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Astrological Geomancy by Anthony Louis
The word geomancy derives from the Greek roots geo, referring
to the earth, and mantikos, meaning "of a soothsayer"
or prophetic." Geomancy is any system of divination (an attempt
to get in touch with the divine) related to manipulation of the
earth. A system of geomancy linking astrological symbols with figures
formed from holes poked in the earth became popular during the Renaissance.
The exact origins of astrological geomancy are unknown. It is similar
to the casting of lots referred to in the Latin and Greek classics
and may have been practiced by ancient desert nomads who made marks
in the sand which they then interpreted to answer questions of personal
concern. In this latter sense geomancy is akin to horary astrology.
In fact, the same philosophical principle -- cosmic sympathy --
underlies both geomantic divination and horary astrology. The idea
is that at the time a question becomes imperative to the inquirer,
the conditions of the cosmos, whether in macrocosm or microcosm,
will reverberate with the inquirer's mind. Systems of divination
are really sets of rules explaining how to decipher the message
of the cosmos. Modern diviners often cite Carl Jung's concept of
synchronicity, or meaningful coincidence, to explain the workings
of their craft. Regardless of whether or how it works, geomancy
is worthwhile to study simply for the beauty of its sixteen archetypal
symbols, another Jungian idea. The sixteen geomantic archetypes
bear a close relationship to the archetypal symbols of planets and
signs used in astrology.
Henry Cornelius Agrippa
Geomancy had its heyday in the Renaissance during Western Europe's
transition from the medieval to the modern world. It's most famous
spokesperson was Henry Cornelius Agrippa, born in 1486, and author
of several texts in Latin on occult philosophy. Agrippa's attitude
toward geomancy was ambivalent. Although he wrote the major geomantic
text of the period, he commented on his own work and about the "common
geomancy" of his predecessors, "I too have written a geomancy
quite different from the rest but no less superstitious and fallacious
or if you wish I will even say 'mendacious.'" Nonetheless,
Agrippa appears to have practiced and written extensively on the
subject.
By the time Agrippa wrote about geomancy, it had undergone an
evolution. No longer were the marks on the earth interpreted in
their own right; now they were used in combination with a horoscope
wheel depicting the twelve astrological houses. There were many
ways to do this, and the modern geomancer will need to experiment
and decide which one suits his or her style.
Fundamental Steps
Fortunately, all the systems of geomancy have some fundamental
steps in common. The first is to ask a question of pressing personal
concern. Then, while concentrating on the question, the "querent"
(inquirer) must poke sixteen rows of holes or make sixteen rows
of marks on the ground. Each row of holes is poked from right to
left and the next row begins beneath it. The querent focuses on
the "quesited" (the matter inquired about), relinquishes
conscious control and keeps poking across a row until it feels right
to stop. This is akin to using a divining rod, and the ancient explanation
is that the earth spirits will guide the rod to make the appropriate
number of marks. Then, if you get a wrong answer, you can blame
the earth spirits for being mischievous, as in, "the devil
made me do it."
Modern geomancers tend not to use the earth in their back yards
or their children's sandboxes. Instead, they make marks on paper
with a pencil, flip a coin, cast a die or dice, or draw cards from
a deck -- any system that will generate a series of sixteen random
odd and even numbers.
Once you have your sixteen rows of dots, you count the dots in
each row and note whether there are an odd or even number of dots.
You next group the rows, in sequential order, four at a time to
generate the first four geomantic figures, known as the four mothers.
The remaining eight geomantic figures used in divination are derived
from these four mothers.
Geomantic Figures and their Planets
Before proceeding with the general methods of geomantic divination,
let me review the sixteen geomantic figures and their associated
planets and signs. The sixteen figures can be grouped into eight
complementary pairs which are like negative images or polar opposites
of one another. Where one member of a complementary pair has a single
dot, its complement will have two dots, and vice versa. Below I
will list the figures next to their complements, and beneath them
their associated planet and sign according to Agrippa.
