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1 He speaks of Equinoctial hours, these being in all cases of the same length, in contradistinction to the Temporal, or Unequal hours, which with the Romans were a twelfth part of the Natural day, from sunrise to sunset, and of course were continually varying.
2 Twenty-fifth of December.
3 Fore.
4 In this Translation, the names of the Constellations are given in English, except in the case of the signs of the Zodiac, which are universally known by their Latin appellations.
5 He begins in c. 64, at the winter solstice, and omits the period between the eleventh of November and the winter solstice altogether, so far as the mention of individual days.
6 "Cum sidus vehemens Orionis iisdem diebus longo decedat spatio." This passage is apparently unintelligible, if considered, as Sillig reads it, as dependent on the preceding one.
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