House I
The querent, the body, the “self”, the ship, the besieged party
“Will I recover?”, “Am I in danger?”
Chargement…
Astrology course — Classical tradition
Cast a chart for the exact moment of a specific question, then read the answer in the mechanics of the sky. The oldest and most demanding technique in Western astrology.
Definition
Horary astrology is the traditional technique that answers a specific question by casting the astrological chart of the moment and place where the question is asked and understood.
Do you want to know whether a matter will succeed, whether someone will return, whether a lost object will be found? Horary astrology (from the old tradition of Bonatti and William Lilly) does not describe a character like the natal chart: it judges a concrete situation from the chart of the sky at the exact moment of the question. This complete course guides you from the conditions of validity all the way to estimating when the outcome will occur.
Summary
What it is not
The reference moment is not that of the event, but the one when the astrologer genuinely receives and understands the question.
The place is that of the astrologer. The chart thus obtained contains, according to tradition, the symbolic image of the situation and its outcome.
Conditions for a good question
Before judging, you check that the chart is “radical”, that is, fit to be read. These warnings (strictures) flag a doubtful or premature chart.
Ascendant too early (< 3°)
The question is premature: the situation is not yet ripe, or elements are missing.
Ascendant too late (> 27°)
It is too late to act, the matter is already decided, or the question is poorly framed.
Moon in the Via Combusta
Moon between 15° Libra and 15° Scorpio: troubled circumstances, a judgement to handle with caution.
Void-of-course Moon
The Moon forms no further major aspect before changing sign: often “nothing will happen”.
Saturn in the 1st house or on the Ascendant
The astrologer is mistaken, or the matter is hindered, delayed, weighed down.
Saturn in the 7th house
A warning to the astrologer himself: the judgement is at risk of error.
Lord of the hour and lord of the Ascendant disagreeing
Internal inconsistency: re-check the time and the sincerity of the question.
A stricture does not always forbid judgement: it calls for caution and often shapes the meaning of the answer (delay, impediment, premature question).
Everything rests on the correct assignment of significators: the planets that represent each actor or each thing in the question.
You first identify the house of the matter, then take the lord (ruler) of that house as the principal significator.
The querent (the one who asks the question)
The 1st house and its lord; the Moon is co-significator of the querent in almost every question.
The quesited (the thing or person asked about)
The house of the matter (e.g. 7th for the partner, 2nd for money) and its lord.
The Moon
Always important: it describes the unfolding, the mood and the events along the way.
Natural significators
Venus for love, Mercury for documents/thieves, Mars for conflicts, etc. — supporting the house significator.
The “yes/no” judgement is read above all in an applying aspect (one that is forming) between the significator of the querent and that of the quesited, or via the Moon.
House I
The querent, the body, the “self”, the ship, the besieged party
“Will I recover?”, “Am I in danger?”
House II
Money, movable goods, resources, a lost object of value
“Will I get this money back?”, “Will I find my ring?”
House III
Siblings, neighbours, short journeys, rumours, letters
“Is this news true?”
House IV
Father, home, real estate, land, the end of matters, hidden treasure
“Should I buy this house?”, “Where is the lost object?”
House V
Children, pregnancy, pleasures, games, entertainment, messengers
“Am I pregnant?”, “Will I have a child?”
House VI
Illness, small animals, employees, subordinate work
“What is the cause of this ailment?”
House VII
Partner, spouse, opponent, lawsuits, the thief, other people in general
“Will he marry me?”, “Will I win this lawsuit?”
House VIII
Death, inheritance, the partner’s money, fears, other people’s debts
“Will I receive this inheritance?”
House IX
Long journeys, foreign lands, higher studies, religion, dreams
“Will this journey take place?”
House X
Career, status, authority, government, the king, the employer
“Will I get this post / this promotion?”
House XI
Friends, hopes, wishes, allies, the employer’s gains
“Will my wish come true?”
House XII
Hidden enemies, prison, large animals, ordeals, self-sabotage
“Who wishes me harm?”
Significators do not act only by direct aspect: tradition describes several “movements of light” that colour or produce the answer.
A faster planet draws toward an exact aspect with another. This is what “brings the matter about”.
A promise in the course of fulfilment.
The aspect is already past: it describes what has just happened, a cause rather than a future.
A matter already settled / past.
A swift planet separates from one significator then applies to the other, carrying the light from one to the other.
An intermediary brings the parties together.
A third, slower planet receives the aspects of the two significators who do not behold each other directly.
A third party unites the parties.
A third planet intervenes and completes its aspect before the two significators can join.