Populus Via
o o o
o o o
o o o
o o o
Moon, Cancer Moon, Cancer
Both Populus and Via are neutral or variable symbols related to
the Moon. Populus means "people, crowd, group" and suggests
that the outcome will depend on other people, that control of the
situation will not be in the querent's hands. Via means "road,
path, way" and often refers to the need to find one's direction
or way in the matter. It can also signify a journey. Their connection
with the Moon gives both these symbols the connotation of fluctuation
or change. The sign Cancer suggests one's home, security, or foundations
are at issue.
Laetitia Caput Draconis (Moon's North Node)
o o o
o o o
o o o
o o o
Jupiter, Sagittarius North Node, Capricorn
Laetitia is a positive symbol meaning "joy" and is associated
with health and happiness. Its complementary symbol is Caput Draconis,
the head of the Dragon, linked astrologically with Jupiter and good
fortune. Caput Draconis often suggests entering or beginning something
new and positive.
Rubeus Puella (cf. glyph of Venus)
o o o
o o o
o o o
o o o
Mars, Scorpio Venus, Taurus
Rubeus means "red," the color of Mars and of blood spilled
in violence. Rubeus is a negative symbol, the dark side of Scorpio
and Mars, associated with danger, lust, addiction, passion, fire,
aggression, and destruction. It is generally unfortunate, except
where a show of force or eroticism is needed. Many geomancers discard
the figure when Rubeus falls in the first house. The complement
to Rubeus is the Venus-ruled symbol Puella meaning "girl."
Puella is a variable or mildly adverse symbol suggesting the fickle,
indecisive and superficial side of Venus. Puella is connected with
physical attractiveness, music and the arts, gaining cooperation,
and women and matters related to women which do well under its influence.
Fortuna Minor Fortuna Major
o o o
o o o
o o o
o o o
Sun, Leo Sun, Leo
Both these symbols are ruled by the Sun and Leo. Both are fortunate,
especially Fortuna Major. Fortuna Minor shows only moderate success
and often denotes some kind of external protection like insurance
coverage. While Fortuna Major usually shows significant good fortune,
Fortuna Minor conveys either a preservation of the status quo or
a definite but modest gain.
Albus Puer (cf. glyph of Mars)
o o o
o o o
o o o
o o o
Mercury, Gemini Mars, Aries
Albus means "white" as in the white hair of the wise old
prophet. Associated ideas are wisdom, clear thought, news, and communication.
Albus is a positive symbol. The complementary figure is Puer, the
impetuous youth of Mars and Aries. Puer means "boy" and
signifies males and the initiation of activity. Puer can be rash
and inconsiderate, but also energetic, enthusiastic and competitive
like Mars in Aries.
Amissio Acquisitio
o o o
o o o
o o o
o o o
Venus, Libra Jupiter, Pisces
Amissio means "loss" and is part of the flip side of Venus.
If the question is about acquisition, Amissio argues against success.
However, if the goal is loss, as in the loss of weight or getting
out of a bad relationship, then Amissio signifies the desired loss
can be achieved. The complement of Amissio is Acquisitio or "acquisition."
This Jupiter-based symbol is quite fortunate and shows success,
money, gain, and good luck.
Conjunctio Carcer
o o o
o o o
o o o
o o o
Mercury, Virgo Saturn, Capricorn
Conjunctio means "union, joining" and denotes the coming
together of people or things. It is favorable for the reunion of
the querent will a lost object or missing person. It can also show
a marriage or partnership. The figure of Carcer looks like a small
cell enclosed by dots on all sides. Carcer means "prison, bondage"
and suggests delays, restrictions, or confinement. Carcer's connection
with Saturn implies that the querent with be confronted by reality
and the laws of the external world. Carcer often shows a learning
experience. As a Judge, Saturn-ruled Carcer means something will
be made real ("real-ized") or made manifest on the physical
plane; the querent will get just what he or she has earned.
