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House (astrology)

Most horoscopic traditions of astrology systems divide the horoscope into a number (usually twelve) of houses whose positions depend on time and location rather than on date. In Hindu astrological tradition these are known as Bhāvas. The houses of the horoscope represent different fields of experience wherein the energies of the signs and planets operate[1]—described in terms of physical surroundings as well as personal life experiences.

Description Edit

 
In this natal chart, the twelve houses are numbered close to the central circle containing the colored aspect lines; this particular horoscope uses the Placidus house system.

In astrology, houses are a fundamental component of the birth chart that represent different areas of life. There are 12 houses, each associated with a specific zodiac sign and planetary ruler. The first house represents the self, while the second house relates to personal possessions and finances. The third house pertains to communication and siblings,[2] while the fourth house represents home and family. The fifth house is associated with creativity and romance, while the sixth house relates to work and health. The seventh house represents partnerships and marriage, while the eighth house pertains to shared resources and transformation. The ninth house is associated with higher education and travel, while the tenth house represents career and public image. The eleventh house pertains to social networks and friendships, while the twelfth house represents spirituality and subconscious patterns. Understanding the houses in astrology can provide insight into various aspects of a person's life and personality.

Every house system is also affiliated with a zodiac sign can be dependent on the rotational movement of Earth on its axis, but there is a wide range of approaches to calculating house divisions and different opinions among astrologers over which house system is most accurate.[3] To calculate the houses, it is necessary to know the exact time, date, and location. In natal astrology, some astrologers will use a birth time set for noon or sunrise if the actual time of birth is unknown. An accurate interpretation of such a chart, however, cannot be expected.[4]

The houses are divisions of the ecliptic plane (a great circle containing the Sun's orbit, as seen from the earth), at the time and place of the horoscope in question. They are numbered counter-clockwise from the cusp of the first house. Commonly, houses one through six are below the horizon and houses seven through twelve are above the horizon, but some systems may not respect entirely that division (in particular when the Ascendant does not coincide with the first house's cusp).

The several methods of calculating house divisions stem from disagreement over what they mean mathematically (regarding space and time). All house systems in Western astrology use twelve houses projected on the ecliptic. The differences arise from which fundamental plane is the object of the initial division and whether the divisions represent units of time, or degrees of distance.[citation needed]

If space is the basis for house division, the chosen plane is divided into equal arcs of 30° each. A difference will be made as to whether these divisions are made directly on the ecliptic, or on the celestial equator or some other great circle, before being projected on the ecliptic.

If time is the basis for house division, a difference must be made for whether the houses are based on invariant equal hours (each house represents 2 hours of the sun's apparent movement each day) or temporal hours (daytime and night-time divided into six equal parts, but here the temporal hours will vary according to season and latitude.)

Regardless of these different methods, all house divisions in Western astrology share certain things in common: the twelve house cusps are always projected on the ecliptic; they will all place the cusp of the first house near the eastern horizon and every house cusp is 180° of longitude apart from the sixth following house (1st opposes 7th; 2nd opposes 8th and so on).[5]

The twelve houses Edit

The next table represents the basic outline of the houses as they are still understood today and includes the traditional Latin names. The houses are numbered from the east downward under the horizon, each representing a specific area of life. Many modern astrologers assume that the houses relate to their corresponding signs,[6][7] i.e. that the first house has a natural affinity with the first sign, Aries, and so on.[8] Another common idea is to look at houses in pairs, e.g. 1-7, 2-8 and so on[9]

House Related Sign Latin motto Translation Modern title Interpretation
1st Aries Vita Life House of Self Physical appearance, identity and characteristics. Resourcefulness. Outlook and impressions. Ego/personality. Goals. Determination. Beginnings and initiatives.[10]
2nd Taurus Lucrum Gain House of Value Material and immaterial things of certain value. Money. Possessions and acquisitions. Cultivation. Substance. Self-worth.[11]
3rd Gemini Fratres Order House of Sharing Communication. Distribution/generosity. Intelligence/development. Siblings. Locomotion and transportation. Ephemera.[12]
4th Cancer Genitor Parent House of Home and Family Ancestry, heritage, roots. Foundation and environment. Mother or caretaker. Housing and the household. Neighborhood matters. Comfort, security. Tidiness. Pets.[13]
5th Leo Nati Children House of Pleasure Recreational and leisure activities. Things which make for enjoyment and entertainment. Games/gambling/risk. Romance and limerence. Children/fertility. Creative self-expression.[14]
6th Virgo Valetudo Health House of Health Routine tasks and duties. Skills or training acquired. Employment (job). Service performed for others. Strength, vitality. Wellness and healthcare. Courage.[15]
7th Libra Uxor Spouse House of Balance Partnerships. Marriage and business matters. Diplomacy. Agreements, contracts and all things official. Equilibrium.[16]
8th Scorpio Mors Death House of Transformation Cycles of deaths and rebirth. Sexual relationships and commitments of all kinds. Joint funds, finances. Other person's resource. Karma and debt (judgment). Regeneration. Self-transformation.[17]
9th Sagittarius Iter Passage House of Purpose Travel and foreign affairs. Culture. Expansion. Law and ethics. Education/learning/knowledge. Philosophical interests, belief systems. Experience through exploration. Things long-term.[18]
10th Capricorn Regnum Kingdom House of Enterprise Ambitions. Motivations. Career, achievements. Society and government. Father or authority. Notoriety. Advantage.[19]
11th Aquarius Benefacta Support House of Blessings Benefits from effort. Friends and acquaintances of like-minded attitudes. Belonging. Groups, communities, and associations. Charity. Connectedness/networking. Love. Wish fulfillment. Wealth.[20]
12th Pisces Carcer Rehabilitation House of Sacrifice Privacy, refuge; seclusion and retreating. Clandestiny↔Revelation. Intuition. Extremes/abundance, but also addictions. Luck, miracles. Releasing/relinquishing, healing/cleansing, forgiveness, and peacefulness. Finality/completion/conclusion.[21]

House modalities and triplicities Edit

Similarly to how signs are classified according to astrological modality (Cardinal, Fixed and Mutable), houses are classified, according to a mode of expression, as Angular, Succedent and Cadent.[22]

Modality Keyword[23] Houses
Angular Action 1st, 4th, 7th and 10th
Succedent Security 2nd, 5th, 8th and 11th
Cadent Learning 3rd, 6th, 9th and 12th

Angular houses are points of initiation and represent action; they relate to cardinal signs (Aries, Cancer, Libra and Capricorn). Succedent houses are points of purpose and represent stabilization; they relate to fixed signs (Taurus, Leo, Scorpio and Aquarius). Cadent houses are points of transition and represent change and adaptation; they relate to mutable signs (Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius and Pisces).[citation needed][24]

Following the classification of signs by the four classical elements (Fire, Earth, Air and Water), houses can also be grouped together in triplicities, related to a level of experience.[23]

Triplicity Keyword Houses
Fire Triplicity Identity 1st, 5th and 9th
Earth Triplicity Material 2nd, 6th and 10th
Air Triplicity Social, Intellectual 3rd, 7th and 11th
Water Triplicity Soul, Emotional 4th, 8th and 12th

In old astrological writings (e.g. William Lilly), house could also be used as a synonym for domicile or rulership, as in the sentence "The Moon has its house in Cancer" meaning that Cancer is ruled by the Moon. It may be helpful to think of a ruling planet, in this case the Moon, as the "owner of the 4th House", and the sign, e.g. Cancer, as the CEO or landlord who runs the house. In an individual horoscope, whatever planet occupies any given house can be thought of as the house's tenant. (See Rulership section below.)

