Hexagram
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A hexagram (Greek) or sexagram (Latin) is a six-pointed geometric star figure with the Schläfli symbol {6/2}, 2{3}, or {{3}}. The term is used to refer to a compound figure of two equilateral triangles. The intersection is a regular hexagon.
The hexagram is part of an infinite series of shapes which are compounds of two n-dimensional simplices. In three dimensions, the analogous compound is the stellated octahedron, and in four dimensions the compound of two 5-cells is obtained.
It has been historically used in various religious and cultural contexts and as decorative motifs. The symbol was used as a decorative motif in medieval Christian churches and Jewish synagogues.Template:Sfn In the medieval period, a Muslim mystical symbol known as the Seal of Solomon was depicted as either a hexagram or a pentagram.Template:Sfn<ref>Leonora Leet, "The Hexagram and Hebraic Sacred Science" in :The Secret Doctrine of the Kabbalah, 1999, pp. 212-217.</ref>
Group theoryEdit
In mathematics, the root system for the simple Lie group G2 is in the form of a hexagram, with six long roots and six short roots.
File:Root system G2.svg
Construction by compass and a straight edgeEdit
A six-pointed star, like a regular hexagon, can be created using a compass and a straight edge:
- Make a circle of any size with the compass.
- Without changing the radius of the compass, set its pivot on the circle's circumference, and find one of the two points where a new circle would intersect the first circle.
- With the pivot on the last point found, similarly find a third point on the circumference, and repeat until six such points have been marked.
- With a straight edge, join alternate points on the circumference to form two overlapping equilateral triangles.
Construction by linear algebraEdit
A regular hexagram can be constructed by orthographically projecting any cube onto a plane through three vertices that are all adjacent to the same vertex. The twelve midpoints to edges of the cube form a hexagram. For example, consider the projection of the unit cube with vertices at the eight possible binary vectors in three dimensions <math>(1,0,0),(0,1,0),(0,0,1),(1,1,0),(1,0,1),(0,1,1),(1,1,1)</math> onto the plane <math>x+y+z=1</math>. The midpoints are <math>(0,0,1/2),(0,1/2,1/2),(0,1,1/2),(1,1,1/2)</math>, and all points resulting from these by applying a permutation to their entries. These 12 points project to a hexagram: six vertices around the outer hexagon and six on the inner.
Origins and shapeEdit
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As a derivative of two overlapping triangles, the hexagram may have developed from different peoples with no direct correlation to one another.
The mandala symbol called yantra, found on ancient South Indian Hindu temples, is a geometric toolset that incorporates hexagrams into its framework. It symbolizes the nara-narayana, or perfect meditative state of balance achieved between Man and God, and if maintained, results in "moksha," or "nirvana" (release from the bounds of the earthly world and its material trappings).Template:Citation needed
Some researchers have theorized that the hexagram represents the astrological chart at the time of David's birth or anointment as king. The hexagram is also known as the "King's Star" in astrological circles.Template:Citation needed
In antique papyri, pentagrams, together with stars and other signs, are frequently found on amulets bearing the Jewish names of God, and used to guard against fever and other diseases. Curiously the hexagram is not found among these signs. In the Greek Magical PapyriTemplate:Citation needed (Wessely, l.c. pp. 31, 112) at Paris and London there are 22 signs side by side, and a circle with twelve signs, but neither a pentagram nor a hexagram.Template:Citation needed
Religious usageEdit
Indian religionsEdit
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Six-pointed stars have also been found in cosmological diagrams in Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism. The reasons behind this symbol's common appearance in Indic religions and the West are unknown. One possibility is that they have a common origin. The other possibility is that artists and religious people from several cultures independently created the hexagram shape, which is a relatively simple geometric design.
Within Indic lore, the shape is generally understood to consist of two triangles—one pointed up and the other down—locked in harmonious embrace. The two components are called "Om" and the "Hrim" in Sanskrit, and symbolize man's position between earth and sky. The downward triangle symbolizes Shakti, the sacred embodiment of femininity, and the upward triangle symbolizes Shiva, or Agni Tattva, representing the focused aspects of masculinity. The mystical union of the two triangles represents Creation, occurring through the divine union of male and female. The two locked triangles are also known as 'Shanmukha'—the six-faced, representing the six faces of Shiva & Shakti's progeny Kartikeya. This symbol is also a part of several yantras and has deep significance in Hindu ritual worship and history.
