the images they created in their minds and Hunter In The Sky has written some down so you may see them as well.
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Myth must be kept alive. The people who can keep it alive are artists of one kind or another. The function of the artist is the mythologization of the environment and the world." - Joseph Campbell (from The Power of Myth)
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The constellation of Orion appears in Milton's Paradise Lost, and Tennyson's Locksley Hall, "Great Orion sloping slowly to the west".
In the Middle-earth mythos of J. R. R. Tolkien, Menelmacar is the Quenya elven name for Orion.
Adrienne Rich wrote the poem, "Orion", in which she describes how she viewed him differently from childhood to middle age.
The Romanian poet Geo Bogza devoted a poem to Orion.
The opening lines of the poem "The Star-Splitter" by Robert Frost accurately describe the rising of Orion: "You know Orion always comes up sideways. / Throwing a leg up over our fence of mountains".
Orion is a protector in Jimmy Buffett's book The Jolly Mon.
Orion was the star constellation that was first recognized symbol, initially mistaken as a character from an ancient or alien language, on the star gate device in the film Stargate.
Orion was the name given to the Aurora-class cruiser that the Atlantis crew commandeered late in the second season of Stargate:Atlantis.
Orion was the name of the cat in the movie Men in Black, when the term 'Orion's Belt' was repeatedly mistaken for the constellation; in fact the character was trying to say 'Orion's bell', referring to an ornament on the cat's collar.
In the Star Trek fictional universe, Orion is home to a civilization of green-skin humanoids that practice a slave trade using their women. The Orion Syndicate is an interplanetary organized crime ring within this society.
In the movie Blade Runner, the Replicant portrayed by Rutger Hauer tells Harrison Ford's character that he has "seen things you people wouldn't believe, attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion."
"Orion" is the ultimate goal in the "Master of Orion" series for DOS and PC
"Orion the Hunter" is a comic book produced by Blue Water Productions.
"Orion" is the name chosen by NASA for the Crew Exploration Vehicle (CEV), as officially announced on August 22, 2006, to be built by Lockheed Martin, as announced on August 31, 2006. A NASA spacecraft program from the 1960s was named "Gemini" after the constellation adjacent to Orion that is associated with The Twins (with that spacecraft having a two-person crew).
Architect Daniel Libeskind used the Orion constellation in his concept for the design of the London Metropolitan University Graduate Centre.
In the New Gods created by Jack Kirby for DC Comics, Orion is the son of the popular villain Darkseid.
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