The four bhavas of Hindu astrology Edit

In Indian astrology, the twelve houses are called Bhava and their meanings are very similar to the triplicities in Western astrology. The houses are divided into four 'bhavas' which point to 'mood' or what the house stands for. These four bhavas are Dharma (duty), Artha (resources), Kama (pleasure) and Moksha (liberation). These bhavas are called 'purusharthas or 'aims in life.' The ancient mystics of India realized that the austere path of the yogi was not for everyone. They found that each human existence has four worthwhile goals in life:

  • Dharma – 1st, 5th and 9th Bhavas – The need to find a path and purpose.
  • Artha – 2nd, 6th and 10th Bhavas – The need to acquire the necessary resources and abilities to provide for to fulfill a path and purpose.
  • Kama – 3rd, 7th and 11th Bhavas – The need for pleasure and enjoyment.
  • Moksha – 4th, 8th and 12th Bhavas – The need to find liberation and enlightenment from the world.

Theses 4 aims of life are repeated in above sequence 3 times through the 12 bhavas:

  • The first round, bhavas 1 through 4, show the process within the Individual.
  • The second round, bhavas 5 through 8, show the alchemy between relating to Other people.
  • The third round, bhavas 9 through 12, show the Universalization of the self.[25]
Dharma (Duty) Houses Artha (Resources) Houses Kama (Pleasure) Houses Moksha (Liberation) Houses
1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12

Houses for a nation or corporation Edit

In his 1920 book The Arcana: Or the Stock and Share Key,[26] Sepharial proposed the following interpretation for houses if the chart is for a nation and a corporation:

Specific house indication for nations
House Title For a nation For a corporation
1st Life The public in which is vested all forms of enterprise and development. The shareholders.
2nd Gain Price of money, trade, returns, bullion imports, bills of exchange, etc.
3rd Brothers Railroads, tramways, omnibuses, traction of all sorts, locomotion, telephone, aircraft, canals, bridges and transports as well as postal service and all means of communication.
4th Parent Real estate, land explorations, mines, developments, crops, produce of raw material from the soil.
5th Children Educational matters, art, theatres, cinemas, amusements and schools.
6th Health Foodstuffs, clothing, equipment, outfitting supplies, upholstering, furnishings, building and upfitting. The employees.
7th Spouse Accountancy, banking, corporations, exchanges, contracts, equity, discounting, surveying, valuations, probate, etc.
8th Death Waste products, conservancy, dredging, petrol, parafine, benzine, medical accessories, chemicals and nitrates.
9th Journeys Insurance, cables, publishing, wireless, radiographs, liners and foreign affairs.
10th Kingdom State affairs, the government and political activity generally. The chairman or the key person in charge.
11th Support The Exchequer, bonds, government loans, electric and gaslight companies. The board of directors.
12th Rehabilitation Launderies, breweries, fisheries boot mfgrs, hosiery and cold storage.

Systems of house division Edit

 
This 18th-century Icelandic manuscript drawing shows the twelve astrological houses with signs for the planetary rulership or maybe planetary joy.

There are many systems of house division. In most, the ecliptic is divided into houses and the ascendant (eastern horizon) marks the cusp, or beginning, of the first house, and the descendant (western horizon) marks the cusp of the seventh house. Many systems, called quadrant house systems, also use the midheaven (medium coeli) as the cusp of the tenth house.

Goals for a house system include ease of computation; agreement with the "quadrant" concept (ascendant on the first house cusp and midheaven on the tenth);[27] defined and meaningful behaviour in the polar regions; acceptable handling of heavenly bodies of high latitude (a distinct problem from high-latitude locations on the Earth's surface); and symbolic value. It is impossible for any system to satisfy all the criteria completely, so each one represents a different compromise. The extremely popular Placidus and Koch systems, in particular, can generate undefined results in the polar circles. Research and debate on the merits of different house systems is ongoing.[citation needed]

Early forms of house division Edit

The Babylonians may have been the first to set out the concept of house division.[28] Specifically, they timed the birth according to three systems of time division: (a) a three-part division of the night into watches, (b) a four-part division of the nychthemeron with respect to sunrise and sunset, and (c) a twelve-part division of the day-time into hours.[29] Babylonian astronomers studied the rising times of the signs and calculated tables of ascensions for their latitude, but it would take better time measurements by the Egyptians and the introduction of the concept of ascendant, around the 2nd century B.C., to give astrological houses their first recognisable structure and meaning, from the perspective of Classical Western astrology.[30][31]

Whole sign Edit

In the whole sign house system, sometimes referred to as the 'Sign-House system', the houses are 30° each. The ascendant designates the rising sign, and the first house begins at zero degrees of the zodiac sign in which the ascendant falls, regardless of how early or late in that sign the ascendant is. The next sign after the ascending sign then becomes the 2nd house, the sign after that the 3rd house, and so on. In other words, each house is wholly filled by one sign. This was the main system used in the Hellenistic tradition of astrology, and is also used in Indian astrology, as well as in some early traditions of Medieval astrology. It is thought to be the oldest system of house division.[32]

The Whole Sign system may have been developed in the Hellenistic tradition of astrology sometime around the 1st or 2nd century BCE, and from there it may have passed to the Indian and early Medieval traditions of astrology; though the line of thought which states that it was transmitted to India from Western locales is hotly contested. At some point in the Medieval period, probably around the 10th century, whole sign houses fell into disuse in the western tradition, and by the 20th century the system was completely unknown in the western astrological community, although was continually used in India all the way into the present time. Beginning in the 1980s and 1990s the system was rediscovered and reintroduced into western astrology. The distinction between equal houses and whole sign houses lies in the fact that in whole sign houses the cusp of the 1st house is the beginning of the sign that contains the ascendant, while in equal houses the degree of the ascendant is itself the cusp of the 1st house.[citation needed]

Debate surrounding whole sign houses Edit

There is debate surrounding the claims that the whole sign house system was the original form of house division and that it was the dominant form of house division among ancient astrologers.[33] One argument against whole sign houses is that it is never explicitly mentioned in the text of any ancient astrologer when explaining how to divide up the houses. A counterpoint is that it is implied and it would be the only house system that makes sense in ancient charts where only an ascendant degree is presented. However, if one knows the longitude of the location of the astrologer, one would only need the ascendant degree to determine the quadrant houses. Another argument against whole sign houses is that it breaks with principles of primary motion since planets can go backwards through the houses (e.g., a planet can go from the 8th house into the 9th house given the right conditions).[34] Additionally, there is concern that whole sign houses demotes the value of angularity.[33] Whole sign houses is essentially an American driven movement that is argued to have decontextualized Hellenistic astrological texts from those that preceded and proceeded them. In Europe, most astrologers previously associated with traditional astrology never really took up whole sign houses.[34] Martin Gansten argues that in Valens, houses were often provisionally approximated by sign position alone, but calculation of places by degree was consistently upheld in principle as more accurate and useful.[35]

Equal house Edit

In the equal house system the ecliptic is also divided into twelve divisions of 30 degrees, although the houses are measured out in 30 degree increments starting from the degree of the ascendant. It begins with the ascendant, which acts as the 'cusp' or starting point of the 1st house, then the second house begins exactly 30 degrees later in zodiacal order, then the third house begins exactly 30 degrees later in zodiacal order from the 2nd house, and so on.[36] Proponents of the equal house system claim that it is more accurate and less distorting in higher latitudes (especially above 60 degrees) than the Placidean and other quadrant house systems.[37]

Space-based house systems Edit

In this type of system, the definition of houses involves the division of the sphere into twelve equal lunes perpendicular to a fundamental plane (the Morinus and Regiomontanus systems being two notable exceptions).[38][39]

