logo
Does Canopus have a connection with canopy?

Does Canopus have a connection with canopy?

Spectatora day ago
I spent some time looking for the connection between the ancient city of Canopus and the English canopy.
Nelson won the Battle of the Nile in Aboukir Bay. The bay was named after the city of Abu Qir, which was named after a Christian martyr, St Cyrus. Abu Qir stands on the site of the city of Canopus, to which ran the Canopic Way, from Alexandria. Canopus was said to have been founded by Menelaus, the King of Sparta who figures in the Iliad. Canopus, the pilot of his ship, was fatally bitten by a snake, and around the monument built by Menelaus grew the city. At Canopus, the Egyptian god Osiris was worshipped under the form of a jar with a human head. Modern antiquaries gave the name Canopic jars to other such jars with quite a different purpose: to hold the entrails of mummified bodies.
The helmsman Canopus was also remembered in ancient times by a star in the constellation of Argo, itself named after Jason's ship, a beam of which killed him. Argo was among the 48 constellations named in the 2nd century ad by the astronomer Ptolemy in a book that we call the Almagest, from its Arabic name, deriving from Greek meaning 'the greatest'. The star Canopus is the second brightest in the sky, and it seems that the south-eastern wall of the square-built Kaaba in Mecca faces the rising point of Canopus, and the orientation of early mosques was taken from this.
Mosques perhaps, but not mosquitoes. The Ancient Greek for mosquito was kōnōps, which does not come from konos ('cone') and ops ('face'), but perhaps from some pre-Greek word. Still, the Greek konopeion 'a couch with mosquito curtains' developed in two ways. One was into the French canapé 'sofa', hence a little bit of bread with something sitting on it: our party canapé.
The other development, in the Middle Ages, was into canopy, a hanging, sometimes a hanging of honour. So Canopus has no connection with canopy, but I enjoyed finding that out.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Last Words by Richard Holloway review: 'a warm and moving memoir'
Last Words by Richard Holloway review: 'a warm and moving memoir'

Scotsman

time4 hours ago

  • Scotsman

Last Words by Richard Holloway review: 'a warm and moving memoir'

Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter, get the latest news and reviews from our specialist arts writers Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... A few years ago Richard Holloway, former Bishop of Edinburgh, published a book of reflections concerning old age entitled Waiting for the Last Bus. Happily the bus has not yet turned up - perhaps it has been rerouted - so now we have Last Words which, we hope, will not yet be the last. Richard Holloway | Colin Hattersley It is an affectionate and moving memoir of his early life and of a working-class youth in Alexandria (Dunbartonshire, not Egypt). The depiction of his parents is loving and moving; he doesn't shrink from their difficulties in what seems to have been an up-and-down marriage. Likewise, the depiction of conditions in Alexandria during the war and the next decade is both warm and critical; living conditions were deplorable yet loving families survived them. It is good to be reminded just what an important part was played by the cinema in these pre-television years. Programmes in Alexandria changed in the middle of the week, presumably because there were usually full houses. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Make sure you keep up to date with Arts and Culture news from across Scotland by signing up to our free newsletter here. It is well known that Holloway is a bishop who lost his faith, though on the evidence of this memoir he retains a deep loyalty to the Church. He has written before about his gradual loss of faith, a process which occurred even while he continued to serve his flock, many of whom, in the second half of the 20th century, must have had their own doubts and misgivings. What became impossible for him was the belief in personal immortality, life after death, and this belief has indeed withered in much of Christian Europe and America. Many still find comfort in the thought of being united with husband, wife, parents and friends after death, though, mischievously, Holloway recalls a woman who, hearing the minister promise that she would be united with her late husband again, muttered that this would give her no pleasure for she had "hated the old bugger" when he was alive. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Like so many who contemplate the decline of the Christian faith, Holloway quotes Matthew Arnold's lines in Dover Beach, about faith being on the ebb. Well, that was almost 200 years ago now, and, while the tide may be well out, the beach will welcome its return. Happily this little book isn't all about the loss of faith - it is also a warm and moving memoir. Now it seems that Holloway is content to live in uncertainty; yet his affection for the church remains. Reflecting on on the closure of a church where he worshipped as a boy, he seems to suggest that, while it served and strengthened so many, its relevance, or the need for it, has simply vanished. Yet though he doubts the existence of God and the afterlife, he doesn't deny the consolations of faith.

