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Mundane Astrology<br />

<strong>the</strong> religious life, <strong>the</strong> economic, and so forth.” However, bearing in mind <strong>the</strong> blurring<br />

between <strong>the</strong> personal and professional, it may not always be possible to decide when<br />

<strong>astrology</strong> is mundane and when it is not. For example, if relationships are political<br />

(i.e., if, <strong>the</strong>y involve power relationships between men and women, or adults and children),<br />

is a composite chart mundane Also, <strong>the</strong> birth charts of politicians may be<br />

interpreted within <strong>the</strong> rules of natal <strong>astrology</strong>, but are clearly of direct importance in<br />

mundane work, while horary charts concerning political matters may be also considered<br />

mundane. Meanwhile, financial <strong>astrology</strong>, which is clearly mundane, has tended<br />

to evolve into a distinct discipline.<br />

In <strong>the</strong> Middle Ages, mundane <strong>astrology</strong> had a narrower remit and was usually<br />

known as <strong>the</strong> study of “revolutions,” (i.e., <strong>the</strong> revolutions of Jupiter and Saturn around<br />

<strong>the</strong> earth), which toge<strong>the</strong>r were seen as <strong>the</strong> main timers of history. The term “revolution,”<br />

used to describe political upheavals, is derived from <strong>the</strong> word’s astrological<br />

application. The Sun’s ingress into Aries was also known as a “revolution.” The three<br />

principle technical bases of <strong>the</strong> study of long periods in relation to Jupiter-Saturn are<br />

conjunctions, <strong>the</strong> casting of horoscopes for <strong>the</strong> Sun’s ingress into Aries, and <strong>the</strong> use of<br />

less frequent events, including predictable ones such as eclipses, and unpredictable<br />

ones such as comets or mock suns. New and full moons and planetary transits provided<br />

fur<strong>the</strong>r information between <strong>the</strong>se major events.<br />

The term mundane is derived from <strong>the</strong> Latin word mundus, meaning “world.”<br />

In <strong>the</strong> first century <strong>the</strong> Roman writer Pliny wrote in De Natura Rerum that “<strong>the</strong> Greeks<br />

have designated <strong>the</strong> world by a word that means ‘ornament,’ and we have given it <strong>the</strong><br />

name of mundus, because of its perfect finish and grace.” Mundus itself is a translation<br />

of <strong>the</strong> Greek word kosmos, meaning “world-order” and was probably first used by ei<strong>the</strong>r<br />

<strong>the</strong> philosopher Parmenides or Pythagoras in <strong>the</strong> sixth-century B.C.E. The word can<br />

also be translated as “adornment,” <strong>the</strong> root of <strong>the</strong> modern word “cosmetic.” The Latin<br />

term mundi was used to describe <strong>the</strong> application of <strong>astrology</strong> to <strong>the</strong> world from <strong>the</strong><br />

eleventh century onwards. (The first medieval Latin astrological text was <strong>the</strong> Liber<br />

Planetis at Mundi Climatibus, published between 1010 and 1027, and probably written<br />

by Gerbert d’Auvergne, who became Pope Sylvester II.) By <strong>the</strong> seventeenth century,<br />

<strong>the</strong> study of revolutions was also known as “Astrologia Munda.” The term “mundane<br />

<strong>astrology</strong>” itself first came into regular use in <strong>the</strong> nineteenth century and is <strong>the</strong> title of<br />

two “cook<strong>book</strong>s” on <strong>the</strong> subject, one by Raphael and and <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r by H. S. Green<br />

respectively, both written around <strong>the</strong> turn of <strong>the</strong> twentieth century.<br />

While <strong>the</strong> term itself is modern, it is clear that <strong>the</strong> earliest known <strong>astrology</strong><br />

was mundane in nature, being concerned exclusively with affairs of state. Indeed, in<br />

ancient Mesopotamia where, according to current records, <strong>the</strong> technical basis was laid<br />

for both western and Indian <strong>astrology</strong>, <strong>the</strong> entire cosmos was seen as one political unit<br />

in which humanity served <strong>the</strong> celestial deities, whose deputy on earth was <strong>the</strong> king.<br />

This notion of <strong>the</strong> “cosmic state is common to most religious societies and persists in<br />

<strong>the</strong> west, shorn of its astrological component, in fundamentalist Christianity. In<br />

Mesopotamia, though, <strong>the</strong> stars and planets were messengers, conveying divine wishes<br />

to humanity via <strong>the</strong> astrologers, whose job it was to scan <strong>the</strong> skies for signs or omens<br />

(i.e., warnings) of divine pleasure or anger.<br />

[474] THE ASTROLOGY BOOK

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