Spatial house system Fundamental Plane Division Reference point(s) Projection onto the ecliptic 1st cusp 10th cusp
Whole sign Ecliptic 12 equal sectors of 30° in longitude Rising Sign - 0° of rising sign 0° of Nonagesimal sign[40]
Equal house Longitude of Asc (λAsc) λAsc Nonagesimal
(λAsc - 90º)
M-House Longitude of MC (λMC) λMC + 90º λMC
Porphyry Trisection of MC-Asc longitude arc (11th, 12th cusps)
Trisection of Asc-IC longitude arc (2nd, 3rd cusps)
Longitudes of MC, Asc and IC λAsc
Carter's Poly Equatorial Celestial equator 12 equal sectors of 30° in RA
(2 sidereal hours)
RA of Asc Along great circles containing the celestial poles Not the MC
Meridian RA of MC East Point
(Equatorial Ascendant)
λMC
Morinus Along great circles containing the ecliptic poles λMC + 90º Not the MC
Regiomontanus Along great circles containing the North and south points of the Horizon λAsc λMC
Campanus Prime vertical 12 equal sectors of 30° Zenith

M-House (Equal Mc) Edit

This system is constructed in a similar manner as the Equal house, but houses are measured out in 30 degree increments starting from the longitude of the midheaven, which acts as the 'cusp' or starting point of the 10th house. The ascendant does not coincide with the cusp for the 1st house.[citation needed]

Porphyry Edit

Each quadrant of the ecliptic is divided into three equal parts between the four angles. This is the oldest system of quadrant style house division. Although it is attributed to Porphyry of Tyros, this system was first described by the 2nd-century astrologer Vettius Valens, in the 3rd book of his astrological compendium known as The Anthology.[citation needed]

Carter's Poly Equatorial Edit

This house system was described by the English astrologer Charles E. O. Carter (1887-1968) in his Essays on the Foundations of Astrology.[41] The house division starts at the right ascension of the ascendant and to it is added 30º of right ascension for each successive cusp. Those cusps are then restated in terms of celestial longitude by projecting them along great circles containing the North and South celestial poles. The 1st house cusp coincides with the ascendant's longitude, but the 10th house cusp is not identical with the Midheaven.

Meridian Edit

Also known as the Axial system, or Equatorial system, it divides the celestial equator in twelve 30° sectors (starting at the local meridian) and projects them on to the ecliptic along the great circles containing the North and South celestial poles. The intersections of the ecliptic with those great circles provide the house cusps. The 10th house cusp thus equals the Midheaven, but the East Point (also known as Equatorial Ascendant) is now the first house's cusp. Each house is exactly 2 sidereal hours long.[42] This system was proposed by the Australian astrologer David Cope in the beginning of the 20th century and has become the most popular system with the Uranian school of astrology.[43] The Ascendant (intersection between the ecliptic and the horizon) preserves its importance in chart interpretation through sign and aspects, but not as a house determinant, which is why this house system can be used in any latitude.

Morinus Edit

French mathematician Jean Baptiste Morinus

Regiomontanus Edit

The celestial equator is divided into twelve, and these divisions are projected on to the ecliptic along great circles that take in the north and south points on the horizon.[44] Named after the German astronomer and astrologer Johann Müller of Königsberg. The Regiomontanus system was later largely replaced by the Placidus system.[citation needed]

Campanus Edit

The prime vertical (the great circle taking in the zenith and east point on the horizon) is divided into twelve, and these divisions are projected on to the ecliptic along great circles that take in the north and south points on the horizon. It is attributed to Campanus of Novara but the method is known to have been used before his time.[45]

Sinusoidal Edit

Sinusoidal systems of house division are similar to Porphyry houses except that instead of each quadrant being divided into three equal sized houses, the middle house in each quadrant is compressed or expanded based on whether the quadrant covers less than or greater than 90 degrees. In other words, houses are smooth around the zodiac with the difference or ratio in quadrant sizes being spread in a continuous sinusoidal manner from expanded to compressed houses. Sinusoidal houses were invented and first published by Walter Pullen in his astrology program Astrolog in 1994.[46]

Krusinski/Pisa/Goelzer Edit

A recently published (1988) house system, discovered by Georg Goelzer,[47] based on a great circle passing through the ascendant and zenith. This circle is divided into 12 equal parts (1st cusp is ascendant, 10th cusp is zenith), then the resulting points are projected to the ecliptic through meridian circles.

The house tables for this system were published in 1995 in Poland. This house system is also known under the name Amphora in the Czech Republic, after it was proposed there by Milan Píša after the study of Manilius's "Astronomica" under this name ("Konstelace č. 22" in: "AMPHORA - nový systém astrologických domů" (1997) and in the booklet "Amphora - algoritmy nového systému domů" (1998)).[citation needed]

Time-based house systems Edit

Alchabitius Edit

The predecessor system to the Placidus, which largely replaced the Porphyry. The difference with Placidus is that the time that it takes the ascendant to reach the meridian is divided equally into three parts. The Alchabitius house system was very popular in Europe before the introduction of the Regiomontanus system.

Placidus Edit

This is the most commonly used house system in modern Western astrology. The paths drawn for each degree of the ecliptic to move from the Imum coeli to the horizon, and from the horizon to the midheaven, are trisected to determine the cusps of houses 2, 3, 11, and 12.[48] The cusps of houses 8, 9, 5 and 6 are opposite these. The Placidus system is sometimes not defined beyond polar circles (latitudes greater than 66°N or 66°S), because certain degrees are circumpolar (never touch the horizon), and planets falling in them cannot be assigned to houses without extending the system. This result is a weakness of the Placidean system according to its critics, who often cite the exceptional house proportions in the higher latitudes.[49]

Named for 17th-century astrologer Placidus de Titis, it is thought the Placidus system was first mentioned about 13th century in Arab literature, but the first confirmed publication was in 1602 by Giovanni Antonio Magini (1555–1617) in his book "Tabulae Primi Mobilis, quas Directionem Vulgo Dicunt". The first documented usage is from Czech, 1627.[50] Later it was popularized by the Catholic Church as an argument for Ptolemy's geocentric theory of the Solar System, in the campaign against the heliocentric theory. Placidus, a professor of mathematics, was named as its author to give it credibility to his contemporaries. Placidus remains the most popular system among English-speaking astrologers.[citation needed]

Koch Edit

A rather more complicated version of the Placidus system, built on equal increments of Right Ascension for each quadrant. The Koch system was developed by the German astrologer Walter Koch (1895–1970) and is defined only for latitudes between 66°N and 66°S. This system is popular among research astrologers in the U.S. and among German speakers, but in Central Europe lost some popularity to the Krusiński house system.[citation needed]

Topocentric Edit

This is a recent system, invented in Argentina, that its creators claim has been determined empirically, i.e. by observing events in people's lives and assessing the geometry of a house system that would fit. The house cusps are always within a degree of those given in the Placidus system. The topocentric system can also be described as an approximation algorithm for the Placidus system.[citation needed]

Topocentric houses are also called Polich-Page, after the names of the house system creators, Wendel Polich and A. Page Nelson.

Chart gallery Edit

The following charts display different house systems for the same time and location. To better compare systems subject to distortion, a high latitude city was chosen (Stockholm, Sweden) and the time corresponds to a long ascension sign (Cancer). For clarity purposes, all the usual aspect lines, degrees and glyphs were removed.

