Vertex & Antivertex
Posted: Thu Dec 07, 2023 10:11 am
[This is from a section of a new book, currently in process; but I thought it was worth posting as a stand-alone instruction. This section applies only to natal charts]
However, our use of that elegant “three-ringed circus” has been incomplete thus far. Although the horizon and meridian constitute the four major angles, we have not yet used the prime vertical in the same way.
As the horizon forms the Ascendant-Descendant axis, and the meridian forms the MC-IC axis, the western and eastern halves of the prime vertical (respectively) are called Vertex and Antivertex. The name Vertex is adapted from prime vertical.
Given the presumed equality of these interlocking great circles, one of astrology’s head-scratching puzzles is why angles based on the prime vertical are not equal to those based on the horizon and meridian. They are not equal (based on both statistical research and chart-by-chart examination) – and we should wonder why they are not.
Vertex, Antivertex, and their ecliptical squares (which are the longitudes of the horizon’s Northpoint and Southpoint, the poles of the prime vertical) have only slight effect. In areas of astrology highly reliant on angles and foreground placement, they are of no use at all (such as return charts or ingresses). Even in natal astrology, if you ignore these points entirely, you will rarely miss anything important (and it is easy to tell the charts where you can benefit from paying attention to them). However, for a complete view, you need to know about them and where they do have occasional voice.
Zodiacally, Vertex is defined as the point where the ecliptic intersects the prime vertical on the western half of the sky. Antivertex is the opposite point on the eastern half of the PV. The western half received the primary name this time because Charles A. Jayne, one of the earliest researchers of the Vertex, thought it was the more powerful end.
Yet, as with the horizon and meridian, we do not expect the ecliptical position of the Vertex axis to be important. Like the horizon and meridian, we expect Vertex and Antivertex contacts to work mundanely.
This expectation seems confirmed in practice. For years, I included Vertex in all charts and thought its contacts important within an orb of about 3°. However, they were inconsistent and unreliable. When I finally began calculating Vertex contacts mundanely, they were stronger and clearer. Because planets on Vertex and Antivertex mundanely often cannot be discerned from Vertex’s longitude, I found surprises.
We measure Vertex and Antivertex mundane contacts in azimuth, the longitude-like coordinate around the horizon. As the western half of the prime vertical, Vertex is equivalent to due west (azimuth 270°) and Antivertex to due east (azimuth 90°).
Finding mundane Vertex-Antivertex contacts is easy: Just scan the azimuth column in a chart’s data table looking for planets within 3° of azimuth 90° or 270°. I no longer put Vertex on the chart itself: Since mundane contacts are often completely invisible in longitude, the longitude is of little use.
As an example, consider the horoscope of retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, who was born August 15, 1938, 7:40 AM, San Francisco, CA. Vertex (Vx) in his 6th House is (at 3°20' Aqu) less than a degree in longitude from Jupiter (4°06' Aqu). This is fine symbolism for a notable, respected jurist. However, this ecliptical view misses most of the action along the Vertex axis. Looking at the azimuth column of his chart’s data table, we see (remembering that Vertex is azimuth 270° and Antivertex 90°):
268°33' Jupiter
89°53' Mercury
91°33' Sun
92°34' Mars
Justice Breyer was not merely a judge. For 18 years he served as one of nine members of the highest court in the nation. Besides Jupiter on Vertex, these azimuth positions show Sun, Mercury, and Mars closely conjoined (near Antivertex) opposite Jupiter (on Vertex). Look back at the ecliptical nativity: Their longitudes are not near the 3°20' Leo Antivertex. Mercury’s involvement with Sun-Mars was unsuspected. This becomes even clearer if we display Breyer’s chart in azimuth positions, similar to the mundoscope.
This seems much more the chart of a U.S. Supreme Court justice.