In Buddhism, some old versions of the Bardo Thodol, also known as The "Tibetan Book of the Dead", contain a hexagram with a swastika inside. It was made up by the publishers for this particular publication. In Tibetan, it is called the "origin of phenomenon" (chos-kyi 'byung-gnas). It is especially connected with Vajrayogini, and forms the center part of her mandala. In reality, it is in three dimensions, not two, although it may be portrayed either way.
The Shatkona is a symbol used in Hindu yantra that represents the union of both the masculine and feminine form. More specifically it is supposed to represent Purusha (the supreme being), and Prakriti (mother nature, or causal matter). Often this is represented as Shiva – Shakti.<ref>sivasakti.com: Introduction to Yantra</ref>
Anahata or heart chakra is the fourth primary chakra, according to Hindu Yogic, Shakta and Buddhist Tantric traditions. In Sanskrit, anahata means "unhurt, unstruck, and unbeaten". Anahata Nad refers to the Vedic concept of unstruck sound (the sound of the celestial realm). Anahata is associated with balance, calmness, and serenity.
JudaismEdit
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The Seal of Solomon or Ring of Solomon is the legendary signet ring attributed to king Solomon in medieval mystical traditions. In mystic Jewish and Islamic lore, the ring is variously described as having given Solomon the power to command the supernatural, including shedim and jinn, and also the ability to speak with animals. Due to the proverbial wisdom of Solomon, it came to be seen as an amulet or talisman, or a symbol or character in medieval magic and Renaissance magic, occultism, and alchemy. The seal is the predecessor to the Star of David, another Jewish symbol.
The Magen David is a generally recognized symbol of Judaism and Jewish identity and is also known colloquially as the Jewish Star or "Star of David." Its usage as a sign of Jewish identity began in the Middle Ages, though its religious usage began earlier, with the current earliest archeological evidence being a stone bearing the shield from the arch of a 3–4th century synagogue in the Galilee.
ChristianityEdit
The first and the most important Armenian Cathedral of Etchmiadzin (303 AD, built by the founder of Christianity in Armenia) is decorated with many types of ornamented hexagrams and so is the tomb of an Armenian prince of the Hasan-Jalalyan dynasty of Khachen (1214 AD) in the Gandzasar Church of Artsakh.
The hexagram may be found in some Churches and stained-glass windows. In Christianity, it is sometimes called the star of creation. A very early example, noted by Nikolaus Pevsner, can be found in Winchester Cathedral, England in one of the canopies of the choir stalls, circa 1308.<ref>Buildings of England: Hampshire and the North (now second edition) Template:ISBN, p.604.</ref>
Latter-day Saints (Mormons)Edit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} The Star of David is also used less prominently by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, in the temples and in architecture. It symbolizes God reaching down to man and man reaching up to God, the union of Heaven and earth. It may also symbolize the Tribes of Israel and friendship and their affinity towards the Jewish people. Additionally, it is sometimes used to symbolize the quorum of the twelve apostles, as in Revelation 12, wherein the Church of God is symbolized by a woman wearing a crown of twelve stars. It is also sometimes used to symbolize the Big Dipper, which points to the North Star, a symbol of Jesus Christ.
IslamEdit
The symbol is known in Arabic as Khātem Sulaymān (Seal of Solomon; {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) or Najmat Dāwūd (Star of David; {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}). The "Seal of Solomon" may also be represented by a five-pointed star or pentagram.
In the Qur'an, it is written that David and King Solomon (Arabic, Suliman or Sulayman) were prophets and kings, and are figures revered by Muslims. The Medieval pre-Ottoman Hanafi Anatolian beyliks of the Karamanids and Jandarids used the star on their flag.<ref name="Muwahhidists">The Muslim Empires of the Ottomans, Safavids, and Mughals, By Stephen F. Dale, 2009</ref> The symbol is also used on the Hayreddin Barbarossa flag. Today the six-pointed star can be found in mosques and on other Arabic and Islamic artifacts.
