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________________ No. 18.] TRUE LONGITUDE OF THE SUN IN HINDU ASTRONOMY. 247 The day of the inscription (measured from 1 Jan.) was 357. 357-86=271, 1.e. the inscription-day was 271 periods of 24 hours each after the moment of true Mēsha-samkranti, and that moment was 9h 32m after mean sunrise. Table XLVIIJC below shews that at 9h 32m after mean sunrise on Day 271 (measured from true Mēsha-samk.) the sun's true long., in 10,000ths of the circle, was 7365-9 104. We deduct the sun's true motion for gb (on Day 271, Table XLIX) 10-6500 and for 32m (Table L) 0.6084. Total 11.2584. 7365.9104-11-2581=7354-6520. This is the exact sun's true long. at mean sunrise on the given day, Sunday 23 Dec. 1649.8=(say) 7355 (the Arya-Siddhanta gave this as=7323, as we have seen above). Add the tithi-index, 9852, aud we find n, the nakshatra-index, =7207 by the Siddhanta-Siromani. Table VIII shews that the moon was by the equal-space system in Pärva-Ashādha. But it is almost certain that in the matter of nakshatras the Siddhānta-Siromani followed thu Brahma-Siddhānta, and, if so, the moon at mean sunrise would have boon in Uttara-Ashādua and this would have given its name to the day. Thus the details 24 Dhanus and Pärva-Ashådhā were correct according to the AryaSiddhanta for mean sunrise of 23 Dec. A.D. 1649 (they were also correct by Sürya-Siddhantu calculation); but the correot details for the same date, if originally caloulated by the Siddhanta: Siromani, would have been " 25 Dhanus" and "Uttara-Ashādha." 266. This being so, the necessity for Tables for correct calculation by the SiddhantaSiromani and Brahma-Siddhānta is at once apparent ; for, as matters stand, most chronologists, finding in a record-date the description of the solar month and nakshatra scemingly wrong by one place each, would class the date as irregular in two respects; and in using it for fixing the accession-date of a king, would give it scant attention. Whereas it was in fact perfectly correct and regular in all respects, but was calculated by a different standard authority from that followed by the modern verifier. Prof. Jacobi's special Tables (above, Vol. I), no doubt, enable these problems to be worked out; but they are rather troublesome to handle, and do not yield the time-result so easily as does calculation by the a, b, c method which he first introduced to us. His later Tables (Vol. XI, p. 158 f.) can be made available ; but before using them the day of the solar month has to be accurately determined ; and, like the Indian Calendar method, they are wanting in sufficiently close fixture of the sun's true longitude at the given moment,
SR No.032568
Book TitleEpigraphia Indica Vol 14
Original Sutra AuthorN/A
AuthorSten Konow, F W Thomas
PublisherArchaeological Survey of India
Publication Year1917
Total Pages480
LanguageEnglish
ClassificationBook_English
File Size24 MB
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