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Sun<br />

i.e. <strong>the</strong> god. Campion argues that <strong>the</strong> Sumerians considered <strong>the</strong> planets and stars to<br />

be under <strong>the</strong> power or authority of specific deities, but that <strong>the</strong>y were not understood<br />

as <strong>the</strong> planet itself. This is one of <strong>the</strong> reasons why <strong>the</strong> sun-god is not <strong>the</strong> most central<br />

figure in <strong>the</strong> Mesopotamian mythologies nor of that of <strong>the</strong> Greeks who mapped much<br />

of <strong>the</strong>ir Pan<strong>the</strong>on onto <strong>the</strong> sky religion of <strong>the</strong> Babylonians. Ano<strong>the</strong>r related explanation,<br />

as Robert Powell points out, is that <strong>the</strong> Babylonians noted that none of <strong>the</strong><br />

planets were always visible in <strong>the</strong> sky, <strong>the</strong>refore no single deity could have supreme<br />

authority. Instead <strong>the</strong>y governed through a council made up of all seven gods. During<br />

<strong>the</strong> Babylonian history, Marduk (<strong>the</strong> deity associated with <strong>the</strong> planet Jupiter) established<br />

himself as <strong>the</strong> president of <strong>the</strong> Council, but <strong>the</strong> Moon god, Sin, had also been<br />

known as “lord of <strong>the</strong> gods” in a time before <strong>the</strong> rulership of Marduk. Similarly during<br />

<strong>the</strong> Old Babylonian period of <strong>the</strong> Amorite king Hammurabi (1792–1750 B.C.E.),<br />

<strong>the</strong> sun god Shamash was considered <strong>the</strong> “king of <strong>the</strong> gods.” In fact “Hammu” was<br />

<strong>the</strong> old Semitic name for <strong>the</strong> sun-god and thus, according to Powell, points to <strong>the</strong><br />

worship of <strong>the</strong> solar deity.<br />

Shamash was <strong>the</strong> son of Sin (a male lunar deity) and bro<strong>the</strong>r of Ishtar (associated<br />

with <strong>the</strong> planet Venus). He was <strong>the</strong> great benefactor to humanity because he<br />

ignited and supported <strong>the</strong> growth of life through his light and warmth. However, <strong>the</strong><br />

early civilizations of <strong>the</strong> arid Mediterranean and Middle East, were all too aware of <strong>the</strong><br />

Sun’s scorching rays and his ability to burn up crops and dry up rivers and lakes. In<br />

Hellenistic and Hindu <strong>astrology</strong> this translated into a negative influence of <strong>the</strong> Sun<br />

when it was positioned too close to one of <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r planets. The planet was designated<br />

as “combust” (within 8° from <strong>the</strong> Sun) or “under <strong>the</strong> Sun’s beams” (within 17°)<br />

and was ei<strong>the</strong>r interpreted as being hidden or operating in secrecy (out of sight),<br />

according to Hellenistic <strong>astrology</strong>, or as weak and ineffective in <strong>the</strong> Jyotish tradition.<br />

This concept of light translating into a higher degree of “sight” finds an echo in <strong>the</strong><br />

Greek sun-god Helios who was also <strong>the</strong> god of seeing and often invoked to heal blindness.<br />

Medieval <strong>astrology</strong>, which was largely an Arabic evolution of <strong>the</strong> Hellenistic tradition,<br />

regarded combustion as especially detrimental. Guido Bonatti (thirteenth century)<br />

says: “A corporal conjunction with <strong>the</strong> Sun is <strong>the</strong> greatest misfortune that can<br />

befall a planet.” To William Lilly, <strong>the</strong> Sun is associated with eyesight, cataracts, eye<br />

diseases and <strong>the</strong> brain—and an echo of this can be found in Vedic <strong>astrology</strong>.<br />

One of <strong>the</strong> more notable characteristics of <strong>the</strong> Babylonian sun-god was that he<br />

was <strong>the</strong> arbiter of justice, a role associated with Jupiter in modern <strong>astrology</strong>. Powell<br />

explains this perspective in terms of <strong>the</strong> interpretation of <strong>the</strong> Sun’s regularity as “infallibility,”<br />

a desirable trait in <strong>the</strong> arbitration of justice. In Jacobsen, it is Utu’s ability to<br />

“enlighten” or to have “clarity of vision” which is considered when he says Utu is <strong>the</strong><br />

“power in light, <strong>the</strong> foe of darkness. On <strong>the</strong> social place he <strong>the</strong>refore becomes a power<br />

for justice and equality.… He is <strong>the</strong>refore <strong>the</strong> judge of god and men, presiding in <strong>the</strong><br />

morning in courts such as <strong>the</strong> one we know from <strong>the</strong> Bathhouse Ritual, where demons<br />

and o<strong>the</strong>r evil doers are sued by <strong>the</strong>ir human victims. At night he judges disputes<br />

among <strong>the</strong> dead of <strong>the</strong> ne<strong>the</strong>rworld. He is <strong>the</strong> last appeal of <strong>the</strong> wronged who can<br />

obtain no justice from <strong>the</strong>ir fellow men, and <strong>the</strong>ir cry of despair to him, ‘i-Utu!’ was<br />

feared as possessing supernatural power” (as noted in Nick Campion’s Cosmos: A Cultural<br />

History of Astrology.<br />

[632] THE ASTROLOGY BOOK

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