- Caliph Al Mustansir Sicilian coin.jpg
Coin minted in the Emirate of Sicily during the reign of Al-Mustansir Billah (11th century CE)
- Ayyubid Az Zahir 1204 Aleppo.jpg
1204 coin minted in Aleppo by Az-Zahir Ghazi
- Gateway-Humayuns-Tomb-104.JPG
Hexagram at Humayun's Tomb, Delhi, India (late 16th century)
- Moroccan 4 Falus Coin (AH 1290).jpg
Hexagram on obverse of Moroccan 4 Falus coin (1873)
- PrizrenCollection2 2010 100 3123.JPG
Hexagram on the Minaret of Arasta Mosque, Prizren, Kosovo
- Morocco Fez Embroidery Horse Cover.JPG
Morocco Fez Embroidery Horse Cover
- BarbarosSancagi.svg
Hexagram on the flag of Hayreddin Barbarossa
- Flag of the Belik of Teke, Catalan Atlas 1375.svg
Hexagram on the flag of Teke Beylik
- Detail of the Gates from the tomb of Mahmud of Ghazni stored in the Arsenal of Agra Fort - ILN 1872.jpg
The Gates from the tomb of Mahmud of Ghazni, taken to the Somnath temple
- COLLECTIE TROPENMUSEUM Katoenen banier met Arabische kalligrafie TMnr 5663-1.jpg
A Cirebonese cotton banner with a Chinese influenced lion with Arabic calligraphy with hexagrams; (dated to the late 18th or the 19th century)
Usage in heraldryEdit
In heraldry and vexillology, a hexagram is a fairly common charge employed, though it is rarely called by this name. In Germanic regions it is known simply as a "star." In English and French heraldry, however, the hexagram is known as a "mullet of six points," where mullet is a French term for a spur rowel which is shown with five pointed arms by default unless otherwise specified. In Albanian heraldry and vexillology, hexagram has been used since classical antiquity and it is commonly referred to as sixagram. The coat of arms of the House of Kastrioti depicts the hexagram on a pile argent over the double headed eagle.
Usage in TheosophyEdit
The Star of David is used in the seal and the emblem of the Theosophical Society (founded in 1875). Although it is more pronounced, it is used along with other religious symbols. These include the Swastika, the Ankh, the Aum, and the Ouroboros. The star of David is also known as the Seal of Solomon, which was its original name, being in regular use until around 50 years ago.Template:Citation needed
Usage in occultismEdit
The hexagram, like the pentagram, was and is used in practices of the occult and ceremonial magic and is attributed to the 7 "old" planets outlined in astrology.
The six-pointed star is commonly used both as a talisman<ref>P299 (and throughout) of The Complete Goldendawn by Israel Regardie. Template:ISBN</ref> and for conjuring spirits and spiritual forces in diverse forms of occult magic. In the book The History and Practice of Magic, Vol. 2, the six-pointed star is called the talisman of Saturn and it is also referred to as the Seal of Solomon.<ref>The History and Practice of Magic (Secaucus, NJ: University Books, published by arrangement with Lyle Stewart, 1979), Vol. II, p. 304</ref> Details are given in this book on how to make these symbols and the materials to use.
Traditionally, the Hexagram can be seen as the combination of the four elements. Fire is symbolized as an upwards pointing triangle, while Air (its elemental opposite) is also an upwards pointing triangle, but with a horizontal line through its center. Water is symbolized as a downwards pointing triangle, while Earth (its elemental opposite) is also a downwards pointing triangle, but with a horizontal line through its center. Combining the symbols of fire and water creates a hexagram (six-pointed star). The same follows when combining the symbols of air and earth. Both hexagrams combined are called a double-hexagram. Thus, a combination of the elements is created.<ref>P315-316 of The Wicca Bible by Ann-Marie Gallagher. Template:ISBN. Same information also found in many other books.</ref>
In Rosicrucian and Hermetic Magic, the seven Traditional planets correspond with the angles and the center of the Hexagram as follows, in the same patterns as they appear on the Sephiroth and on the Tree of Life. Saturn, although formally attributed to the Sephira of Binah, within this frame work nonetheless occupies the position of Daath.<ref>P31 of The Ritual Magic Manual: A Complete Course in Practical Magic by David Griffin. Template:ISBN</ref>
In alchemy, the two triangles represent the reconciliation of the opposites of fire and water.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
The hexagram is used as a sign for quintessence, the fifth element.Template:Citation needed
Usage in FreemasonryEdit
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"The interlacing triangles or deltas symbolize the union of the two principles or forces, the active and passive, male and female, pervading the universe ... The two triangles, one white and the other black, interlacing, typify the mingling of apparent opposites in nature, darkness and light, error and truth, ignorance and wisdom, evil and good, throughout human life." – Albert G. Mackey: Encyclopedia of FreemasonryTemplate:Page neededTemplate:Failed verification{{#if:|{{#if:|}}
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The hexagram is featured within and on the outside of many Masonic temples as a decoration. It may have beenTemplate:According to whom found within the structures of King Solomon's temple, from which Freemasons are inspired in their philosophies and studies. Like many other symbols in Freemasonry, the deciphering of the hexagram is non-dogmatic and left to the interpretation of the individual.Template:Cn
Other usesEdit
FlagsEdit
- The flag of Australia had a six pointed star to represent the six federal states from 1901 to 1908.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
- The Ulster Banner flag of Northern Ireland, used from 1953 to 1972. The six pointed star, representing the six counties that make up Northern Ireland. The star of the Ulster Banner is not the compound of two equilateral triangles. The intersection is not a regular hexagon.