Something or someone prevents it.
A significator changes sign or is overtaken just before the perfection of the expected aspect.
The matter fails by a hair.
A planet turns retrograde before perfecting the aspect: the party withdraws.
Someone backs out at the last moment.
The strength of a significator is measured by its essential dignities (its intrinsic quality according to its zodiacal position) and its accidental ones (its situation in the chart). This is the heart of horary judgement.
Essential dignities (intrinsic strength)
Domicile
+5The planet is at home: strong, at ease, reliable.
Exaltation
+4Honoured, valued — sometimes a little presumptuous.
Triplicity
+3Well integrated, supported by its element.
Term
+2A slight dignity, giving a little means.
Face / Decan
+1Minimal dignity: barely enough to save appearances.
Detriment
−5The sign opposite to domicile: weakened, ill at ease, struggling.
Fall
−4The sign opposite to exaltation: devalued, without credit.
Peregrine
0No essential dignity: without resources of its own, it may “wander” and act badly (often held against a thief).
Accidental — strengthening
Accidental — debilitating
The Moon is the key planet of horary: co-significator of the querent and the thread running through the story.
Last aspect
What is being left behind: the cause, the recent past, what led to the question.
Next aspect
What we are heading toward: the most immediate event to come.
Void of course
No major aspect before the change of sign: often “nothing will happen”, the matter comes to nothing.
Phase and speed
A fast, waxing Moon: things speeding up; slow and waning: a slowing down.
Via Combusta
Between 15° Libra and 15° Scorpio: a turbulent zone, unstable emotions and circumstances.
Reception describes the attitude of the significators toward one another: are they well disposed, hostile, or indifferent?
Mutual reception by domicile
Each planet is in the other’s sign: strong cooperation, mutual help — often a “yes” even without a perfect aspect.
Reception by exaltation
Esteem, respect: one values the other.
Minor reception (triplicity, term, face)
Sympathy or goodwill, but limited means.
Negative reception (detriment/fall)
One places the other in a position of weakness: distrust, contempt, hostility.
A perfect aspect without reception can produce a result… but an unpleasant one. An aspect with good reception gives a willing “yes”.
When the horary promises an event, you estimate the delay from the number of degrees separating the significators from their perfect aspect, modulated by the nature of the signs and houses.
Rules of estimation
Example
Significators 5° from an exact trine, in mutable signs, a succedent house: this is often rendered as “about 5 weeks/months” depending on the context.
The querent in the 1st house, the beloved in the 7th. If the lords of the 1st and 7th apply in aspect with good reception, and the Moon reinforces the link, the promise is favourable. A refranation (turning retrograde before perfection) would signal the other party drawing back.
You look at the 2nd house (valuable goods) and the 4th (place, recovery). The sign and house of the significator indicate the direction and the type of location; an angular, direct planet favours recovery.
The querent in the 1st, the job/employer in the 10th. An applying aspect between the lords of the 1st and 10th, with the querent’s significator dignified and angular, argue for yes. Combustion or cadency of the significator weaken the chances.
Common mistakes to avoid
What is the difference between horary astrology and the natal chart?
The natal chart describes a person for their whole life. Horary casts the chart of a single moment to answer a specific question and judge a particular situation.
Do you need your date of birth for a horary question?
No. Horary uses the time and place where the question is asked and understood, not the querent’s birth.
What exact moment is taken for the chart?
The moment when the astrologer genuinely receives and understands the question, at the place where they are.
Can you re-ask a question if you do not like the answer?
No. Only the first sincere chart is valid. Re-asking yields only a non-radical chart, unless the situation has truly changed.
What is a “radical” chart?
A chart fit to be judged: free of any major warning (Ascendant too early/late, void-of-course Moon, badly placed Saturn…) that would compromise the reading.
Is horary astrology reliable?
It is a codified traditional technique (Bonatti, Lilly). Its reliability depends on a sincere, well-framed question and a rigorous reading of the rules. It remains a tool for reflection, not a certainty.
A question should be single, sincere and concrete, ideally settled by yes/no or by “how”. Avoid mixing several subjects and asking for a general prediction about the future.
It goes back to Antiquity and was codified in the Middle Ages by Guido Bonatti, then masterfully set out in the 17th century by the Englishman William Lilly in Christian Astrology, a reference still used today.
When the Moon forms no further major aspect before leaving its sign, tradition often reads “nothing will happen”: the matter comes to nothing, or runs its course with no notable change.
An applying aspect between significators delivers the result; dignities and receptions describe its quality. A yes can exist with weak significators, but the outcome will be laborious or disappointing.