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By Manly P. Hall
IT is difficult for this age to estimate correctly the profound effect
produced upon the religions,
philosophies, and sciences of antiquity by the
study of the planets, luminaries, and constellations. Not without adequate
reason were the Magi of Persia called the Star Gazers. The Egyptians were
honored with a special appellation because of their proficiency in computing the
power and motion of the heavenly bodies and their effect upon the destinies of
nations and individuals. Ruins of primitive astronomical observatories have been
discovered in all parts of the world, although in many cases modern archeologists
are unaware of the true purpose for which these structures were erected. While
the telescope was unknown to ancient astronomers, they made many remarkable
calculations with instruments cut from blocks of granite or pounded from sheets
of brass and cop per. In India such instruments are still in use, and they
posses a high degree of accuracy. In Jaipur, Rajputana, India, an observatory
consisting largely of immense stone sundials is still in operation. The famous
Chinese observatory on the wall of Peking consists of immense bronze
instruments, including a telescope in the form of a hollow tube without lenses.
The pagans looked upon the stars as living things, capable of influencing the
destinies of individuals, nations, and races. That the early Jewish patriarchs
believed that the celestial bodies participated in the affairs of men is evident
to any student of Biblical literature, as, for example, in the Book of Judges:
"They fought from heaven, even the stars in their courses fought against
Sisera." The Chaldeans, Phnicians, Egyptians, Persians, Hindus, and
Chinese all had zodiacs that were much alike in general character, and different
authorities have credited each of these nations with being the cradle of
astrology and astronomy. The Central and North American Indians also had an
understanding of the zodiac, but the patterns and numbers of the signs differed
in many details from those of the Eastern Hemisphere.
The word zodiac is derived from the Greek
ζωδιακός (zodiakos), which means
"a circle of animals," or, as some believe, "little
animals." It is the name given by the old pagan astronomers to a band of
fixed stars about sixteen degrees wide, apparently encircling the earth. Robert
Hewitt Brown, 32°, states that the Greek word zodiakos comes from zo-on,
meaning "an animal." He adds: "This latter word is compounded
directly from the primitive Egyptian radicals, zo, life, and on, a being."
The Greeks, and later other peoples influenced by their culture, divided the
band of the zodiac into twelve sections, each being sixteen degrees in width and
thirty degrees in length. These divisions were called the Houses of the Zodiac.
The sun during its annual pilgrimage passed through each of these in turn,
Imaginary creatures were traced in the Star groups bounded by these rectangles;
and because most of them were animal--or part animal--in form, they later became
known as the Constellations, or Signs, of the Zodiac.
There is a popular theory concerning the origin of the zodiacal creatures to
the effect that they were products of the imagination of shepherds, who,
watching their flocks at night, occupied their minds by tracing the forms of
animals and birds in the heavens. This theory is untenable, unless the
"shepherds" be regarded as the shepherd priests of antiquity. It is
unlikely that the zodiacal signs were derived from the star groups which they
now represent. It is far more probable that the creatures assigned to the twelve
houses are symbolic of the qualities and intensity of the sun's power while it
occupies different parts of the zodiacal belt.
On this subject Richard Payne Knight writes: "The emblematical meaning,
which certain animals were employed to signify, was only some particular
property generalized; and, therefore, might easily be invented or discovered by
the natural operation of the mind: but the collections of stars, named after
certain animals, have no resemblance whatever to those animals; which are
therefore merely signs of convention adopted to distinguish certain portions of
the heavens, which were probably consecrated to those particular personified
attributes, which they respectively represented." (The Symbolical Language
of Ancient Art and Mythology.)
Some authorities are of the opinion that the zodiac was originally divided
into ten (instead of twelve) houses, or "solar mansions." In early
times there were two separate standards--one solar and the other lunar--used for
the measurement of the months, years, and seasons. The solar year was composed
of ten months of thirty-six days each, and five days sacred to the gods. The
lunar year consisted of thirteen months of twenty-eight days each, with one day
left over. The solar zodiac at that time consisted often houses of thirty-six
degrees each.