- A flag used by rebels during the Whiskey Insurrection in South-Western Pennsylvania, 1794.
- A hexagram appears on the Dardania Flag, proposed for Kosovo by the Democratic League of Kosovo.
- The flag of Nigeria depicted a green hexagram surrounding a crown from with the white word "Nigeria" under it on a red disc from 1914 to 1960.
- The flag of Israel has a blue hexagram in the middle.
- The former flag of Portland, Oregon (from 1970 to 2002) features a small six point star in the seal in the canton.
Other symbolic usesEdit
- A six-point interlocking triangles has been used for thousands of years as an indication a sword was made, and "proofed", in the Damascus area of the Middle East. Still today, it is a required proof mark on all official UK and United States military swords though the blades themselves no longer come from the Middle East.
- In southern Germany the hexagram can be found as part of tavern anchors. It is symbol for the tapping of beer and sign of the brewer's guild. In German this is called "Bierstern" (beer star) or "Brauerstern" (brewer's star).
- A six-point star is used as an identifying mark of the Folk Nation alliance of US street gangs.
- The Indian sage and seer Sri Aurobindo used it—e.g. on the cover of his books—as a symbol of the aspiration of humanity calling to the Divine to descend into life (the triangle with the point at the top), and the descent of the Divine into the Earth's atmosphere and all individuals in response to that calling (the triangle with the point at the bottom). (This was explained by the Mother, his spiritual partner in Her 14-volume Agenda and elsewhere by Sri Aurobindo in his writings.)Template:Citation needed
- The seal of the city of Portland, Oregon features a small six point star above the head of Lady Commerce. The star represents the "crown achievement of Portland's historical leadership."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Man-made and natural occurrencesEdit
- The main runways and taxiways of Heathrow Airport were arranged roughly in the shape of a hexagram.<ref>bbc.co.uk and see File:Aerial photograph of Heathrow Airport, 1955.jpg</ref>
- A hexagram in a circle is incorporated prominently in the supports of Worthing railway station's platform 2 canopy (UK).
- An extremely large, free-standing wood hexagram stands in the central park of the Municipality of El Tejar, Guatemala. Additionally, every year at Christmastime the residents of El Tejar erect a giant artificial Christmas tree in front of their municipal building, with a hexagram sitting at its peak.
UnicodeEdit
- In Unicode, the "Star of David" symbol ✡ is encoded in U+2721.
Other hexagramsEdit
The figure {6/3} can be shown as a compound of three digons.
Other hexagrams can be constructed as a continuous path.
Regular compounds | D2 symmetry unicursal |
D3 symmetry isogonal |
D3 symmetry isotoxal | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
File:Regular star figure 2(3,1).svg {6/2}=2{3} |
File:Regular star figure 3(2,1).svg {6/3}=3{2} |
File:Unicursal hexagram.png | File:Regular polygon truncation 3 2.svg | File:Regular truncation 3 -1.svg | File:Regular truncation 3 1.5.svg | File:Regular truncation 3 1.1.svg | File:Great triambic icosahedron face.svg |
See alsoEdit
- Pentagram
- Star of Bethlehem
- Star of David
- Seal of Solomon
- Heptagram
- The Thelemic Unicursal hexagram
- Pascal's mystic hexagram
- Hexagram (I Ching)
- Sacred Geometry
FootnotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
- Template:Cite news
- Graham, Dr. O.J. The Six-Pointed Star: Its Origin and Usage 4th ed. Toronto: The Free Press 777, 2001. Template:ISBN
- Grünbaum, B. and G. C. Shephard; Tilings and patterns, New York: W. H. Freeman & Co., (1987), Template:ISBN.
- Grünbaum, B.; Polyhedra with Hollow Faces, Proc of NATO-ASI Conference on Polytopes ... etc. (Toronto 1993), ed T. Bisztriczky et al., Kluwer Academic (1994) pp. 43–70.
- Wessely, l.c. pp. 31, 112
External linksEdit
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- Hexagram (MathWorld)
- The Archetypal Mandala of India
- Thesis from Munich University on hexagram as brewing symbol
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