This quote from Donald Bradley (writing as Garth Allen in the September 1957 American Astrology) returns our attention to the elegant three-ringed framework [of horizon, meridian, and prime vertical]. Major angles form from these interlocking, mutually perpendicular great circles.…the supreme fact of astrology is that the mundane structure of any horoscope has a modifying effect on the intensity of all planetary forces… It is only in the zones centering around the three basic great circles (horizon, meridian, and prime vertical) that the inhibiting pressures are relieved or removed.
However, our use of that elegant “three-ringed circus” has been incomplete thus far. Although the horizon and meridian constitute the four major angles, we have not yet used the prime vertical in the same way.
As the horizon forms the Ascendant-Descendant axis, and the meridian forms the MC-IC axis, the western and eastern halves of the prime vertical (respectively) are called Vertex and Antivertex. The name Vertex is adapted from prime vertical.
Given the presumed equality of these interlocking great circles, one of astrology’s head-scratching puzzles is why angles based on the prime vertical are not equal to those based on the horizon and meridian. They are not equal (based on both statistical research and chart-by-chart examination) – and we should wonder why they are not.
Vertex, Antivertex, and their ecliptical squares (which are the longitudes of the horizon’s Northpoint and Southpoint, the poles of the prime vertical) have only slight effect. In areas of astrology highly reliant on angles and foreground placement, they are of no use at all (such as return charts or ingresses). Even in natal astrology, if you ignore these points entirely, you will rarely miss anything important (and it is easy to tell the charts where you can benefit from paying attention to them). However, for a complete view, you need to know about them and where they do have occasional voice.
Zodiacally, Vertex is defined as the point where the ecliptic intersects the prime vertical on the western half of the sky. Antivertex is the opposite point on the eastern half of the PV. The western half received the primary name this time because Charles A. Jayne, one of the earliest researchers of the Vertex, thought it was the more powerful end.
Yet, as with the horizon and meridian, we do not expect the ecliptical position of the Vertex axis to be important. Like the horizon and meridian, we expect Vertex and Antivertex contacts to work mundanely.
This expectation seems confirmed in practice. For years, I included Vertex in all charts and thought its contacts important within an orb of about 3°. However, they were inconsistent and unreliable. When I finally began calculating Vertex contacts mundanely, they were stronger and clearer. Because planets on Vertex and Antivertex mundanely often cannot be discerned from Vertex’s longitude, I found surprises.
We measure Vertex and Antivertex mundane contacts in azimuth, the longitude-like coordinate around the horizon. As the western half of the prime vertical, Vertex is equivalent to due west (azimuth 270°) and Antivertex to due east (azimuth 90°).
Finding mundane Vertex-Antivertex contacts is easy: Just scan the azimuth column in a chart’s data table looking for planets within 3° of azimuth 90° or 270°. I no longer put Vertex on the chart itself: Since mundane contacts are often completely invisible in longitude, the longitude is of little use.
As an example, consider the horoscope of retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, who was born August 15, 1938, 7:40 AM, San Francisco, CA. Vertex (Vx) in his 6th House is (at 3°20' Aqu) less than a degree in longitude from Jupiter (4°06' Aqu). This is fine symbolism for a notable, respected jurist. However, this ecliptical view misses most of the action along the Vertex axis. Looking at the azimuth column of his chart’s data table, we see (remembering that Vertex is azimuth 270° and Antivertex 90°):
268°33' Jupiter
89°53' Mercury
91°33' Sun
92°34' Mars
Justice Breyer was not merely a judge. For 18 years he served as one of nine members of the highest court in the nation. Besides Jupiter on Vertex, these azimuth positions show Sun, Mercury, and Mars closely conjoined (near Antivertex) opposite Jupiter (on Vertex). Look back at the ecliptical nativity: Their longitudes are not near the 3°20' Leo Antivertex. Mercury’s involvement with Sun-Mars was unsuspected. This becomes even clearer if we display Breyer’s chart in azimuth positions, similar to the mundoscope.
This seems much more the chart of a U.S. Supreme Court justice.