The first six signs of the zodiac of twelve signs were regarded as
benevolent, because the sun occupied them while traversing the Northern
Hemisphere. The 6,000 years during which, according to the Persians, Ahura-Mazda
ruled His universe in harmony and peace, were symbolic of these six signs. The
second six were considered malevolent, because while the sun was traveling the
Southern Hemisphere it was winter with the Greeks, Egyptians, and Persians.
Therefore these six months symbolic of the 6,000 years of misery and suffering
caused by the evil genius of the Persians, Ahriman, who sought to overthrow the
power of Ahura-Mazda.
Those who hold the opinion that before its revision by the Greeks the zodiac
consisted of only ten signs adduce evidence to show that Libra (the Scales) was
inserted into the zodiac by dividing the constellation of Virgo Scorpio (at that
time one sign) into two parts, thus establishing "the balance" at the
point of equilibrium between the ascending northern and the descending southern
signs. (See The Rosicrucians, Their Rites and Mysteries, by Hargrave Jennings.)
On this subject Isaac Myer states: "We think that the Zodiacal
constellations were first ten and represented an immense androgenic man or
deity; subsequently this was changed, resulting in Scorpio and Virgo and making
eleven; after this from Scorpio, Libra, the Balance, was taken, making the
present twelve." (The Qabbalah.)
Each year the sun passes entirely around the zodiac and returns to the point
from which it started--the vernal equinox--and each year it falls just a little
short of making the complete circle of the heavens in the allotted period of
time. As a result, it crosses the equator just a little behind the spot in the
zodiacal sign where it crossed the previous year. Each sign of the zodiac
consists of thirty degrees, and as the sun loses about one degree every seventy
two years, it regresses through one entire constellation (or sign) in
approximately 2,160 years, and through the entire zodiac in about 25,920 years. (Authorities disagree concerning these figures.) This
retrograde motion is called the precession of the equinoxes. This means that in
the course of about 25,920 years, which constitute one Great Solar or Platonic
Year, each one of the twelve constellations occupies a position at the vernal
equinox for nearly 2,160 years, then gives place to the previous sign.
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CHART SHOWING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE HUMAN BODY AND THE EXTERIOR UNIVERSE.
From Kircher's dipus Ægyptiacus.
The ornamental border contains groups of names of animal, mineral, and
vegetable substances, Their relationship to corresponding parts of the human
body is shown by the dotted lines. The words in capital letters on the dotted
lines indicate to what corporeal member, organ, or disease, the herb or other
substance is related. The favorable positions in relation to the time of year
are shown by the signs of the zodiac, each house of which is divided by crosses
into its three decans. This influence is further emphasized by the series of
planetary signs placed on either side of the figure.

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THE EQUINOXES AND SOLSTICES.
The plane of the zodiac intersects the celestial equator at an angle of
approximately 23° 28'. The two points of intersection (A and B) are called the
equinoxes.
Among the ancients the sun was always symbolized by the figure and nature of
the constellation through which it passed at the vernal equinox. For nearly the
past 2,000 years the sun has crossed the equator at the vernal equinox in the
constellation of Pisces (the Two Fishes). For the 2,160 years before that it
crossed through the constellation of Aries (the Ram). Prior to that the vernal
equinox was in the sign of Taurus (the Bull). It is probable that the form of
the bull and the bull's proclivities were assigned to this constellation because
the bull was used by the ancients to plow the fields, and the season set aside
for plowing and furrowing corresponded to the time at which the sun reached the
segment of the heavens named Taurus.
Albert Pike describes the reverence which the Persians felt for this sign and
the method of astrological symbolism in vogue among them, thus: "In
Zoroaster's cave of initiation, the Sun and Planets were represented, overhead,
in gems and gold, as was also the Zodiac. The Sun appeared, emerging from the
back of Taurus. " In the constellation of the Bull are also to be found the
"Seven Sisters"--the sacred Pleiades--famous to Freemasonry as the
Seven Stars at the upper end of the Sacred Ladder.
In ancient Egypt it was during this period--when the vernal equinox was in
the sign of Taurus--that the Bull, Apis, was sacred to the Sun God, who was
worshiped through the animal equivalent of the celestial sign which he had
impregnated with his presence at the time of its crossing into the Northern
Hemisphere. This is the meaning of an ancient saying that the celestial Bull
"broke the egg of the year with his horns."