The MC in non-quadrant house systems Edit

In the whole sign and equal house systems the Medium Coeli (Midheaven), the highest point in the chart, does not act as the cusp or starting point of the 10th house. Instead the MC moves around the top half of the chart, and can land anywhere in the 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th, 12th, depending on the latitude. The MC retains its commonly agreed significations, but it doesn't act as the starting point of the 10th house, whereas the Equal house system adds extra definition and meaning to the MC including any cusps involved, any interpretations applied to the MC itself concur with other house systems.[citation needed]

This is also the more common criticism of the whole sign and equal house method as it concerns the location of the Medium Coeli (Midheaven), the highest point in the chart. In the equal house system, the ascendant/descendant and midheaven/IC axes can vary from being perpendicular to each other (from approx. +-5 deg at most at equator to approx. +-15 degrees at Alexandria to +-90 degrees at polar circle). As a result, equal houses counted from the ascendant cannot in general place the midheaven on the tenth house cusp, where many feel it would be symbolically desirable. Since this point is associated with ambition, career, and public image, the argument is that the Midheaven, therefore, must be the cusp of the similar tenth house. It has also been linked by extension with Capricorn (the tenth sign of the zodiac). The equal house system always takes the MC to be first and foremost THE most important indicator of career; whereas the 10th house cusp, while taken into account, is interpreted simply as a weaker 2nd MC cusp. The Midheaven is not associated with house locations defined by the Whole Sign and Equal House system, rather, the Midheaven placement relies on the specific location of the Ascendant, so the Midheaven can be found anywhere between the 8th and 11th houses.[51]

Rulership Edit

In Hellenistic, Vedic, Medieval and Renaissance astrology each house is ruled by the planet that rules the sign on its cusp. For example, if a person has the sign Aries on the cusp of their 7th house, the planet Mars is said to "rule" the 7th house. This means that when a planet is allotted a house, the planet's attributes will have some bearing on the topics related to that house within the life of the individual whose chart is being analyzed. This planet is considered very important for events specifically pertaining to that house's topics; in fact, its placement in the chart will have at least as much influence on the chart as the planets placed within the house. In traditional Western and Hindu astrology, each sign is ruled by one of the 7 visible planets (note that in astrology, the Sun and Moon are considered planets, which literally means wanderers, i.e. wandering stars, as opposed to the fixed stars of the constellations).[citation needed]

In addition, some modern astrologers who follow the X=Y=Z or Planet=Sign=House doctrine, which was first taught by Alan Leo in the early part of the 20th century, believe that certain houses are also ruled by—or have an affinity with—the planet which rules the corresponding zodiacal sign. For instance, Mars is ruler of the 1st house because it rules Aries, the first sign; Mercury rules (or has an affinity with) the 3rd house because it rules Gemini, the 3rd sign; etc.[52]

This concept is sometimes referred to as "natural rulership," as opposed to the former which is known as "accidental rulership."[citation needed]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Arroyo (1989), p. 111.
  2. ^ "Third House of the Birth Chart: Sibling Bonds". AstroSapient. 1 July 2023.
  3. ^ Hone (1978), pp. 281-284
  4. ^ "What If You Don't Know The Birth Time". Astrologyclub.org. 28 October 2016.
  5. ^ DeVore (1948), sub. tit. "Houses"
  6. ^ Kenton (1974), p. 17
  7. ^ Hone (1978) p. 89
  8. ^ Dobyns, Zipporah P. (1973), p. 10
  9. ^ Rusborn, Mark (2023-02-02). "Astrology houses explained. A comprehensive guide for beginners". astro-school.org. Retrieved 2023-03-07.
  10. ^ "The First House in Astrology".
  11. ^ "The Second House in Astrology".
  12. ^ "The Third House in Astrology".
  13. ^ "The Fourth House in Astrology".
  14. ^ "The Fifth House in Astrology".
  15. ^ "The Sixth House in Astrology".
  16. ^ "The Seventh House in Astrology".
  17. ^ "The Eighth House in Astrology".
  18. ^ "The Ninth House in Astrology".
  19. ^ "The Tenth House in Astrology".
  20. ^ "The Eleventh House in Astrology".
  21. ^ "The Twelfth House in Astrology".
  22. ^ Hone (1978), p. 91
  23. ^ a b Arroyo (1989), p. 114
  24. ^ Hampar, Joan (2017). Astrology for Beginners: A Simple Way to Read Your Chart. Woodbury, Minnesota: Llewellyn Publications. p. 54. ISBN 9780738711065.
  25. ^ The Brihat Parashara Hora Sashtra, VedicAstroyoga.com
  26. ^ Sepharial (2010). The Arcana: Or the Stock And Share Key (Facsimile reprint of the 1920 original ed.). Whitefish, MT: Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-1162632674.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  27. ^ "The Houses". 28 October 2016.
  28. ^ Parker (1990), p. 12
  29. ^ Rochberg (1998) p. 35
  30. ^ James Holden. "Ancient House Division" (PDF). Retrieved 4 August 2016.
  31. ^ Tester (1987), p. 25
  32. ^ Holden (1982), p. 19-28.
  33. ^ a b "Ep. 54 Transcript: Debating Ancient Systems of House Division". The Astrology Podcast. Retrieved 2022-08-26.
  34. ^ a b Houlding, Deborah. "The sign the whole sign and nothing but the sign". Astrological Association.
  35. ^ Gansten, M. (2023). Platikos and moirikos: Ancient Horoscopic Practice in the Light of Vettius Valens’ Anthologies, International Journal of Divination and Prognostication, 4(1), 1-43. doi: https://doi.org/10.1163/25899201-12340029
  36. ^ "HOUSES - Astrology Booth". Astrology Booth. Retrieved 2018-10-13.
  37. ^ Parker (1990), p. 175.
  38. ^ Foreman, P. (1992), p.20
  39. ^ Hone (1978), p.134
  40. ^ Hone(1978), p.111 "the highest point of the ecliptic above the horizon"
  41. ^ Carter (1947) p.158-159
  42. ^ Foreman, P. (1992), p.31
  43. ^ Collins, G. (2009), Chapter 4
  44. ^ Rusborn, Mark (2023-03-19). "How to calculate house cusps in the Regiomontanus system?". astro-school.org. Retrieved 2023-03-26.
  45. ^ North (1986), pp.175-176. The eastern origins of the Campanus (Prime Vertical) method. Evidence from al-Bīrūnī.
  46. ^ "Sinusoidal House Systems".
  47. ^ "Der Grüne Vogel".
  48. ^ Rusborn, Mark (2023-03-21). "How to calculate house cusps in the Placidus system?". astro-school.org. Retrieved 2023-03-21.
  49. ^ Astrodatabank FAQ n.5
  50. ^ "Horoscope of Albrecht of Wallenstein on display in Prague". 13 November 2007.
  51. ^ Mayo (1979), p76.
  52. ^ Deborah Houlding (2006). The Houses: Temples of the Sky. The Wessex Astrologer Ltd. ISBN 978-1-902405-20-9.

