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Horary Astrology<br />

Ivy Goldstein-Jacobson (1893–1990) practiced in California, writing a<br />

number of <strong>book</strong>s. She adapted some classical methods, adding <strong>the</strong> use of<br />

<strong>the</strong> word “cautions” for <strong>the</strong> considerations against judgment, and was<br />

adamant that <strong>the</strong> horary had to be calculated for <strong>the</strong> location of <strong>the</strong><br />

querent, not <strong>the</strong> horary astrologer. She was inadvertently <strong>the</strong> originator<br />

of <strong>the</strong> idea that planets in mutual reception “swap” or “exchange”<br />

places. She also popularized <strong>the</strong> use of <strong>the</strong> parallel and added decanates<br />

to horary delineation.<br />

Barbara Watters (1907–1984) allowed <strong>the</strong> quincunx as an aspect,<br />

brought back <strong>the</strong> use of eclipses in horary delineation, and used <strong>the</strong><br />

word “strictures” for <strong>the</strong> considerations against judgment (<strong>the</strong>reby<br />

allowing later horary astrologers to refer to <strong>the</strong> “cautions and strictures”<br />

and to attempt to distinguish between <strong>the</strong>m).<br />

Olivia Barclay (1919–2001) was largely responsible for <strong>the</strong> current<br />

popularity of William Lilly and <strong>the</strong> revival of classical methods in<br />

horary <strong>astrology</strong>. Originally trained in Goldstein-Jacobson’s methods,<br />

Barclay switched when she accidentally found a partial original copy of<br />

Lilly in a used-<strong>book</strong> shop.<br />

—J. Lee Lehman, Ph.D.<br />

Sources:<br />

Al-Biruni, Abu’l-Rayhan Muhammed ibn Ahmad. The Book of Instruction in <strong>the</strong> Elements of<br />

Astrology. 1029. Translated by R. Ramsay Wright. London: Luzac & Co., 1934.<br />

Barclay, Olivia. Horary Astrology Rediscovered. West Chester, PA: Whitford Press, 1990.<br />

Chevalier, Jacques M. A Postmodern Revelation: Signs of Astrology and <strong>the</strong> Apocalypse. Toronto:<br />

University of Toronto Press, 1997.<br />

Cornelius, Geoffrey. The Moment of Astrology. New York: Penguin, 1994.<br />

Curry, Patrick. A Confusion of Prophets: Victorian and Edwardian Astrology. London: Collins &<br />

Brown, 1992.<br />

———. Prophesy and Power. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1989.<br />

Doro<strong>the</strong>us of Sidonius. Carmen Astrologicum. Translated by David Pingree. B. G. Teubner Verlagsgesellschaft:<br />

Leipzig, Germany: 1976.<br />

Goldstein-Jacobson, Ivy M. Simplified Horary Astrology. Alhambra, CA: Frank Severy Publishing,<br />

1960.<br />

Jones, Marc Edmund. Horary Astrology. Santa Fe, NM: Aurora Press, 1993.<br />

Lehman, J. Lee. The Martial Art of Horary Astrology. West Chester, PA: Whitford Press, 2002.<br />

Lilly, William. Christian Astrology. London: T. Brudenell, 1647. Reprint, London: Regulus, 1985.<br />

McEvilley, Thomas. The Shape of Ancient Thought: Comparative Studies in Greek and Indian<br />

Philosophies. New York: Allworth Press, 2002.<br />

Neugebuaer, Otto, and Van Hoesen. Greek Horoscopes. Philadelphia: American Philosophical<br />

Society, 1959.<br />

Rupertus, Stella. An Astrologian’s Guide in Horary Astrology. London: Simpkin and Marshall,<br />

1832.<br />

Sibly, Ebenezer. A New and Complete Illustration of <strong>the</strong> Celestial Science of Astrology. London: W.<br />

Nicol, 1784–1797.<br />

Thomas, Keith. Religion and <strong>the</strong> Decline of Magic. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1971.<br />

Watters, Barbara. Horary Astrology and <strong>the</strong> Judgment of Events. Washington, DC: Valhalla, 1973.<br />

[332] THE ASTROLOGY BOOK

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