Cauda Draconis Tristitia
o o o
o o o
o o o
o o o
Moon's South Node, Scorpio Saturn, Aquarius
Cauda Draconis, the Moon's South Node or Dragon's Tail, is associated
with the negative sides of Saturn and Scorpio. It can show misfortune
and the need to pay for past debts. Cauda Draconis favors the termination
of something. When Cauda falls in the first house, many geomancers
destroy the figure. Its complementary symbol Tristitia is also connected
with Saturn. Tristitia means "sorrow, sadness" and suggests
depression, unhappiness, or grief. The querent may suffer problems
or feel negatively about the matters governed by the house where
Tristitia lies. Sometimes Tristitia shows the need for professional
counseling to deal with emotional stress or pain.
The geomantic symbols bear a resemblance to the glyphs of the
planets with which they are linked. Meditating on the geomantic
figures and their associated planetary glyphs will lead to a deeper
understanding of their archetypal significance.
Now let's look at an actual example of geomantic divination. This
article was originally written on Saturday, October 6, 1990. At
11:56 A.M. EDT, I asked the question, "Will this article be
of interest to the general reader?"
I next took a single die from a pair of dice and cast it sixteen
times to generate a set of sixteen rows. Next to each row I entered
the total number of dots. Then next to each number I created a line
of a geomantic figure, using two "o's" for even numbers
and one "o" for odd numbers. I totaled the number of dots
at the bottom for future reference to calculate an "index."
Each set of four rows generates a "mother" figure consisting
of a head, neck, body and feet. Here's what my experiment produced:
16 ROWS NUMBER GEOMANTIC FIGURE
OF MARKS
* 1 Head: o Mother One:
** 2 Neck: o o
** 2 Body: o o Laetitia (M1)
**** 4 Feet: o o
* 1 o Mother Two:
**** 4 o o
**** 4 o o Laetitia (M2)
** 2 o o
****** 6 o o Mother Three:
* 1 o
***** 5 o Conjunctio (M3)
****** 6 o o
** 2 o o Mother Four:
*** 3 o
*** 3 o Conjunctio (M4)
****** 6 o o
---------------
Total: 52
Once you generate the four mothers, you next derive four daughters
as follows. Each daughter consists of the sequence of dots taken
from the same row or level of the four mothers. Thus, the first
daughter consists of four rows of dots (the "heads" of
the mothers) from the top level of each of the mothers in order
from the first (M1) to the fourth (M4). The second daughter is made
up of all the second rows or "necks" of the mothers, taken
in order from one to four. All the third rows or "bodies"
of mothers combine to make the third daughter. Combining all the
"feet" of the mothers in order produces the fourth daughter.
The process is cumbersome to explain but easy to do. If you line
up the four mothers in sequence, the mothers can be read down the
page, and the daughters across the page. Here's an abstract representation:
Mothers Daughters
M1 M2 M3 M4 D1 D2 D3 D4
HEADS: a e i m a b c d
NECKS: b f j n e f g h
BODIES: c g k o i j k l
FEET: d h l p m n o p
In the above example, the derived daughters are as follows:
Mother One: o Daughter One: o
o o o
Laetitia (M1) o o Fortuna o o
o o Minor (D1) o o
Mother Two: o Daughter Two: o o
o o o o
Laetitia (M2) o o Fortuna o
o o Major (D2) o
Mother Three: o o Daughter Three: o o
o o o
Conjunctio (M3) o Fortuna o
o o Major (D3) o
Mother Four: o o Daughter Four: o o
o o o
Conjunctio (M4) o Populus (D4) o o
o o o o
To be sure you understand the method, let me derive Daughter Three
in detail by combining the "bodies" of the four mothers:
* The third row of M1 has two dots, so row one of D3 has two dots.
* The third row of M2 has two dots, so row two of D3 has two dots.
* The third row of M3 has one dot, so row three of D3 has one
dot.
* The third row of M4 has one dot, so row four of D3 has one dot.
Up to the point of generating the mothers and daughters, most
classical geomancers are in agreement. Now come the variations.
We have four mothers and four daughters, but there are twelve houses
in the horoscope. We need to generate four new figures which are
known as "Nephews." Many geomancers, like Regardie in
The Golden Dawn or Schwei and Pestka in The Complete Book of Astrological
Geomancy (both available from Llewellyn) use the "common"
form of geomancy that was in vogue before Agrippa developed his
system. In common geomancy one combines mothers one and two to form
nephew one, mothers three and four to make nephew two, daughters
one and two to form nephew three, and daughters three and four to
make nephew four.
