B.V. Raman
Posted: Sat Feb 05, 2022 10:12 am
Bangalore Venkata Raman - commonly known as Dr. B.V. Raman - was, for decades, India's foremost astrologer centered around his publication for 60+ years of The Astrological Magazine, India's version of American Astrology and Horoscope all in one. His commercial instincts brought a solid foundation to Indian astrology in the 20th century and his publications (books and the magazine) were treasures for those interested in the subject. He compares to Alan Leo in England and Llewellyn George in the U.S. for establishing respect and orderly thought for astrology. He famously lectured before the United Nations general assembly about astrology in 1976.
I had many of his publications, subscribed to his magazine for a short while when I was in high school, and corresponded with him briefly. His correspondence (tightly typed on the same kind of international mailer folds that Firebrace used) was elegant, intelligent, precise, and gracious. The fact that we didn't consider a correspondence is probably credited to the near absence of any connection between our charts: The fact that we both had Hub Moons seems the most significant. His Venus squared mine exactly, but that also means it was on my Pluto. (This also suggests that the earliest time in the range isn't correct, or my Venus would have exactly squared his Ascendant and I'd have pursued a correspondence more.)
I doubt anyone in India considered him India's greatest astrologer, but he was surely its most respected - and the loudest voice advocating India's traditional astrology to the world.
He was born august 8, 1912, in Bangalore, India. Times ranging over a half-hour range are all labelled A Data because they're all from him - perhaps from successive rectifications. He published his own time in 1962 (in his magazine) as 7:15 PM (this is IST). Church of Light has a time from him for 7:35, though I don't know when they got it. At the end of his life, he wrote he was born at 7:43 PM. That's a 31-minute range. If he ever gave me his time, I don't remember (and the letter would have been long lost) - I think he didn't, because I don't recall stumbling on his chart over and over flipping through my chart collections when I kept them in large notebooks.
All the times have Aquarius rising - given India's methods, he wouldn't have let that change from a rectification - and they don't make a lot of difference. Going with 7:35 PM puts us roughly in the middle and is what Church of Light has in its files.
BTW, his own "Raman" ayanamsa not only disagrees with the SVP by 2°20', but disagrees with both other leading Indian ayanamsas, which was always controversial and probably led, as much as anything else, to the plethora of "accepted" ayanamsas across India.
I had many of his publications, subscribed to his magazine for a short while when I was in high school, and corresponded with him briefly. His correspondence (tightly typed on the same kind of international mailer folds that Firebrace used) was elegant, intelligent, precise, and gracious. The fact that we didn't consider a correspondence is probably credited to the near absence of any connection between our charts: The fact that we both had Hub Moons seems the most significant. His Venus squared mine exactly, but that also means it was on my Pluto. (This also suggests that the earliest time in the range isn't correct, or my Venus would have exactly squared his Ascendant and I'd have pursued a correspondence more.)
I doubt anyone in India considered him India's greatest astrologer, but he was surely its most respected - and the loudest voice advocating India's traditional astrology to the world.
He was born august 8, 1912, in Bangalore, India. Times ranging over a half-hour range are all labelled A Data because they're all from him - perhaps from successive rectifications. He published his own time in 1962 (in his magazine) as 7:15 PM (this is IST). Church of Light has a time from him for 7:35, though I don't know when they got it. At the end of his life, he wrote he was born at 7:43 PM. That's a 31-minute range. If he ever gave me his time, I don't remember (and the letter would have been long lost) - I think he didn't, because I don't recall stumbling on his chart over and over flipping through my chart collections when I kept them in large notebooks.
All the times have Aquarius rising - given India's methods, he wouldn't have let that change from a rectification - and they don't make a lot of difference. Going with 7:35 PM puts us roughly in the middle and is what Church of Light has in its files.
BTW, his own "Raman" ayanamsa not only disagrees with the SVP by 2°20', but disagrees with both other leading Indian ayanamsas, which was always controversial and probably led, as much as anything else, to the plethora of "accepted" ayanamsas across India.