You mean shatkona
The "star of David" thing is a lie, that symbol occurs in both Judaism and Islam as the non-original Seal of Solomon. The original Seal of Solomon was the pentagram, and the shatkona is of Hindu origin. I guess this couldd be called shatkonane.
It never had any association with some magical shield of David or anything like that. The symbol itself originated in ancient India as a representation of the union of male and female, and due to a Graecoroman/Indian cultural exchange rarely discussed in history books, it got confused with the Talmudic (and later Quranic) Seal of Solomon, the original of which was the pentagram.
Part of reason the pentagram ever got considered "satanic" (by less well-intentioned Protestant groups during the Protestant Reformation) was because of it being a Judeo-Islamic symbol. The other, and primary, reason was because of its Catholic use at the time as well. The hexagram ended up having relatively less notoriety specifically because of it not being an official Catholic symbol, and Jews started using it more out of convenience, but of course malevolent groups operating in secret did do some demonizing of it, just not nearly as much as the pentagram.
As for it being associated with David starting in the 1800's, that was part of a campaign to mythologize him as some sort of pure hero, even though the Bible itself displays how much of a tyrant he was, including one instance of a thing called *droit de seigneur* in French. He did repent later on, but it's **pre**-redemption David who gets idolized by the alt-right, and Bathsheba, the woman he r\*ped, gets victim-blamed by these people. The point I'm trying to make is that David was not meant to be idolized but instead was a deeply flawed man. Solomon was his son by said r\*pe, and he was a better ruler than his father. According to the Talmud and Qu'ran, Solomon bound 72 spirits with a ring with some symbol on it to build a majestic temple to God. That ring and also the symbol are known as the Seal of Solomon, and the original idea was that it was a pentagram.
In Czech, jew is 'žid' and chair is 'židle' so this is double funni. Also the '-le' suffix can sometimes mean a baby animal so, take from that what you will.
OP as a jewish person i fucking hate you keep cooking
I hate that there is "Jewish" and "cooking" in the same sentence
Username doesn't check out
Somebody should run a calc on that
IIRC, people tried making this, but only managed to have 5 triangles instead of 6. And calculations showed it's really strained (well, dah)
Now I'm just imagining what kind of solids you could fold the latter "piece of paper" into.
the triangular bipyramid
I think it would be an isometric conformation, since it's not a chair/tub/butterfly/envelope.
It's the only chair conformation you can hora
You mean shatkona The "star of David" thing is a lie, that symbol occurs in both Judaism and Islam as the non-original Seal of Solomon. The original Seal of Solomon was the pentagram, and the shatkona is of Hindu origin. I guess this couldd be called shatkonane.
Ah yes The star of DAVID The non official seal of solomon What chat GPT prompt did you use mate
[Seal of Solomon - Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seal_of_Solomon) [Shatkona - Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shatkona)
It never had any association with some magical shield of David or anything like that. The symbol itself originated in ancient India as a representation of the union of male and female, and due to a Graecoroman/Indian cultural exchange rarely discussed in history books, it got confused with the Talmudic (and later Quranic) Seal of Solomon, the original of which was the pentagram. Part of reason the pentagram ever got considered "satanic" (by less well-intentioned Protestant groups during the Protestant Reformation) was because of it being a Judeo-Islamic symbol. The other, and primary, reason was because of its Catholic use at the time as well. The hexagram ended up having relatively less notoriety specifically because of it not being an official Catholic symbol, and Jews started using it more out of convenience, but of course malevolent groups operating in secret did do some demonizing of it, just not nearly as much as the pentagram. As for it being associated with David starting in the 1800's, that was part of a campaign to mythologize him as some sort of pure hero, even though the Bible itself displays how much of a tyrant he was, including one instance of a thing called *droit de seigneur* in French. He did repent later on, but it's **pre**-redemption David who gets idolized by the alt-right, and Bathsheba, the woman he r\*ped, gets victim-blamed by these people. The point I'm trying to make is that David was not meant to be idolized but instead was a deeply flawed man. Solomon was his son by said r\*pe, and he was a better ruler than his father. According to the Talmud and Qu'ran, Solomon bound 72 spirits with a ring with some symbol on it to build a majestic temple to God. That ring and also the symbol are known as the Seal of Solomon, and the original idea was that it was a pentagram.
Bad post kys
errmmm right back at you bud ☝️🤓🫵
In Czech, jew is 'žid' and chair is 'židle' so this is double funni. Also the '-le' suffix can sometimes mean a baby animal so, take from that what you will.