Sampson Arnold Mackey, in his Mythological Astronomy of the Ancients
Demonstrated, makes note of two very interesting points concerning the bull in
Egyptian symbolism. Mr. Mackey is of the opinion that the motion of the earth
that we know as the alternation of the poles has resulted in a great change of
relative position of the equator and the zodiacal band. He believes that
originally the band of the zodiac was at right angles to the equator, with the
sign of Cancer opposite the north pole and the sign of Capricorn opposite the
south pole. It is possible that the Orphic symbol of the serpent twisted around
the egg attempts to show the motion of the sun in relation to the earth under
such conditions. Mr. Mackey advances the Labyrinth of Crete, the name Abraxas,
and the magic formula, abracadabra, among other things, to substantiate his
theory. Concerning abracadabra he states:
"But the slow progressive disappearance of the Bull is most happily
commemorated in the vanishing series of letters so emphatically expressive of
the great astronomical fact. For ABRACADABRA is The Bull, the only Bull. The
ancient sentence split into its component parts stands thus: Ab'r-achad-ab'ra, i.
e., Ab'r, the Bull; achad, the only, &c.--Achad is one of the names of the
Sun, given him in consequence of his Shining ALONE,--he is the ONLY Star to be
seen when he is seen--the remaining ab'ra, makes the whole to be, The Bull, the
only Bull; while the repetition of the name omitting a letter, till all is gone,
is the most simple, yet the most satisfactory method that could have been
devised to preserve the memory of the fact; and the name of Sorapis, or Serapis,
given to the Bull at the above ceremony puts it beyond all doubt. * * * This
word (Abracadabra) disappears in eleven decreasing stages; as in the figure. And
what is very remarkable, a body with three heads is folded up by a Serpent with
eleven Coils, and placed by Sorapis: and the eleven Volves of the Serpent form a
triangle similar to that formed by the ELEVEN diminishing lines of the
abracadabra."
Nearly every religion of the world shows traces of astrological influence.
The Old Testament of the Jews, its writings overshadowed by Egyptian culture, is
a mass of astrological and astronomical allegories. Nearly all the mythology of
Greece and Rome may be traced in star groups. Some writers are of the opinion
that the original twenty-two letters of the Hebrew alphabet were derived from
groups of stars, and that the starry handwriting on the wall of the heavens
referred to words spelt out, with fixed stars for consonants, and the planets,
or luminaries, for vowels. These, coming into ever-different combinations, spelt
words which, when properly read, foretold future events.
As the zodiacal band marks the pathway of the sun through the constellations,
it results in the phenomena of the seasons. The ancient systems of measuring the
year were based upon the equinoxes and the solstices. The year always began with
the vernal equinox, celebrated March 21 with rejoicing to mark the moment when
the sun crossed the equator northward up the zodiacal arc. The summer solstice
was celebrated when the sun reached its most northerly position, and the day
appointed was June 21. After that time the sun began to descend toward the
equator, which it recrossed southbound at the autumnal equinox, September 21.
The sun reached its most southerly position at the winter solstice, December 21.
Four of the signs of the zodiac have been permanently dedicated to the
equinoxes and the solstices; and, while the signs no longer correspond with the
ancient constellations to which they were assigned, and from which they secured
their names, they are accepted by modern astronomers as a basis of calculation.
The vernal equinox is therefore said to occur in the constellation of Aries (the
Ram). It is fitting that of all beasts a Ram should be placed at the head of the
heavenly flock forming the zodiacal band. Centuries before the Christian Era,
the pagans revered this constellation. Godfrey Higgins states: "This
constellation was called the 'Lamb of God.' He was also called the 'Savior,' and
was said to save mankind from their sins. He was always honored with the
appellation of 'Dominus' or 'Lord.' He was called the 'Lamb of God which taketh
away the sins of the world.' The devotees addressing him in their litany,
constantly repeated the words, 'O Lamb of God, that taketh away the sin of the
world, have mercy upon us. Grant us Thy peace."' Therefore, the Lamb of God
is a title given to the sun, who is said to be reborn every year in the Northern
Hemisphere in the sign of the Ram, although, due to the existing discrepancy
between the signs of the zodiac and the actual star groups, it actually rises in
the sign of Pisces.
