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Asteroids<br />

epic poetry), and Laetitia (Latin for “gladness”) are all larger than Juno (150 miles in<br />

diameter), but almost no information is available on any of <strong>the</strong>se bodies except Psyche.<br />

(Short summary meanings of <strong>the</strong>se asteroids are given in Martha Lang-Wescott’s<br />

Mechanics of <strong>the</strong> Future: Asteroids.)<br />

By sequence of discovery, <strong>the</strong> next four asteroids after <strong>the</strong> Big Four are Astraea,<br />

goddess of justice; Hebe, goddess of youth who took ambrosia to <strong>the</strong> gods; Iris, goddess of<br />

<strong>the</strong> rainbow who was a messenger between <strong>the</strong> gods and humanity; and Flora, goddess of<br />

flowering plants. Again, little information on any of <strong>the</strong>se four asteroids is available<br />

except for short summaries in Lang-Wescott’s survey. The clues that one would use to<br />

research any one of <strong>the</strong>se “concept” or “goddess” asteroids—health, justice, poetry, gladness,<br />

and so forth—are all appealing, so <strong>the</strong> lack of attention <strong>the</strong>y have attracted is surprising.<br />

Clearly, <strong>the</strong> next step in establishing <strong>the</strong> study of asteroids as a widely accepted<br />

branch of <strong>astrology</strong> will be <strong>the</strong> systematic exploration of <strong>the</strong> larger or <strong>the</strong> earlier asteroids,<br />

ra<strong>the</strong>r than <strong>the</strong> current piecemeal study of asteroids with idiosyncratic appeal.<br />

One issue that emerged when astrological asteroid studies was beginning to<br />

attract serious interest was <strong>the</strong> question of sign rulership. It was traditionally held that<br />

<strong>the</strong> Sun and <strong>the</strong> Moon (<strong>the</strong> two luminaries) ruled one sign apiece, Leo and Cancer,<br />

respectively. The known planets each ruled two signs: Mercury ruled Virgo and Gemini;<br />

Venus ruled Taurus and Libra; Mars ruled Aries and Scorpio; Jupiter ruled Sagittarius<br />

and Pisces; and Saturn ruled Capricorn and Aquarius. When <strong>the</strong> “new” planets<br />

were discovered, astrologers determined that Uranus ruled Aquarius, Neptune ruled<br />

Pisces, and Pluto ruled Scorpio, leaving Saturn, Jupiter, and Mars as <strong>the</strong> rulers, respectively,<br />

of Capricorn, Sagittarius, and Aries. In this modified system, only Mercury and<br />

Venus still rule two signs each. The attractiveness of a balanced system in which 12<br />

heavenly bodies rule 12 signs has often led twentieth-century astrologers to speculate<br />

that two new planets would eventually be discovered and come to be accepted as <strong>the</strong><br />

rulers of Virgo and Libra.<br />

Some asteroid-oriented astrologers speculated that <strong>the</strong> larger asteroids ruled <strong>the</strong>se<br />

signs. Bach, <strong>the</strong> founder of astrological asteroid studies, assigned Ceres and Vesta <strong>the</strong><br />

rulership of Virgo, and Juno and Pallas <strong>the</strong> rulership of Libra. Zipporah Dobyns, ano<strong>the</strong>r<br />

pioneer in <strong>the</strong> field of asteroid research, accepted <strong>the</strong> Big Four as corulers (with Mercury<br />

and Venus) of <strong>the</strong>se two signs. However, spreading out sign rulerships to more than one<br />

planet did not strike a favorable chord among nonasteroid astrologers. Not only did multiple<br />

rulership lack elegance, but it also made certain astrological procedures, such as<br />

identifying <strong>the</strong> significator in horary <strong>astrology</strong>, somewhat schizophrenic. Beyond <strong>the</strong><br />

question of elegance, some of <strong>the</strong> sign associations were strained. Ceres, which embodies<br />

<strong>the</strong> quality of nurture, for example, is clearly more related to Cancer than to Virgo.<br />

Ano<strong>the</strong>r question one might ask with respect to asteroid rulerships is: Why stop with <strong>the</strong><br />

Big Four The asteroid Hygiea, <strong>the</strong> personification of health and hygiene, is clearly related<br />

to Virgo; <strong>the</strong> asteroid Astraea, <strong>the</strong> goddess of justice, has definite affinities to Libra;<br />

and so forth. The point is, while various asteroids may be associated with <strong>the</strong> 12 signs of<br />

<strong>the</strong> zodiac, assigning rulerships to asteroids raised more problems than it resolved.<br />

In more recent years, <strong>the</strong> exploration of <strong>the</strong> astrological significance of asteroids<br />

has been overshadowed, if not derailed, by two developments: <strong>the</strong> emergence of Jyotish<br />

[64] THE ASTROLOGY BOOK

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