References Edit

  • Arroyo, Stephen (1989). Chart Interpretation Handbook. California: CCRS Publications. ISBN 0-916360-49-0
  • Carter, Charles (1947; 2nd ed. 1978). Essays on the Foundations of Astrology - Chapter 8 "Problems of the Houses". London: Theosophical Publishing House. ISBN 0722951329
  • Collins, Gene. F. (2009). "Cosmopsychology - The psychology of humans as spiritual beings". Xlibris Corporation. ISBN 978-1-4691-2262-5[self-published source]
  • DeVore, Nicholas (1948). Encyclopedia of Astrology. Philosophical Library, sub. tit. "Houses"
  • Dobyns, Zipporah P. (1973). Finding the person in the horoscope. Third Edition. California: T.I.A. Publications (CCRS Publications)
  • Foreman, Patricia (1992). "Computers and astrology: a universal user's guide and reference". Virginia: Good Earth Publications. ISBN 0-9624648-1-3
  • Hand, Rob (2000). Whole Sign Houses: The Oldest House System. ARHAT Publications.
  • Holden, James (1982). Ancient House Division, Journal of Research of the American Federation of Astrologers 1.
  • Hone, Margaret (1978). The Modern Text-Book of Astrology. Revised edition (1995). England: L. N. Fowler & Co. Ltd. ISBN 0852433573
  • Houlding, Deborah (1996; Reprinted 2006). The Houses: Temples of the sky. Bournemouth: The Wessex Astrologer, Ltd. ISBN 190240520X
  • Kenton, Warren (1974). Astrology. The Celestial Mirror. Reprinted (1994). London: Thames and Hudson. ISBN 0-500-81004-4
  • Mayo, Jeff (1979). Teach Yourself Astrology. London: Hodder and Stoughton.
  • North, John D. (1986). Horoscopes and History. London: The Warburg Institute, University of London. ISBN 978-0-85481-068-0
  • Parker, Derek and Julia (1990). The New Complete Astrologer. New York: Crescent Books.
  • Rochberg, Francesca (1998). Babylonian Horoscopes. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society. ISBN 0-87169-881-1
  • Tester, Jim (1987). "A History of Western Astrology". Reprinted (1990). Suffolk: St Edmundsbury Press. ISBN 0-85115-255-4