Anti-fishing group PETA call for Norwich pub Compleat Angler to be renamed 'The Thinking Trout'
Anti-fishing group PETA call for Norwich pub Compleat Angler to be renamed 'The Thinking Trout'

ITV News

time8 hours ago

  • ITV News

Anti-fishing group PETA call for Norwich pub Compleat Angler to be renamed 'The Thinking Trout'

An animal rights group has called for a riverside pub to change its traditional name amid concerns about cruelty to fish. PETA has written to the manager of The Compleat Angler in Norwich and asked him to change the name of the pub to 'The Thinking Trout'. The letter to the pub, which sits on the edge of the River Wensum at the bottom of Prince of Wales Road, reads: "Angling is far from a peaceful pastime. When wrenched from their homes, fish struggle, suffocating, before being bludgeoned to death or beheaded while still alive. "Fish, too, are thinking, feeling individuals. They enjoy social relationships, communicate with their bodies, use tools, and even make art for love. "Angling doesn't just harm fish. Every year, around 640,000 tonnes of discarded fishing gear enter the world's oceans and rivers, strangling millions of fish, birds, turtles, and other animals. "By replacing sea life on your menu with delicious vegan options and rebranding as 'The Thinking Trout', you can take a bold stand against cruelty and environmental destruction. "And you have to admit, The Thinking Trout has a certain sparkle to it." The Compleat Angler is named after a collection of stories and poems about fishing, published in 1653 by Izaak Walton. It's thought to be one of the most printed works in English Literature. The pub chain that owns The Compleat Angler pub, Greene King, has been contacted for comment. Since the letter from PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) was published, people have speculated online as to which other pubs could be on its hit list. Someone suggested the popular Norwich pub, The Fat Cat, could also be petitioned as it could be accused of promoting obesity in response to the tongue-in-cheek suggestion, staff at the Fat Cat posted on their Facebook page: "...And I thought we were named after those hardworking heroes in the City of London! "But seriously, all cats are beautiful. It doesn't matter how fat they are."

'I could hear my dead mum celebrating with me when I opened my A-level results'
'I could hear my dead mum celebrating with me when I opened my A-level results'

Daily Mirror

time9 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

'I could hear my dead mum celebrating with me when I opened my A-level results'

Gabrielle Morgan, 18, was among the students celebrating - she said she had kept a promise she made to her mum before she died by getting a place at Oxford University A record number of students today celebrated top A-level results across the country - with a new milestone hit for A & A* achievements. ‌ But education leaders warned of stark divides in results between different areas of the country. The regional gap widened from 7.4 percentage points to 9.2, with 32.1% of kids in London getting top grades compared to 22.9% in the north-east of England. ‌ On average across the UK, 28.3% of entries were awarded either an A or A*, up from 27.8% in 2024 and above 25.4% in 2019. This is the highest proportion on record outside the pandemic-affected years of 2020-22- when the figure peaked at 44.8% in 2021. It comes after Gordon Brown blasted the return of 'poverty of 60 years ago' as he makes one big demand. ‌ Boys took a lead over girls in the top grades for the first time since 2018, with 28.4% of boys' A-level entries scoring an A or A* this summer, compared to 28.2% of their female classmates' entries. One happy sixth-form student said she had kept a promise she made to her mum before she died by getting a place at Oxford University. Gabrielle Morgan, 18, who is from Newcastle and who achieved straight A*s in English literature, Spanish and chemistry, said: "I could practically hear her celebrating with me when the offer came through. I know just how proud of me she is and I know she helped a lot, even though she wasn't here physically." Her mum, who moved from Malaysia to the UK in her early 20s, died from lung cancer in April last year. Elsewhere Meghan Cotty, 18, from Caerphilly, celebrated two A*s and a B, which got her into the University of Birmingham to study law with business. Megan, who balanced her studies alongside working as a part-time carer, told the BBC: 'It's taken a lot of work and patience but I'm so glad it paid off. I want to be a solicitor so it's a stepping stone to get that. I am just so glad my hard work paid off.' ‌ Sam Perret, 18, from Staffordshire, received better results than he thought he would get with his A*AA. He spent 45 minutes on the phone with three universities as he went through clearing but in the end stuck with Loughborough University to study economics. He told the BBC he was going 'straight to the pub' to celebrate. Ucas said a record 439,180 applicants have gained a place at university or college - up 3.1% on last year. The number of T-level entries has increased by 61.4% on last year, while the number of A-level entries has fallen by 0.5% compared to 2024. ‌ T-levels are two-year courses, which are broadly equivalent to three A-levels, focus on more vocational subjects and offer a mix of classroom learning and industry placements. While the number of T-level entries soared, stats showed more than a quarter of students in England who started T-level courses did not complete them this summer. However the overall drop-out rate has fallen, with 73% completing the technical qualifications this summer, up on last year's 71%. ‌ Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson branded yesterday a "day of celebration" for young people who have worked hard and got the results they wanted. She said: "My message to young people is that if you've got what you've needed to move on to the next step in your journey, that's fantastic. But if you haven't there's lots of support and advice that's available, either from your school or college, but also through Ucas.' She added that the "entrenched divide" in outcomes and the lack of progress for white working-class children is "concerning". Jill Duffy, chairwoman of JCQ board of directors and chief executive of the OCR exam board, said: "Regional inequalities are getting worse, not better. The gap at top grades (A*-A) has grown again. London is once again the top performing region and is now 9.2 percentage points ahead of the North East." She added: "These regional inequalities need more attention."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store