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XXX<br />

B<br />

BACCHUS<br />

Bacchus is asteroid 2,063 (<strong>the</strong> 2,063rd asteroid to<br />

be discovered, on April 24, 1977). It is approximately<br />

1.2 kilometers in diameter and has an<br />

orbital period of 1.1 years. Bacchus was named<br />

after <strong>the</strong> god of wine, <strong>the</strong> Roman equivalent of<br />

<strong>the</strong> Greek Dionysus. According to Martha Lang-<br />

Wescott, Bacchus is related to addictive syndrome,<br />

particularly to <strong>the</strong> denial, substitution,<br />

and management of uncomfortable emotions.<br />

This asteroid’s key word is “denial.” According to<br />

J. Lee Lehman, “Bacchus represents <strong>the</strong> way that<br />

a person seeks ecstasy through direct experience<br />

or passion.” Jacob Schwartz gives <strong>the</strong> astrological<br />

significance of this asteroid as “Ecstasy to encourage<br />

sensual excess and fertility; addictive personalities<br />

and behaviors and attempts to manage<br />

feelings through substitutions.”<br />

Bacchus is also one of <strong>the</strong> names given<br />

to <strong>the</strong> hypo<strong>the</strong>tical planet that some astrologers<br />

assert is orbiting beyond Pluto.<br />

Sources:<br />

Lehman, J. Lee. The Ultimate Asteroid Book. West<br />

Chester, PA: Whitford, 1988.<br />

Lang-Wescott, Martha. Asteroids-Mechanics: Ephemerides<br />

II. Rev. ed. Conway, MA: Treehouse<br />

Mountain, 1990.<br />

A seventeenth-century engraving of a drunken Bacchus<br />

supported by two fauns. Reproduced by permission of<br />

Fortean Picture Library.<br />

THE ASTROLOGY BOOK<br />

[81]

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