house, astrology, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, house, astrology, news, newspapers, books, scholar. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources House astrology news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message Most horoscopic traditions of astrology systems divide the horoscope into a number usually twelve of houses whose positions depend on time and location rather than on date In Hindu astrological tradition these are known as Bhavas The houses of the horoscope represent different fields of experience wherein the energies of the signs and planets operate 1 described in terms of physical surroundings as well as personal life experiences Contents 1 Description 2 The twelve houses 2 1 House modalities and triplicities 2 1 1 The four bhavas of Hindu astrology 2 2 Houses for a nation or corporation 3 Systems of house division 3 1 Early forms of house division 3 1 1 Whole sign 3 1 2 Debate surrounding whole sign houses 3 1 3 Equal house 3 2 Space based house systems 3 2 1 M House Equal Mc 3 2 2 Porphyry 3 2 3 Carter s Poly Equatorial 3 2 4 Meridian 3 2 5 Morinus 3 2 6 Regiomontanus 3 2 7 Campanus 3 2 8 Sinusoidal 3 2 9 Krusinski Pisa Goelzer 3 3 Time based house systems 3 3 1 Alchabitius 3 3 2 Placidus 3 3 3 Koch 3 3 4 Topocentric 3 4 Chart gallery 3 5 The MC in non quadrant house systems 4 Rulership 5 Notes 6 ReferencesDescription EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp In this natal chart the twelve houses are numbered close to the central circle containing the colored aspect lines this particular horoscope uses the Placidus house system In astrology houses are a fundamental component of the birth chart that represent different areas of life There are 12 houses each associated with a specific zodiac sign and planetary ruler The first house represents the self while the second house relates to personal possessions and finances The third house pertains to communication and siblings 2 while the fourth house represents home and family The fifth house is associated with creativity and romance while the sixth house relates to work and health The seventh house represents partnerships and marriage while the eighth house pertains to shared resources and transformation The ninth house is associated with higher education and travel while the tenth house represents career and public image The eleventh house pertains to social networks and friendships while the twelfth house represents spirituality and subconscious patterns Understanding the houses in astrology can provide insight into various aspects of a person s life and personality Every house system is also affiliated with a zodiac sign can be dependent on the rotational movement of Earth on its axis but there is a wide range of approaches to calculating house divisions and different opinions among astrologers over which house system is most accurate 3 To calculate the houses it is necessary to know the exact time date and location In natal astrology some astrologers will use a birth time set for noon or sunrise if the actual time of birth is unknown An accurate interpretation of such a chart however cannot be expected 4 The houses are divisions of the ecliptic plane a great circle containing the Sun s orbit as seen from the earth at the time and place of the horoscope in question They are numbered counter clockwise from the cusp of the first house Commonly houses one through six are below the horizon and houses seven through twelve are above the horizon but some systems may not respect entirely that division in particular when the Ascendant does not coincide with the first house s cusp The several methods of calculating house divisions stem from disagreement over what they mean mathematically regarding space and time All house systems in Western astrology use twelve houses projected on the ecliptic The differences arise from which fundamental plane is the object of the initial division and whether the divisions represent units of time or degrees of distance citation needed If space is the basis for house division the chosen plane is divided into equal arcs of 30 each A difference will be made as to whether these divisions are made directly on the ecliptic or on the celestial equator or some other great circle before being projected on the ecliptic If time is the basis for house division a difference must be made for whether the houses are based on invariant equal hours each house represents 2 hours of the sun s apparent movement each day or temporal hours daytime and night time divided into six equal parts but here the temporal hours will vary according to season and latitude Regardless of these different methods all house divisions in Western astrology share certain things in common the twelve house cusps are always projected on the ecliptic they will all place the cusp of the first house near the eastern horizon and every house cusp is 180 of longitude apart from the sixth following house 1st opposes 7th 2nd opposes 8th and so on 5 The twelve houses EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message The next table represents the basic outline of the houses as they are still understood today and includes the traditional Latin names The houses are numbered from the east downward under the horizon each representing a specific area of life Many modern astrologers assume that the houses relate to their corresponding signs 6 7 i e that the first house has a natural affinity with the first sign Aries and so on 8 Another common idea is to look at houses in pairs e g 1 7 2 8 and so on 9 House Related Sign Latin motto Translation Modern title Interpretation1st Aries Vita Life House of Self Physical appearance identity and characteristics Resourcefulness Outlook and impressions Ego personality Goals Determination Beginnings and initiatives 10 2nd Taurus Lucrum Gain House of Value Material and immaterial things of certain value Money Possessions and acquisitions Cultivation Substance Self worth 11 3rd Gemini Fratres Order House of Sharing Communication Distribution generosity Intelligence development Siblings Locomotion and transportation Ephemera 12 4th Cancer Genitor Parent House of Home and Family Ancestry heritage roots Foundation and environment Mother or caretaker Housing and the household Neighborhood matters Comfort security Tidiness Pets 13 5th Leo Nati Children House of Pleasure Recreational and leisure activities Things which make for enjoyment and entertainment Games gambling risk Romance and limerence Children fertility Creative self expression 14 6th Virgo Valetudo Health House of Health Routine tasks and duties Skills or training acquired Employment job Service performed for others Strength vitality Wellness and healthcare Courage 15 7th Libra Uxor Spouse House of Balance Partnerships Marriage and business matters Diplomacy Agreements contracts and all things official Equilibrium 16 8th Scorpio Mors Death House of Transformation Cycles of deaths and rebirth Sexual relationships and commitments of all kinds Joint funds finances Other person s resource Karma and debt judgment Regeneration Self transformation 17 9th Sagittarius Iter Passage House of Purpose Travel and foreign affairs Culture Expansion Law and ethics Education learning knowledge Philosophical interests belief systems Experience through exploration Things long term 18 10th Capricorn Regnum Kingdom House of Enterprise Ambitions Motivations Career achievements Society and government Father or authority Notoriety Advantage 19 11th Aquarius Benefacta Support House of Blessings Benefits from effort Friends and acquaintances of like minded attitudes Belonging Groups communities and associations Charity Connectedness networking Love Wish fulfillment Wealth 20 12th Pisces Carcer Rehabilitation House of Sacrifice Privacy refuge seclusion and retreating Clandestiny Revelation Intuition Extremes abundance but also addictions Luck miracles Releasing relinquishing healing cleansing forgiveness and peacefulness Finality completion conclusion 21 House modalities and triplicities Edit Similarly to how signs are classified according to astrological modality Cardinal Fixed and Mutable houses are classified according to a mode of expression as Angular Succedent and Cadent 22 Modality Keyword 23 HousesAngular Action 1st 4th 7th and 10thSuccedent Security 2nd 5th 8th and 11thCadent Learning 3rd 6th 9th and 12thAngular houses are points of initiation and represent action they relate to cardinal signs Aries Cancer Libra and Capricorn Succedent houses are points of purpose and represent stabilization they relate to fixed signs Taurus Leo Scorpio and Aquarius Cadent houses are points of transition and represent change and adaptation they relate to mutable signs Gemini Virgo Sagittarius and Pisces citation needed 24 Following the classification of signs by the four classical elements Fire Earth Air and Water houses can also be grouped together in triplicities related to a level of experience 23 Triplicity Keyword HousesFire Triplicity Identity 1st 5th and 9thEarth Triplicity Material 2nd 6th and 10thAir Triplicity Social Intellectual 3rd 7th and 11thWater Triplicity Soul Emotional 4th 8th and 12thIn old astrological writings e g William Lilly house could also be used as a synonym for domicile or rulership as in the sentence The Moon has its house in Cancer meaning that Cancer is ruled by the Moon It may be helpful to think of a ruling planet in this case the Moon as the owner of the 4th House and the sign e g Cancer as the CEO or landlord who runs the house In an individual horoscope whatever planet occupies any given house can be thought of as the house s tenant See Rulership section below The four bhavas of Hindu astrology Edit In Indian astrology the twelve houses are called Bhava and their meanings are very similar to the triplicities in Western astrology The houses are divided into four bhavas which point to mood or what the house stands for These four bhavas are Dharma duty Artha resources Kama pleasure and Moksha liberation These bhavas are called purusharthas or aims in life The ancient mystics of India realized that the austere path of the yogi was not for everyone They found that each human existence has four worthwhile goals in life Dharma 1st 5th and 9th Bhavas The need to find a path and purpose Artha 2nd 6th and 10th Bhavas The need to acquire the necessary resources and abilities to provide for to fulfill a path and purpose Kama 3rd 7th and 11th Bhavas The need for pleasure and enjoyment Moksha 4th 8th and 12th Bhavas The need to find liberation and enlightenment from the world Theses 4 aims of life are repeated in above sequence 3 times through the 12 bhavas The first round bhavas 1 through 4 show the process within the Individual The second round bhavas 5 through 8 show the alchemy between relating to Other people The third round bhavas 9 through 12 show the Universalization of the self 25 Dharma Duty Houses Artha Resources Houses Kama Pleasure Houses Moksha Liberation Houses1 2 3 45 6 7 89 10 11 12Houses for a nation or corporation Edit In his 1920 book The Arcana Or the Stock and Share Key 26 Sepharial proposed the following interpretation for houses if the chart is for a nation and a corporation Specific house indication for nations House Title For a nation For a corporation1st Life The public in which is vested all forms of enterprise and development The shareholders 2nd Gain Price of money trade returns bullion imports bills of exchange etc 3rd Brothers Railroads tramways omnibuses traction of all sorts locomotion telephone aircraft canals bridges and transports as well as postal service and all means of communication 4th Parent Real estate land explorations mines developments crops produce of raw material from the soil 5th Children Educational matters art theatres