Rather than the technique of common geomancy, I prefer the method
of Agrippa which combines a mother and a daughter to produce a nephew.
In "On Geomancy" in the Fourth Book of Occult Philosophy,
Agrippa states:
As the former Matres [mothers] do make four Angles of a house,
the first maketh the first Angle, the second the second Angle [10th
house], the third maketh the third Angle [7th house], and the fourth
the fourth Angle [4th house]; so the four Filiae [daughters] arising
from the Matres do constitute the four Succedent houses; the first
maketh the second house, the second the eleventh, the third the
eighth, and the fourth maketh the fifth house; the rest of the houses,
which are Cadents are to be calculated according to the rule of
their triplicity; that is to say, by making the ninth out of the
first and fifth, and the sixth out of the tenth and second, and
of the seventh and eleventh the third, and of the fourth and eighth
the twelfth ("On Geomancy" from the 4th book of Occult
Philosophy by Agrippa, translated by James Freake).
Agrippa's method of adding figures is as follows. Each nephew
is formed by combining adjacent rows of particular mothers and daughters,
the points of which are added at each of the four levels to give
an odd or an even sum. Even totals generate two dots at the corresponding
level of the nephew, and odd totals generate one dot. In Agrippa's
system:
Nephew 1 = Mother 1 + Daughter 4
Nephew 2 = Mother 2 + Daughter 1
Nephew 3 = Mother 3 + Daughter 2
Nephew 4 = Mother 4 + Daughter 3
Agrippa derived these formulae from the idea the each nephew is
the sum of the mother and daughter that are in trine aspect around
the horoscope wheel. As in the quote above, Agrippa placed the mothers
in the angular houses, going clockwise from the first house. He
then placed the daughters clockwise around the wheel in the succedent
houses, starting with the second house. Houses in trine are 1-5-9,
2-6-10, 3-7-11, and 4-8-12. Here is a table showing Agrippa's distribution
of geomantic figures in the horoscope:
Angular Houses: Succedent Houses: Cadent Houses:
1st - M1 2nd - D1 9th - N1 = M1 + D4
10th - M2 11th - D2 6th - N2 = M2 + D1
7th - M3 8th - D3 3rd - N3 = M3 + D2
4th - M4 5th - D4 12th - N4 = M4 + D3
Now let's calculate the nephews, Agrippa style:
MOTHERS: DAUGHTERS: NEPHEWS:
M1 o + D4 o o = N1 o
o o o o o o Laetitia
o o o o o o
o o o o o o
M2 o + D1 o = N2 o o
o o o o Rubeus
o o o o o o
o o o o o o
M3 o o + D2 o o = N3 o o
o o o o Acquisitio
o o o o
o o o o
M4 o o + D3 o o = N4 o o
o o o o Acquisitio
o o o o
o o o o
We can now proceed to a preliminary answer to the original question,
Will this article be of interest to the reader? In astrology each
house of the horoscope governs certain areas of life. Essays are
ruled by the third house (manuscripts) and the ninth house (publications).
N1 (Laetitia) goes in the 9th house and N3 (Acquisitio) goes in
the third. These two geomantic figures are both connected with Jupiter
(publications, good fortune) and suggest a positive answer to the
question. M3 (Conjunctio) is placed in the 7th house of the general
public.
Conjunctio means a joining or union and is associated with Mercury
(communications). In the 7th house, Conjunctio suggests a favorable
union between the author and his readers. The house placements of
the geomantic figures suggest the article will be well-received
-- a favorable answer to the question.
Agrippa next suggested calculating an "Index" that "giveth
you a competent judgment of the thing quesited." To find the
Index, you take the total number of holes that were poked in the
ground and divide by 12 (for the 12 houses of the horoscope). In
this case there were a total of 52 dots at the start. Thus, 52 divided
by 12 equals 4 with a remainder of 4. What is important here is
the remainder after dividing by twelve. The Index is the geomantic
figure found in the house of the horoscope corresponding to the
remainder.
