Sun's exaltation degree & presidential inaugurations
Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2020 7:54 am
I don't think I've mentioned this before... it's the kind of thing Bradley would have noticed and mentioned in his column, but I don't think he ever did... and it crosses my mind every time I look at a modern presidential inauguration chart.
Since 1945, by constitutional law, an elected U.S. president's term begin precisely at noon on January 20. A technically separate matter is that a president's legal authorization to exercise the power of the president is attached to taking the oath of office, but the term itself begins January 20 at noon. (Before 1945, inaugurations were held on March 4.)
In 1945, Washington, DC was on Eastern War Time - same as daylight saving time, an hour different from standard time - but, beginning in 1949 with Harry Truman, every elected president has come into office exactly as 19° Aries has crossed Ascendant. This, of course, is the traditional exaltation degree of the Sun - theoretically the most solar degree of the zodiac.
This is most fascinating, since the post-WW II dividing line marks the start of what has often been called "the imperial presidency." This was most marked during the terms of Kennedy (Aries stellium), Johnson (Leo stellium), and Nixon (Sagittarius stellium), watered down after Watergate (Ford's term didn't begin with this pattern, though Carter's did), and has remained a strong character of the time since (compared to the presidency before Roosevelt).
Because the inaugurations are at four-year intervals, leap yer cycling removes year-to-year irregularities in Sidereal Time. The Ascendant is essentially the same position to the minute of arc, walked back 0°01'/year mostly due to precession. The latest longitude was 19°26' Aries in 1949; the most recent is 19°11' Aries in 2017. Every one of them has 1° Capricorn on Midheaven and 19° Aries on Ascendant.
This is just one more interesting little scrap of anecdotal information that seems to tell us that the traditional exaltation degrees - despite what we know of their historic origin in 786 BC - are accurate markers of tiny zones of distinctive planetary character.
Since 1945, by constitutional law, an elected U.S. president's term begin precisely at noon on January 20. A technically separate matter is that a president's legal authorization to exercise the power of the president is attached to taking the oath of office, but the term itself begins January 20 at noon. (Before 1945, inaugurations were held on March 4.)
In 1945, Washington, DC was on Eastern War Time - same as daylight saving time, an hour different from standard time - but, beginning in 1949 with Harry Truman, every elected president has come into office exactly as 19° Aries has crossed Ascendant. This, of course, is the traditional exaltation degree of the Sun - theoretically the most solar degree of the zodiac.
This is most fascinating, since the post-WW II dividing line marks the start of what has often been called "the imperial presidency." This was most marked during the terms of Kennedy (Aries stellium), Johnson (Leo stellium), and Nixon (Sagittarius stellium), watered down after Watergate (Ford's term didn't begin with this pattern, though Carter's did), and has remained a strong character of the time since (compared to the presidency before Roosevelt).
Because the inaugurations are at four-year intervals, leap yer cycling removes year-to-year irregularities in Sidereal Time. The Ascendant is essentially the same position to the minute of arc, walked back 0°01'/year mostly due to precession. The latest longitude was 19°26' Aries in 1949; the most recent is 19°11' Aries in 2017. Every one of them has 1° Capricorn on Midheaven and 19° Aries on Ascendant.
This is just one more interesting little scrap of anecdotal information that seems to tell us that the traditional exaltation degrees - despite what we know of their historic origin in 786 BC - are accurate markers of tiny zones of distinctive planetary character.