cinemas amusements and schools 6th Health Foodstuffs clothing equipment outfitting supplies upholstering furnishings building and upfitting The employees 7th Spouse Accountancy banking corporations exchanges contracts equity discounting surveying valuations probate etc 8th Death Waste products conservancy dredging petrol parafine benzine medical accessories chemicals and nitrates 9th Journeys Insurance cables publishing wireless radiographs liners and foreign affairs 10th Kingdom State affairs the government and political activity generally The chairman or the key person in charge 11th Support The Exchequer bonds government loans electric and gaslight companies The board of directors 12th Rehabilitation Launderies breweries fisheries boot mfgrs hosiery and cold storage Systems of house division EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp This 18th century Icelandic manuscript drawing shows the twelve astrological houses with signs for the planetary rulership or maybe planetary joy There are many systems of house division In most the ecliptic is divided into houses and the ascendant eastern horizon marks the cusp or beginning of the first house and the descendant western horizon marks the cusp of the seventh house Many systems called quadrant house systems also use the midheaven medium coeli as the cusp of the tenth house Goals for a house system include ease of computation agreement with the quadrant concept ascendant on the first house cusp and midheaven on the tenth 27 defined and meaningful behaviour in the polar regions acceptable handling of heavenly bodies of high latitude a distinct problem from high latitude locations on the Earth s surface and symbolic value It is impossible for any system to satisfy all the criteria completely so each one represents a different compromise The extremely popular Placidus and Koch systems in particular can generate undefined results in the polar circles Research and debate on the merits of different house systems is ongoing citation needed Early forms of house division Edit The Babylonians may have been the first to set out the concept of house division 28 Specifically they timed the birth according to three systems of time division a a three part division of the night into watches b a four part division of the nychthemeron with respect to sunrise and sunset and c a twelve part division of the day time into hours 29 Babylonian astronomers studied the rising times of the signs and calculated tables of ascensions for their latitude but it would take better time measurements by the Egyptians and the introduction of the concept of ascendant around the 2nd century B C to give astrological houses their first recognisable structure and meaning from the perspective of Classical Western astrology 30 31 Whole sign Edit In the whole sign house system sometimes referred to as the Sign House system the houses are 30 each The ascendant designates the rising sign and the first house begins at zero degrees of the zodiac sign in which the ascendant falls regardless of how early or late in that sign the ascendant is The next sign after the ascending sign then becomes the 2nd house the sign after that the 3rd house and so on In other words each house is wholly filled by one sign This was the main system used in the Hellenistic tradition of astrology and is also used in Indian astrology as well as in some early traditions of Medieval astrology It is thought to be the oldest system of house division 32 The Whole Sign system may have been developed in the Hellenistic tradition of astrology sometime around the 1st or 2nd century BCE and from there it may have passed to the Indian and early Medieval traditions of astrology though the line of thought which states that it was transmitted to India from Western locales is hotly contested At some point in the Medieval period probably around the 10th century whole sign houses fell into disuse in the western tradition and by the 20th century the system was completely unknown in the western astrological community although was continually used in India all the way into the present time Beginning in the 1980s and 1990s the system was rediscovered and reintroduced into western astrology The distinction between equal houses and whole sign houses lies in the fact that in whole sign houses the cusp of the 1st house is the beginning of the sign that contains the ascendant while in equal houses the degree of the ascendant is itself the cusp of the 1st house citation needed Debate surrounding whole sign houses Edit There is debate surrounding the claims that the whole sign house system was the original form of house division and that it was the dominant form of house division among ancient astrologers 33 One argument against whole sign houses is that it is never explicitly mentioned in the text of any ancient astrologer when explaining how to divide up the houses A counterpoint is that it is implied and it would be the only house system that makes sense in ancient charts where only an ascendant degree is presented However if one knows the longitude of the location of the astrologer one would only need the ascendant degree to determine the quadrant houses Another argument against whole sign houses is that it breaks with principles of primary motion since planets can go backwards through the houses e g a planet can go from the 8th house into the 9th house given the right conditions 34 Additionally there is concern that whole sign houses demotes the value of angularity 33 Whole sign houses is essentially an American driven movement that is argued to have decontextualized Hellenistic astrological texts from those that preceded and proceeded them In Europe most astrologers previously associated with traditional astrology never really took up whole sign houses 34 Martin Gansten argues that in Valens houses were often provisionally approximated by sign position alone but calculation of places by degree was consistently upheld in principle as more accurate and useful 35 Equal house Edit In the equal house system the ecliptic is also divided into twelve divisions of 30 degrees although the houses are measured out in 30 degree increments starting from the degree of the ascendant It begins with the ascendant which acts as the cusp or starting point of the 1st house then the second house begins exactly 30 degrees later in zodiacal order then the third house begins exactly 30 degrees later in zodiacal order from the 2nd house and so on 36 Proponents of the equal house system claim that it is more accurate and less distorting in higher latitudes especially above 60 degrees than the Placidean and other quadrant house systems 37 Space based house systems Edit In this type of system the definition of houses involves the division of the sphere into twelve equal lunes perpendicular to a fundamental plane the Morinus and Regiomontanus systems being two notable exceptions 38 39 Spatial house system Fundamental Plane Division Reference point s Projection onto the ecliptic 1st cusp 10th cuspWhole sign Ecliptic 12 equal sectors of 30 in longitude Rising Sign 0 of rising sign 0 of Nonagesimal sign 40 Equal house Longitude of Asc l Asc l Asc Nonagesimal l Asc 90º M House Longitude of MC l MC l MC 90º l MCPorphyry Trisection of MC Asc longitude arc 11th 12th cusps Trisection of Asc IC longitude arc 2nd 3rd cusps Longitudes of MC Asc and IC l AscCarter s Poly Equatorial Celestial equator 12 equal sectors of 30 in RA 2 sidereal hours RA of Asc Along great circles containing the celestial poles Not the MCMeridian RA of MC East Point Equatorial Ascendant l MCMorinus Along great circles containing the ecliptic poles l MC 90º Not the MCRegiomontanus Along great circles containing the North and south points of the Horizon l Asc l MCCampanus Prime vertical 12 equal sectors of 30 ZenithM House Equal Mc Edit This system is constructed in a similar manner as the Equal house but houses are measured out in 30 degree increments starting from the longitude of the midheaven which acts as the cusp or starting point of the 10th house The ascendant does not coincide with the cusp for the 1st house citation needed Porphyry Edit Each quadrant of the ecliptic is divided into three equal parts between the four angles This is the oldest system of quadrant style house division Although it is attributed to Porphyry of Tyros this system was first described by the 2nd century astrologer Vettius Valens in the 3rd book of his astrological compendium known as The Anthology citation needed Carter s Poly Equatorial Edit This house system was described by the English astrologer Charles E O Carter 1887 1968 in his Essays on the Foundations of Astrology 41 The house division starts at the right ascension of the ascendant and to it is added 30º of right ascension for each successive cusp Those cusps are then restated in terms of celestial longitude by projecting them along great circles containing the North and South celestial poles The 1st house cusp coincides with the ascendant s longitude but the 10th house cusp is not identical with the Midheaven Meridian Edit Also known as the Axial system or Equatorial system it divides the celestial equator in twelve 30 sectors starting at the local meridian and projects them on to the ecliptic along the great circles containing the North and South celestial poles The intersections of the ecliptic with those great circles provide the house cusps The 10th house cusp thus equals the Midheaven but the East Point also known as Equatorial Ascendant is now the first house s cusp Each house is exactly 2 sidereal hours long 42 This system was proposed by the Australian astrologer David Cope in the beginning of the 20th century and has become the most popular system with the Uranian school of astrology 43 The Ascendant intersection between the ecliptic and the horizon preserves its importance in chart interpretation through sign and aspects but not as a house determinant which is why this house system can be used in any latitude Morinus Edit French mathematician Jean Baptiste Morinus Regiomontanus Edit The celestial equator is divided into twelve and these divisions are projected on to the ecliptic along great circles that take in the north and south points on the horizon 44 Named after the German astronomer and astrologer Johann Muller of Konigsberg The Regiomontanus system was later largely replaced by the Placidus system citation needed Campanus Edit The prime vertical the great circle taking in the zenith and east point on the horizon is divided into twelve and these divisions are projected on to the ecliptic along great circles that take in the north and south points on the horizon It is attributed to Campanus of Novara but the method is known to have been used before his time 45 Sinusoidal Edit Sinusoidal systems of house division are similar to Porphyry houses except that instead of each quadrant being divided into three equal sized houses the middle house in each quadrant is compressed or expanded based on whether the quadrant covers less than or greater than 90 degrees In other words houses are smooth around the zodiac with the difference or ratio in quadrant sizes being spread in a continuous sinusoidal manner from expanded to compressed houses Sinusoidal houses were invented and first published by Walter Pullen in his astrology program Astrolog in 1994 46 Krusinski Pisa Goelzer Edit A recently published 1988 house system discovered by Georg Goelzer 47 based on a great circle passing through the ascendant and zenith This circle is divided into 12 equal parts 1st cusp is ascendant 10th cusp is zenith then the resulting points are projected to the ecliptic through meridian circles The house tables for this system were published in 1995 in Poland This house system is also known under the name Amphora in the Czech