The summer solstice is regarded as occurring in Cancer (the Crab), which the
Egyptians called the scarab--a beetle of the family Lamellicornes, the head of
the insect kingdom, and sacred to the Egyptians as the symbol of Eternal Life.
It is evident that the constellation of the Crab is represented by this peculiar
creature because the sun, after passing through this house, proceeds to walk
backwards, or descend the zodiacal arc. Cancer is the symbol of generation, for
it is the house of the Moon, the great Mother of all things and the patroness of
the life forces of Nature. Diana, the moon goddess of the Greeks, is called the
Mother of the World. Concerning the worship of the feminine or maternal
principle, Richard Payne Knight writes:
"By attracting or heaving the waters of the ocean, she naturally
appeared to be the sovereign of humidity; and by seeming to operate so
powerfully upon the constitutions of women, she equally appeared to be the
patroness and regulatress of nutrition and passive generation: whence she is
said to have received her nymphs, or subordinate personifications, from the
ocean; and is often represented by the symbol of the sea crab, an animal that
has the property of spontaneously detaching from its own body any limb that has
been hurt or mutilated, and reproducing another in its place." (The
Symbolical Language of Ancient Art and Mythology.) This water sign, being
symbolic of the maternal principle of Nature, and recognized by the pagans as
the origin of all life, was a natural and consistent domicile of the moon.
The autumnal equinox apparently occurs in the constellation of Libra (the
Balances). The scales tipped and the solar globe began its pilgrimage toward the
house of winter. The constellation of the Scales was placed in the zodiac to
symbolize the power of choice, by means of which man may weigh one problem
against another. Millions of years ago, when the human race was in the making,
man was like the angels, who knew neither good nor evil. He fell into the state
of the knowledge of good and evil when the gods gave him the seed for the mental
nature. From man's mental reactions to his environments he distills the product
of experience, which then aids him to regain his lost position plus an
individualized intelligence. Paracelsus said: "The body comes from the
elements, the soul from the stars, and the spirit from God. All that the
intellect can conceive of comes from the stars [the spirits of the stars, rather
than the material constellations]."
The constellation of Capricorn, in which the winter solstice theoretically
takes place, was called The House of Death, for in winter all life in the
Northern Hemisphere is at its lowest ebb. Capricorn is a composite creature,
with the head and upper body of a goat and the tail of a fish. In this
constellation the sun is least powerful in the Northern Hemisphere, and after passing through this constellation it
immediately begins to increase. Hence the Greeks said that Jupiter (a name of
the Sun God) was suckled by a goat. A new and different sidelight on zodiacal
symbolism is supplied by John Cole, in A Treatise on the Circular Zodiac of
Tentyra, in Egypt: "The symbol therefore of the Goat rising from the body
of a fish [Capricorn], represents with the greatest propriety the mountainous
buildings of Babylon rising out of its low and marshy situation; the two horns
of the Goat being emblematical of the two towns, Nineveh and Babylon, the former
built on the Tigris, the latter on the Euphrates; but both subjected to one
sovereignty."

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THE MICROCOSM.
From Schotus' Margarita Philosophica.
The pagans believed that the zodiac formed the body of the Grand Man of the
Universe. This body, which they called the Macrocosm (the Great World), was
divided into twelve major parts, one of which was under the control of the
celestial powers reposing in each of the zodiacal constellations. Believing that
the entire universal system was epitomized in man's body, which they called the
Microcosm (the Little World), they evolved that now familiar figure of "the
cut-up man in the almanac" by allotting a sign of the zodiac to each of
twelve major parts of the human body.
The period of 2,160 years required for the regression of the sun through one
of the zodiacal constellations is often termed an age. According to this system,
the age secured its name from the sign through which the sun passes year after
year as it crosses the equator at the vernal equinox. From this arrangement are
derived the terms The Taurian Age, The Aryan Age, The Piscean Age, and The
Aquarian Age. During these periods, or ages, religious worship takes the form of
the appropriate celestial sign--that which the sun is said to assume as a
personality in the same manner that a spirit assumes a body. These twelve signs
are the jewels of his breastplate and his light shines forth from them, one
after the other.
