Alexander the Great
Posted: Sat May 13, 2017 10:54 am
I've been asked for the horoscope of Alexander the Great. Fagan published this decades ago in American Astrology, but I won't have time to dig through back issues to find it, and don't have the chart in my files. I'll attempt to reconstruct it here, though I encourage/request anyone who has access to better information to post it.
History records that he was born either on the 20th or 21st of July, 356 BC, in Pella, Macedonia (40N46, 22E32). The time of his birth is well documented because of the story that what would have been a pre-dawn birth was held back by extreme measures so that he would emerge just as the Sun broke the horizon.
The Sun theoretically broke the horizon at 4:36 AM LMT. Here's the chart for these data:
The chart has obvious dominent elements: For one of history's greatest kings, the Sun is rising in Leo conjunct Venus (and square Pluto), with the Moon on the IC in Leo. Mercury is on the Eastpoint forming a T-square with Moon and Uranus (for one of the most ingenious of strategists, and someone personally tutored by Aristotle until age 16). Though background, Mars is in very close square to Neptune, which is just the right amount of madness and conviction to cause masses to follow him with enthusiasm. Jupiter is just a bit more than 9° from the IC.
A mundoscope for this exact moment shows the Sun 0°54' below the Ascendant, Venus 2°34' below the Ascendant, and the Moon 4°06' west of the IC. The only thing I find wrong and questionable about the chart is that Mars is in the immediate background - within 1' of the cadent cusp in mundo for this exact minute! This would imply that he wasn't a warrior so much as a leader - and I'm not sure history would agree with that.
His AstroMap is enormously interesting. The rising Sun-Venus line slices downward across the eastern edge of Egypt (and farther south). Pluto was on the Midheaven through the heart of the Middle East (roughly slicing through the middle of modern Iraq, where he defeated Darius). His campaign was halted in western India when his army eventually revolted, and the line of Saturn on his Midheaven nearly touches the western boundary of India (passing right through Karachi).
His death was either on June 10 or 11, 323 BC, in Babylon (32N29, 44E25: the modern Al Hillah, Iraq), from a raging fever (probably from a poison). Checking the transits for the midnight bridging these two days, we discover a New Moon in partile conjunction with his Mars (and square transiting Mars)! Pluto and Uranus were in partile conjunction (a meaning for the world: an age ended that night) and both had recently conjoined his Saturn. One can expect, therefore, that his power had been shaken.
For this birth chart, his final Sidereal Lunar Return had Pluto conjoined with Uranus on the Ascendant (conjunct natal Saturn), and a Sun-Neptune opposition just of the horizon. (His Demi-SLR was less dramatic, yet accurate: the only close angularity was natal Pluto exactly square the Ascendant, and natal Sun setting.) Secondary progressed Moon, already out of orb of opposition to his natal Mars, was half a degree from square his natal Neptune.
History records that he was born either on the 20th or 21st of July, 356 BC, in Pella, Macedonia (40N46, 22E32). The time of his birth is well documented because of the story that what would have been a pre-dawn birth was held back by extreme measures so that he would emerge just as the Sun broke the horizon.
The Sun theoretically broke the horizon at 4:36 AM LMT. Here's the chart for these data:
The chart has obvious dominent elements: For one of history's greatest kings, the Sun is rising in Leo conjunct Venus (and square Pluto), with the Moon on the IC in Leo. Mercury is on the Eastpoint forming a T-square with Moon and Uranus (for one of the most ingenious of strategists, and someone personally tutored by Aristotle until age 16). Though background, Mars is in very close square to Neptune, which is just the right amount of madness and conviction to cause masses to follow him with enthusiasm. Jupiter is just a bit more than 9° from the IC.
A mundoscope for this exact moment shows the Sun 0°54' below the Ascendant, Venus 2°34' below the Ascendant, and the Moon 4°06' west of the IC. The only thing I find wrong and questionable about the chart is that Mars is in the immediate background - within 1' of the cadent cusp in mundo for this exact minute! This would imply that he wasn't a warrior so much as a leader - and I'm not sure history would agree with that.
His AstroMap is enormously interesting. The rising Sun-Venus line slices downward across the eastern edge of Egypt (and farther south). Pluto was on the Midheaven through the heart of the Middle East (roughly slicing through the middle of modern Iraq, where he defeated Darius). His campaign was halted in western India when his army eventually revolted, and the line of Saturn on his Midheaven nearly touches the western boundary of India (passing right through Karachi).
His death was either on June 10 or 11, 323 BC, in Babylon (32N29, 44E25: the modern Al Hillah, Iraq), from a raging fever (probably from a poison). Checking the transits for the midnight bridging these two days, we discover a New Moon in partile conjunction with his Mars (and square transiting Mars)! Pluto and Uranus were in partile conjunction (a meaning for the world: an age ended that night) and both had recently conjoined his Saturn. One can expect, therefore, that his power had been shaken.
For this birth chart, his final Sidereal Lunar Return had Pluto conjoined with Uranus on the Ascendant (conjunct natal Saturn), and a Sun-Neptune opposition just of the horizon. (His Demi-SLR was less dramatic, yet accurate: the only close angularity was natal Pluto exactly square the Ascendant, and natal Sun setting.) Secondary progressed Moon, already out of orb of opposition to his natal Mars, was half a degree from square his natal Neptune.