Republic after it was proposed there by Milan Pisa after the study of Manilius s Astronomica under this name Konstelace c 22 in AMPHORA novy system astrologickych domu 1997 and in the booklet Amphora algoritmy noveho systemu domu 1998 citation needed Time based house systems Edit Alchabitius Edit The predecessor system to the Placidus which largely replaced the Porphyry The difference with Placidus is that the time that it takes the ascendant to reach the meridian is divided equally into three parts The Alchabitius house system was very popular in Europe before the introduction of the Regiomontanus system Placidus Edit This is the most commonly used house system in modern Western astrology The paths drawn for each degree of the ecliptic to move from the Imum coeli to the horizon and from the horizon to the midheaven are trisected to determine the cusps of houses 2 3 11 and 12 48 The cusps of houses 8 9 5 and 6 are opposite these The Placidus system is sometimes not defined beyond polar circles latitudes greater than 66 N or 66 S because certain degrees are circumpolar never touch the horizon and planets falling in them cannot be assigned to houses without extending the system This result is a weakness of the Placidean system according to its critics who often cite the exceptional house proportions in the higher latitudes 49 Named for 17th century astrologer Placidus de Titis it is thought the Placidus system was first mentioned about 13th century in Arab literature but the first confirmed publication was in 1602 by Giovanni Antonio Magini 1555 1617 in his book Tabulae Primi Mobilis quas Directionem Vulgo Dicunt The first documented usage is from Czech 1627 50 Later it was popularized by the Catholic Church as an argument for Ptolemy s geocentric theory of the Solar System in the campaign against the heliocentric theory Placidus a professor of mathematics was named as its author to give it credibility to his contemporaries Placidus remains the most popular system among English speaking astrologers citation needed Koch Edit A rather more complicated version of the Placidus system built on equal increments of Right Ascension for each quadrant The Koch system was developed by the German astrologer Walter Koch 1895 1970 and is defined only for latitudes between 66 N and 66 S This system is popular among research astrologers in the U S and among German speakers but in Central Europe lost some popularity to the Krusinski house system citation needed Topocentric Edit This is a recent system invented in Argentina that its creators claim has been determined empirically i e by observing events in people s lives and assessing the geometry of a house system that would fit The house cusps are always within a degree of those given in the Placidus system The topocentric system can also be described as an approximation algorithm for the Placidus system citation needed Topocentric houses are also called Polich Page after the names of the house system creators Wendel Polich and A Page Nelson Chart gallery Edit The following charts display different house systems for the same time and location To better compare systems subject to distortion a high latitude city was chosen Stockholm Sweden and the time corresponds to a long ascension sign Cancer For clarity purposes all the usual aspect lines degrees and glyphs were removed nbsp Whole Sign house divisions nbsp Equal Asc house divisions nbsp M House house divisions nbsp Porphyry house divisions nbsp Meridian house divisions nbsp Morinus house divisions nbsp Regiomontanus house divisions nbsp Campanus house divisions nbsp Alcabitius house divisions nbsp Placidus house divisions nbsp Koch house divisions nbsp Topocentric house divisionsThe MC in non quadrant house systems Edit In the whole sign and equal house systems the Medium Coeli Midheaven the highest point in the chart does not act as the cusp or starting point of the 10th house Instead the MC moves around the top half of the chart and can land anywhere in the 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th 12th depending on the latitude The MC retains its commonly agreed significations but it doesn t act as the starting point of the 10th house whereas the Equal house system adds extra definition and meaning to the MC including any cusps involved any interpretations applied to the MC itself concur with other house systems citation needed This is also the more common criticism of the whole sign and equal house method as it concerns the location of the Medium Coeli Midheaven the highest point in the chart In the equal house system the ascendant descendant and midheaven IC axes can vary from being perpendicular to each other from approx 5 deg at most at equator to approx 15 degrees at Alexandria to 90 degrees at polar circle As a result equal houses counted from the ascendant cannot in general place the midheaven on the tenth house cusp where many feel it would be symbolically desirable Since this point is associated with ambition career and public image the argument is that the Midheaven therefore must be the cusp of the similar tenth house It has also been linked by extension with Capricorn the tenth sign of the zodiac The equal house system always takes the MC to be first and foremost THE most important indicator of career whereas the 10th house cusp while taken into account is interpreted simply as a weaker 2nd MC cusp The Midheaven is not associated with house locations defined by the Whole Sign and Equal House system rather the Midheaven placement relies on the specific location of the Ascendant so the Midheaven can be found anywhere between the 8th and 11th houses 51 Rulership EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message In Hellenistic Vedic Medieval and Renaissance astrology each house is ruled by the planet that rules the sign on its cusp For example if a person has the sign Aries on the cusp of their 7th house the planet Mars is said to rule the 7th house This means that when a planet is allotted a house the planet s attributes will have some bearing on the topics related to that house within the life of the individual whose chart is being analyzed This planet is considered very important for events specifically pertaining to that house s topics in fact its placement in the chart will have at least as much influence on the chart as the planets placed within the house In traditional Western and Hindu astrology each sign is ruled by one of the 7 visible planets note that in astrology the Sun and Moon are considered planets which literally means wanderers i e wandering stars as opposed to the fixed stars of the constellations citation needed In addition some modern astrologers who follow the X Y Z or Planet Sign House doctrine which was first taught by Alan Leo in the early part of the 20th century believe that certain houses are also ruled by or have an affinity with the planet which rules the corresponding zodiacal sign For instance Mars is ruler of the 1st house because it rules Aries the first sign Mercury rules or has an affinity with the 3rd house because it rules Gemini the 3rd sign etc 52 This concept is sometimes referred to as natural rulership as opposed to the former which is known as accidental rulership citation needed Notes Edit Arroyo 1989 p 111 Third House of the Birth Chart Sibling Bonds AstroSapient 1 July 2023 Hone 1978 pp 281 284 What If You Don t Know The Birth Time Astrologyclub org 28 October 2016 DeVore 1948 sub tit Houses Kenton 1974 p 17 Hone 1978 p 89 Dobyns Zipporah P 1973 p 10 Rusborn Mark 2023 02 02 Astrology houses explained A comprehensive guide for beginners astro school org Retrieved 2023 03 07 The First House in Astrology The Second House in Astrology The Third House in Astrology The Fourth House in Astrology The Fifth House in Astrology The Sixth House in Astrology The Seventh House in Astrology The Eighth House in Astrology The Ninth House in Astrology The Tenth House in Astrology The Eleventh House in Astrology The Twelfth House in Astrology Hone 1978 p 91 a b Arroyo 1989 p 114 Hampar Joan 2017 Astrology for Beginners A Simple Way to Read Your Chart Woodbury Minnesota Llewellyn Publications p 54 ISBN 9780738711065 The Brihat Parashara Hora Sashtra VedicAstroyoga com Sepharial 2010 The Arcana Or the Stock And Share Key Facsimile reprint of the 1920 original ed Whitefish MT Kessinger Publishing ISBN 978 1162632674 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain The Houses 28 October 2016 Parker 1990 p 12 Rochberg 1998 p 35 James Holden Ancient House Division PDF Retrieved 4 August 2016 Tester 1987 p 25 Holden 1982 p 19 28 a b Ep 54 Transcript Debating Ancient Systems of House Division The Astrology Podcast Retrieved 2022 08 26 a b Houlding Deborah The sign the whole sign and nothing but the sign Astrological Association Gansten M 2023 Platikos and moirikos Ancient Horoscopic Practice in the Light of Vettius Valens Anthologies International Journal of Divination and Prognostication 4 1 1 43 doi https doi org 10 1163 25899201 12340029 HOUSES Astrology Booth Astrology Booth Retrieved 2018 10 13 Parker 1990 p 175 Foreman P 1992 p 20 Hone 1978 p 134 Hone 1978 p 111 the highest point of the ecliptic above the horizon Carter 1947 p 158 159 Foreman P 1992 p 31 Collins G 2009 Chapter 4 Rusborn Mark 2023 03 19 How to calculate house cusps in the Regiomontanus system astro school org Retrieved 2023 03 26 North 1986 pp 175 176 The eastern origins of the Campanus Prime Vertical method Evidence from al Biruni Sinusoidal House Systems Der Grune Vogel Rusborn Mark 2023 03 21 How to calculate house cusps in the Placidus system astro school org Retrieved 2023 03 21 Astrodatabank FAQ n 5 Horoscope of Albrecht of Wallenstein on display in Prague 13 November 2007 Mayo 1979 p76 Deborah Houlding 2006 The Houses Temples of the Sky The Wessex Astrologer Ltd ISBN 978 1 902405 20 9 References EditArroyo Stephen 1989 Chart Interpretation Handbook California CCRS Publications ISBN 0 916360 49 0 Carter Charles 1947 2nd ed 1978 Essays on the Foundations of Astrology Chapter 8 Problems of the Houses London Theosophical Publishing House ISBN 0722951329 Collins Gene F 2009 Cosmopsychology The psychology of humans as spiritual beings Xlibris Corporation ISBN 978 1 4691 2262 5 self published source DeVore Nicholas 1948 Encyclopedia of Astrology Philosophical Library sub tit Houses Dobyns Zipporah P 1973 Finding the person in the horoscope Third Edition California T I A Publications CCRS Publications Foreman Patricia 1992 Computers and astrology a universal user s guide and reference Virginia Good Earth Publications ISBN 0 9624648 1 3 Hand Rob 2000 Whole Sign Houses The Oldest House System ARHAT Publications Holden James 1982 Ancient House Division Journal of Research of the American Federation of Astrologers 1 Hone Margaret 1978 The Modern Text Book of Astrology Revised edition 1995 England L N Fowler amp Co Ltd ISBN 0852433573 Houlding Deborah 1996 Reprinted 2006 The Houses Temples of the sky Bournemouth The Wessex Astrologer Ltd ISBN 190240520X Kenton Warren 1974 Astrology The Celestial Mirror Reprinted 1994 London Thames and Hudson ISBN 0 500 81004 4 Mayo Jeff 1979 Teach Yourself Astrology London Hodder and Stoughton North John D 1986 Horoscopes and History London The Warburg Institute University of London ISBN 978 0 85481 068 0 Parker Derek and Julia 1990 The New Complete Astrologer New York Crescent Books Rochberg Francesca 1998 Babylonian Horoscopes Transactions of the American Philosophical Society ISBN 0 87169 881 1 Tester Jim 1987 A History of Western Astrology Reprinted 1990 Suffolk St Edmundsbury Press ISBN 0 85115 255 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title House astrology amp oldid 1177890730, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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