From a consideration of this system, it is readily understood why certain
religious symbols were adopted during different ages of the earth's history; for
during the 2,160 years the sun was in the constellation of Taurus, it is said
that the Solar Deity assumed the body of Apis, and the Bull became sacred to
Osiris. (For details concerning the astrological ages as related to Biblical
symbolism, see The Message of the Stars by Max and Augusta Foss Heindel.) During
the Aryan Age the Lamb was held sacred and the priests were called shepherds.
Sheep and goats were sacrificed upon the altars, and a scapegoat was appointed
to bear the sins of Israel.
During the Age of Pisces, the Fish was the symbol of divinity and the Sun God
fed the multitude with two small fishes. The frontispiece of Inman's Ancient
Faiths shows the goddess Isis with a fish on her head; and the Indian Savior
God, Christna, in one of his incarnations was cast from the mouth of a fish.
Not only is Jesus often referred to as the Fisher of Men, but as John P.
Lundy writes: "The word Fish is an abbreviation of this whole title, Jesus
Christ, Son of God, Savior, and Cross; or as St. Augustine expresses it, 'If you
join together the initial letters of the five Greek words,
Ἰησοῦς
Χριστος Θεου
Υιὸσ Σωτήρ, which mean Jesus
Christ, Son of God, Savior, they will make ΙΧΘΥΣ, Fish,
in which word Christ is mystically understood, because He was able to live in
the abyss of this mortality as in the depth of waters, that is, without
sin.'" (Monumental Christianity.) Many Christians observe Friday, which is
sacred to the Virgin (Venus), upon which day they shall eat fish and not meat.
The sign of the fish was one of the earliest symbols of Christianity; and when
drawn upon the sand, it informed one Christian that another of the same faith
was near.
Aquarius is called the Sign of the Water Bearer, or the man with a jug of
water on his shoulder mentioned in the New Testament. This is sometimes shown as
an angelic figure, supposedly androgynous, either pouring water from an urn or
carrying the vessel upon its shoulder. Among Oriental peoples, a water vessel
alone is often used. Edward Upham, in his History and Doctrine of Budhism,
describes Aquarius as being "in the shape of a pot and of a color between
blue and yellow; this Sign is the single house of Saturn."
When Herschel discovered the planet Uranus (sometimes called by the name of
its discoverer), the second half of the sign of Aquarius was allotted to this
added member of the planetary family. The water pouring from the urn of Aquarius
under the name of "the waters of eternal life" appears many times in
symbolism. So it is with all the signs. Thus the sun in its path controls
whatever form of worship man offers to the Supreme Deity.
There are two distinct systems of astrological philosophy. One of them, the
Ptolemaic, is geocentric: the earth is considered the center of the solar
system, around which the sun, moon, and planets revolve. Astronomically, the
geocentric system is incorrect; but for thousands of years it has proved its
accuracy when applied to the material nature of earthly things. A careful
consideration of the writings of the great occultists and a study of their
diagrams reveal the fact that many of them were acquainted with another method
of arranging the heavenly bodies.
The other system of astrological philosophy is called the heliocentric. This
posits the sun in the center of the solar system, where it naturally belongs,
with the planets and their moons revolving about it. The great difficulty,
however, with the heliocentric system is that, being comparatively new, there
has not been sufficient time to experiment successfully and catalogue the
effects of its various aspects and relationships. Geocentric astrology, as its
name implies, is confined to the earthy side of nature, while heliocentric
astrology may be used to analyze the higher intellectual and spiritual faculties
of man.
The important point to be remembered is that when the sun was said to be in a
certain sign of the zodiac, the ancients really meant that the sun occupied the
opposite sign and cast its long ray into the house in which they enthroned it.