If there is no remainder, that is, if the remainder is zero, the
Index is the figure in the twelfth house. In our example, the remainder
is 4 and the figure in the fourth house is M4 (Conjunctio). Again,
this Mercury based figure suggests a mental union with the reader
as the final outcome.
The system of common geomancy that predated Agrippa used a different
method to gauge the final outcome of a question. The text by Schwei
and Pestka is an excellent source for delineations using the method
of common geomancy. The first two nephews are added to make a first
"Witness" (W1) and the final two nephews are added to
form a second "Witness" (W2). The sum of these two witnesses
produces a "Judge." Let's calculate them now:
N1 o N2 o o W1 o
o o + o = o Fortuna
o o o o o o Minor
o o o o o o
N3 o o N4 o o W2 o o
o + o = o o Populus
o o o o o o
o o o o
Finally, Witness 1 + Witness 2 = The Judge:
W1 o W2 o o Judge o
o + o o = o Fortuna
o o o o o o Minor
o o o o o o
As the Judge or final outcome figure, Fortuna Minor is mildly fortunate.
According to common geomancy, this article will be moderately well-received
but it will not be a smashing success.
Because of the way the Judges are formed, only eight of the sixteen
geomantic figures can become Judges. I will not review the mathematics
in detail, but when you combine figures to form a Judge, the final
figure must have an either two or four even numbered rows, or two
or four odd numbered rows. This fact limits the Judges to Populus
and Via, Amissio and Acquisitio, Carcer and Conjunctio, and Fortuna
Major and Fortuna Minor. Because they are related to the Moon, Populus
and Via are variable as Judges.
Invariably favorable Judges are Acquisitio and Fortuna Major.
Fortuna Minor is mildly favorable, and Conjunctio is variable as
a Judge. Amissio can be a favorable Judge, especially if loss of
some kind is a positive outcome. Carcer is a variable Judge which
favors Saturnian matters like contracts, obligations, realization,
attainment, just rewards, and responsibility.
Yet another twist can be added to geomantic divination. Each of
the sixteen geomantic figures corresponds to an astrological sign
and to a planet or node of the Moon. The planetary assignments are
invariant across systems, but there are at least six different ways
to assign astrological signs to the figures.
Once Agrippa placed his figures in the houses, he assigned the
first house to the astrological sign associated with the first mother
in the first house. In our example, mother one is Laetitia which
Agrippa associates with Jupiter and Sagittarius. Agrippa then followed
the zodiac sequence to locate all twelve signs around the wheel.
Sagittarius is in the first house, Capricorn in the second, Aquarius
in the third, Pisces in the fourth, Aries in the fifth, Taurus in
the sixth, and so on around the wheel. Having linked each house
with a different zodiac sign, Agrippa next entered the planet associated
with each geomantic symbol in the same house as its symbol. In this
system it is possible for the same planet to occupy several houses.
Agrippa then interpreted the chart using a combination of astrology
and geomancy. Because no degrees in the signs are specified, Agrippa
used mundane aspects, that is, planets are considered to bear the
same aspect with one another as the houses they occupy. For example,
planets in houses one and seven are in opposition, and planets in
houses three and seven are in trine.
Most modern authors do not follow Agrippa's method of placing
planets. Instead, the current trend is to use an ephemeris to locate
the planets in the signs they actually occupy at the time the question
was asked. Thus, modern geomancy is more a hybrid between classical
geomancy and horary astrology.
Because there are at least six ways to assign the signs to houses
in the geomantic chart, there is obvious room for disagreement among
geomancers. I have presented Agrippa's system in this article. Both
Regardie and Schwei & Pestka use a different assignment of planets
to geomantic figures and a different method of placing the figures
in the houses.
So there you have it, the basic elements of astrological geomancy.
The next step, if you're interested, is to start asking questions
and testing the technique for yourself. There are many variants
of geomantic technique and you will need to experiment until you
find one that fits you. In the process you may discover some refinements
and come up with a geomancy that is uniquely your own. Regardless
of which system you settle on, practicing geomancy is great fun
and produces some insightful and thought-provoking results.
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