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Fixed Stars<br />

lost to <strong>the</strong> view of <strong>the</strong> observer. O<strong>the</strong>rs will rise or set at night, but instead of disappearing<br />

from view altoge<strong>the</strong>r, <strong>the</strong>y will lose touch with <strong>the</strong> horizon and spend <strong>the</strong><br />

whole night being visible in <strong>the</strong> night sky. Yet both types of stars will eventually<br />

return to rising or setting during <strong>the</strong> night, with each individual star doing so on a particular<br />

date of <strong>the</strong> year. However, <strong>the</strong>re is also ano<strong>the</strong>r set of stars that does not partake<br />

of this pattern; <strong>the</strong>se are always visible, and never sink beneath <strong>the</strong> horizon,<br />

spending every night circling around <strong>the</strong> pole.<br />

To <strong>the</strong> Egyptians, <strong>the</strong> stars were deities, and so <strong>the</strong>se annual star patterns had<br />

strong religious significance. The never-setting circumpolar stars were considered to<br />

be <strong>the</strong> Immortals, for <strong>the</strong>se were <strong>the</strong> deities that never died, <strong>the</strong> stars that never set. It<br />

was <strong>the</strong>refore considered significant when a star that would normally rise or set would<br />

appear to act like a circumpolar star by being visible for <strong>the</strong> whole night. This event<br />

would always commence on <strong>the</strong> same calendar date, from one year to <strong>the</strong> next. Fur<strong>the</strong>rmore,<br />

and considered of even greater significance, this same star would return to<br />

<strong>the</strong> pattern of setting during <strong>the</strong> night, at ano<strong>the</strong>r set calendar date. Such a star was<br />

considered to be a deity who spent time not only walking in <strong>the</strong> world of <strong>the</strong> Immortals,<br />

but also walking in <strong>the</strong> world of humans, and was <strong>the</strong>refore open to prayer and<br />

offerings. The return of such a star on a particular date is known as <strong>the</strong> heliacal setting<br />

star, and its phase, as named by Ptolemy, is “curtailed passage.”<br />

The stars that were never seen, <strong>the</strong> stars that never rose during <strong>the</strong> night and<br />

remained permanently out of sight, were considered by <strong>the</strong> Egyptians to be <strong>the</strong> deities<br />

that lived in <strong>the</strong> Underworld. However, at set dates some visible stars would disappear<br />

from view and fail to rise during <strong>the</strong> night. These stars were believed to be deities that<br />

died at a set time of <strong>the</strong> year and <strong>the</strong>n spent time walking through <strong>the</strong> Underworld.<br />

However, such a star would reappear in <strong>the</strong> night sky (rise from <strong>the</strong> dead) by rising just<br />

before dawn at a precise calendar date. This star was considered a deity who had risen<br />

from <strong>the</strong> Underworld and now walked again upon <strong>the</strong> earth. It was believed to be <strong>the</strong><br />

ruling deity for <strong>the</strong> period of time until <strong>the</strong> next deity returned from <strong>the</strong> land of <strong>the</strong><br />

dead. The return of such a star is known as <strong>the</strong> heliacal rising star, and its phase, as<br />

named by Ptolemy, is arising and laying hidden.<br />

So important were <strong>the</strong>se times of <strong>the</strong> return of a star that, as Norman Lockyer<br />

(1836–1920), considered <strong>the</strong> founding fa<strong>the</strong>r of archeoastronomy, pointed out in his<br />

work Dawn of Astronomy (1894), <strong>the</strong> Egyptians based <strong>the</strong>ir religious calendar around<br />

such events and built temples designed to capture <strong>the</strong> returning star’s light onto <strong>the</strong><br />

altar of <strong>the</strong> deity.<br />

The principles embodied in <strong>the</strong> work of such writers as Robert Hand, Norman<br />

Lockyer, and Anonymous of 379 C.E., and also demonstrated by Ptolemy’s The Phases<br />

of <strong>the</strong> Fixed Stars, were taken up and expanded upon by Bernadette Brady’s <strong>book</strong><br />

Brady’s Book of Fixed Stars (1998), in which she recommends that astrologers should<br />

once again return to <strong>the</strong> older observational techniques of working with fixed stars as<br />

well as move away from <strong>the</strong> star/planet delineations of Plato and Ptolemy and, by<br />

researching <strong>the</strong> symbolism and mythology linked to <strong>the</strong> ancient constellations, use<br />

<strong>the</strong>se to explore far older meanings of <strong>the</strong> stars.<br />

—Bernadette Brady<br />

[250] THE ASTROLOGY BOOK

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