Therefore, when it is said that the sun is in Taurus, it means (astronomically)
that the sun is in the sign opposite to Taurus, which is Scorpio. This resulted
in two distinct schools of philosophy: one geocentric and exoteric, the other
heliocentric and esoteric. While the ignorant multitudes worshiped the house of
the sun's reflection, which in the case described would be the Bull, the wise
revered the house of the sun's actual dwelling, which would be the Scorpion, or
the Serpent, the symbol of the concealed spiritual mystery. This sign has three
different symbols. The most common is that of a Scorpion, who was called by the
ancients the backbiter, being the symbol of deceit and perversion; the second
(and less common) form of the sign is a Serpent, often used by the ancients to
symbolize wisdom.
Probably the rarest form of Scorpio is that of an Eagle. The arrangement of
the stars of the constellation bears as much resemblance to a flying bird as to
a scorpion. Scorpio, being the sign of occult initiation, the flying eagle--the
king of birds--represents the highest and most spiritual type of Scorpio, in
which it transcends the venomous insect of the earth. As Scorpio and Taurus are
opposite each other in the zodiac, their symbolism is often closely
intermingled. The Hon. E. M. Plunket, in Ancient Calendars and Constellations,
says: "The Scorpion (the constellation Scorpio of the Zodiac opposed to
Taurus) joins with Mithras in his attack upon the Bull, and always the genii of
the spring and autumn equinoxes are present in joyous and mournful
attitudes."
The Egyptians, the Assyrians, and the Babylonians, who knew the sun as a
Bull, called the zodiac a series of furrows, through which the great celestial
Ox dragged the plow of the sun. Hence the populace offered up sacrifice and led
through the streets magnificent steers, bedecked with flowers and surrounded
with priests, dancing girls of the temple, and musicians. The philosophic elect
did not participate in these idolatrous ceremonials, but advocated them as most
suitable for the types of mind composing the mass of the population. These few
possessed a far deeper understanding, as the Serpent of Scorpio upon their
foreheads--the Uræus--bore witness.
The sun is often symbolized with its rays in the form of a shaggy mane.
Concerning the Masonic significance of Leo, Robert Hewitt Brown, 32°, has
written: "On the 21st of June, when the sun arrives at the summer solstice,
the constellation Leo--being but 30° in advance of the sun--appears to be
leading the way, and to aid by his powerful paw in lifting the sun up to the
summit of the zodiacal arch. * * * This visible connection between the
constellation Leo and the return of the sun to his place of power and glory, at
the summit of the Royal Arch of heaven, was the principal reason why that
constellation was held in such high esteem and reverence by the ancients. The
astrologers distinguished Leo as the 'sole house of the sun,' and taught that
the world was created when the sun was in that sign. 'The lion was adored in the
East and the West by the Egyptians and the Mexicans. The chief Druid of Britain
was styled a lion.'" (Stellar Theology and Masonic Astronomy.) When the
Aquarian Age is thoroughly established, the sun will be in Leo, as will be noted
from the explanation previously given in this chapter regarding the distinction
between geocentric and heliocentric astrology. Then, indeed, will the secret
religions of the world include once more the raising to initiation by the Grip
of the Lion's Paw. (Lazarus will come forth.)

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THE CIRCULAR ZODIAC OF TENTYRA.
From Cole's Treatise--the Circular Zodiac of Tentyra, in Egypt.
The oldest circular zodiac known is the one found at Tentyra, in Egypt, and
now in the possession of the French government. Mr. John Cole describes this
remarkable zodiac as follows: "The diameter of the medallion in which the
constellations are sculptured, is four feet nine inches, French measure. It is
surrounded by another circle of much larger circumference, containing
hieroglyphic characters; this second circle is enclosed in a square, whose sides
are seven feet nine inches long. * * * The asterisms, constituting the Zodiacal
constellations mixed with others, are represented in a spiral. The extremities
of this spiral, after one revolution, are Leo and Cancer. Leo is no doubt at the
head. It appears to be trampling on a serpent, and its tail to be held by a
woman. Immediately after the Lion comes the Virgin holding an ear of corn,
Further on, we perceive two scales of a balance, above which, in a medal lion,
is the figure of Harpocrates. Then follows the Scorpion and Sagittarius, to whom
the Egyptians gave wings, and two faces. After Sagittarius are successively
placed, Capricornus, Aquarius, Pisces, the Ram, the Bull, and the Twins. This
Zodiacal procession is, as we have already observed, terminated by Cancer, the
Crab."
