Sunday, November 21, 2010

some uses of shatkona (hexagram)


  • A six-point interlocking triangles has been used for thousands of years as an indication a sword was made, and "proved," in the Damascus area of the Middle East. Still today, it is a required "proved" mark on all official UK and U.S. military swords though the blades themselves no longer come from the Middle East.
  • In Unicode, the "Star of David" symbol is U+2721 ().
  • There is a plant named Solomon's seal (Polygonatum multiflorum) in the lily family.
  • In alchemy, the two triangles represent the reconciliation of the opposites of fire and water. Non-Jewish Kabbalah (also called Christian or Hermetic Kabbalah) interprets
  • the hexagram to mean the divine union of male and female energy, where the male is represented by the upper triangle and the female by the lower one. Moreover, it derives four triangular symbols from it (two triangles crossed like a capital letter A and two uncrossed) to represent the four elements: water, fire, air, and earth. This use of the symbol was used as an important plot point in Dan Brown's popular novel The Da Vinci Code and the Da Vinci Code film cites this as the origin of the star.
It was also used as a sign for quintessence, the fifth element.
  • 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.
  • The main runways and taxiways of Heathrow Airport are arranged roughly in the shape of a hexagram.
  • A hexagram in a circle is incorporated prominently in the supports of Worthing railway station's platform 2 canopy (UK).

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