The antiquity of the zodiac is much in dispute. To contend that it originated
but a mere few thousand years before the Christian Era is a colossal mistake on
the part of those who have sought to compile data, concerning its origin. The
zodiac necessarily must be ancient enough to go backward to that period when its
signs and symbols coincided exactly with the positions of the constellations
whose various creatures in their natural functions exemplified the outstanding
features of the sun's activity during each of the twelve months. One author,
after many years of deep study on the subject, believed man's concept of the
zodiac to be at least five million years old. In all probability it is one of
the many things for which the modem world is indebted to the Atlantean or the
Lemurian civilizations. About ten thousand years before the Christian Era there
was a period of many ages when knowledge of every kind was suppressed, tablets
destroyed, monuments torn down, and every vestige of available material
concerning previous civilizations completely obliterated. Only a few copper
knives, some arrowheads, and crude carvings on the walls of caves bear mute
witness of those civilizations which preceded this age of destruction. Here and
there a few gigantic structures have remained which, like the strange monoliths
on Easter Island, are evidence of lost arts and sciences and lost races. The
human race is exceedingly old. Modern science counts its age in tens of
thousands of years; occultism, in tens of millions. There is an old saying that
"Mother Earth has shaken many civilizations from her back," and it is
not beyond reason that the principles of astrology and astronomy were evolved
millions of years before the first white man appeared.
The occultists of the ancient world had a most remarkable understanding of
the principle of evolution. They recognized all life as being in various stages
of becoming. They believed that grains of sand were in the process of becoming
human in consciousness but not necessarily in form; that human creatures were in
the process of becoming planets; that planets were in the process of becoming
solar systems; and that solar systems were in the process of becoming cosmic
chains; and so on ad infinitum. One of the stages between the solar system and
the cosmic chain was called the zodiac; therefore they taught that at a certain
time a solar system breaks up into a zodiac. The house of the zodiac become the
thrones for twelve Celestial Hierarchies, or as certain of the ancients state,
ten Divine Orders. Pythagoras taught that 10, or the unit of the decimal system,
was the most perfect of all numbers, and he symbolized the number ten by the
lesser tetractys, an arrangement of ten dots in the form of an upright triangle.
The early star gazers, after dividing the zodiac into its houses, appointed
the three brightest scars in each constellation to be the joint rulers of that
house. Then they divided the house into three sections of ten degrees each,
which they called decans. These, in turn, were divided in half, resulting in the
breaking up of the zodiac into seventy-two duodecans of five degrees each. Over
each of these duodecans the Hebrews placed a celestial intelligence, or angel,
and from this system, has resulted the Qabbalistic arrangement of the
seventy-two sacred names, which correspond to the seventy-two flowers, knops,
and almonds upon the seven-branched Candlestick of the Tabernacle, and the
seventy-two men who were chosen from the Twelve Tribes to represent Israel.
The only two signs not already mentioned are Gemini and Sagittarius. The
constellation of Gemini is generally represented as two small children, who,
according to the ancients, were born out of eggs, possibly the ones that the
Bull broke with his horns. The stories concerning Castor and Pollux, and Romulus
and Remus, may be the result of amplifying the myths of these celestial Twins.
The symbols of Gemini have passed through many modifications. The one used by
the Arabians was the peacock. Two of the important stars in the constellation of
Gemini still bear the names of Castor and Pollux. The sign of Gemini is supposed
to have been the patron of phallic worship, and the two obelisks, or pillars, in
front of temples and churches convey the same symbolism as the Twins.
The sign of Sagittarius consists of what the ancient Greeks called a
centaur--a composite creature, the lower half of whose body was in the form of a
horse, while the upper half was human. The centaur is generally shown with a bow
and arrow in his hands, aiming a shaft far off into the stars. Hence Sagittarius
stands for two distinct principles: first, it represents the spiritual evolution
of man, for the human form is rising from the body of the beast; secondly, it is
the symbol of aspiration and ambition, for as the centaur aims his arrow at the
stars, so every human creature aims at a higher mark than he can reach.
Albert Churchward, in The Signs and Symbols of Primordial Man, sums up the
influence of the zodiac upon religious symbolism in the following words:
"The division here [is] in twelve parts, the twelve signs of the Zodiac,
twelve tribes of Israel, twelve gates of heaven mentioned in Revelation, and
twelve entrances or portals to be passed through in the Great Pyramid, before
finally reaching the highest degree, and twelve Apostles in the Christian
doctrines, and the twelve original and perfect points in Masonry."
The ancients believed that the theory of man's being made in the image of God
was to be understood literally. They maintained that the universe was a great
organism not unlike the human body, and that every phase and function of the
Universal Body had a correspondence in man. The most precious Key to Wisdom that
the priests communicated to the new initiates was what they termed the law of
analogy. Therefore, to the ancients, the study of the stars was a sacred
science, for they saw in the movements of the celestial bodies the ever-present
activity of the Infinite Father.
The Pythagoreans were often undeservedly criticized for promulgating the
so-called doctrine of metempsychosis, or the transmigration of souls. This
concept as circulated among the uninitiated was merely a blind, however, to
conceal a sacred truth. Greek mystics believed that the spiritual nature of man
descended into material existence from the Milky Way--the seed ground of
souls--through one of the twelve gates of the great zodiacal band. The spiritual
nature was therefore said to incarnate in the form of the symbolic creature
created by Magian star gazers to represent the various zodiacal constellations.
If the spirit incarnated through the sign of Aries, it was said to be born in
the body of a ram; if in Taurus, in the body of the celestial bull. All human
beings were thus symbolized by twelve mysterious creatures through the natures
of which they were able to incarnate into the material world. The theory of
transmigration was not applicable to the visible material body of man, but
rather to the invisible immaterial spirit wandering along the pathway of the
stars and sequentially assuming in the course of evolution the forms of the
sacred zodiacal animals.
In the Third Book of the Mathesis of Julius Firmicus Maternus appears the
following extract concerning the positions of the heavenly bodies at the time of
the establishment of the inferior universe: "According to Æsculapius,
therefore, and Anubius, to whom especially the divinity Mercury committed the
secrets of the astrological science, the geniture of the world is as follows:
They constituted the Sun in the 15th part of Leo, the Moon in the 15th part of
Cancer, Saturn in the 15th part of Capricorn, Jupiter in the 15th part of
Sagittary, Mars in the 15th part of Scorpio, Venus in the 15th part of Libra,
Mercury in the 15th part of Virgo, and the Horoscope in the 15th part of Cancer.
Conformably to this geniture, therefore, to these conditions of the stars, and
the testimonies which they adduce in confirmation of this geniture, they are of
opinion that the destinies of men, also, are disposed in accordance with the
above arrangement, as maybe learnt from that book of Æsculapius which is called
Μυριογενεσις, (i.e.
Ten Thousand, or an innumerable multitude of Genitures) in order that nothing in
the several genitures of men may be found to be discordant with the
above-mentioned geniture of the world." The seven ages of man are under the
control of the planets in the following order: infancy, the moon; childhood,
Mercury; adolescence, Venus; maturity, the sun; middle age, Mars; advanced age, Jupiter; and decrepitude and dissolution, Saturn.

Click to enlarge
HIEROGLYPHIC PLAN, By HERMES, OF THE ANCIENT ZODIAC.
From Kircher's dipus Ægyptiacus.
The inner circle contains the hieroglyph of Hemphta, the triform and
pantamorphic deity. In the six concentric bands surrounding the inner circle are
(from within outward): (1) the numbers of the zodiacal houses in figures and
also in words; (2) the modern names of the houses.(3) the Greek or the Egyptian
names of the Egyptian deities assigned to the houses; (4) the complete figures
of these deities; (5) the ancient or the modem zodiacal signs, sometimes both;
(6) the number of decans or subdivisions of the houses.
| Source:
THE SECRET TEACHINGS OF ALL AGES by Manly P. Hall [1928, copyright not
renewed]. The text has been reformatted, page numbers have been removed,
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