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Autumnal Equinox

Ancient Meaning of the Autumnal Equinox

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The autumnal equinox is the hour hand that tells us what time it is in the Great Year. Just as we can tell the hour of the day by noticing how high or low the sun is in the sky so do we tell time in the 24,000-year precession cycle by noticing the position of the sun on this equinox relative to the twelve ancient constellations of the zodiac on this equinox.

Precession is observed as the sun slowly moving backward through each of the twelve constellations at the rate of about 50 arc seconds per year. Most people are familiar with mention of the sun’s position on the Vernal Equinox: Four thousand years ago it was in Aries, then about 2000 years ago it entered Pisces, and very soon now it will be entering Aquarius. This is the meaning of the popular verse “The dawning of the Age of Aquarius”. This is precession.

But the fact is Great Year time is better told and measured by using the autumnal equinox. The reason for this is many of the ancient zodiacal wheels (clock faces of the Great Year) put Aries at the top in the 12 o’clock position, and made reference to stars in this region as markers of a high age. For example, the Pleiades are very close to this spot (between Taurus and Aries). This mysterious constellation contains the star Alcyone, which is the harbinger of good times, “Oh, those Halcyon days!” And anyone that has visited Egypt can see the great respect given to Aries the Ram at many temples. Even the Greeks wrote of its influence when they spoke of Jason and the Argonauts, those brave souls seeking Aries Golden Fleece; the consciousness worn by many in the Golden Age.

An illustration of ‘The Great Year’

An illustration of ‘The Great Year’ from Walter Cruttenden’s children’s book ‘The Great Year Adventure’.

We also find in the Book of Job a reference to this point in the sky when Job says, “Canst thou bind the sweet influence of the Pleiades or loose the bands of Orion”? Of course this is a rhetorical question and reference to the Golden age. The answer is, “No, we cannot stay with the autumnal sun in this high constellation (and thus bind ourselves to the sweet influence of the Pleiades and the Golden Age) anymore than we can break apart the stars in Orion’s belt – it is a physical impossibility. The cycle of the ages must progress, just as the earth must orbit the sun and bring in the constant changing of the seasons. These celestial cycles are invincible!

For all this to make sense in a system where the sun clearly moves clockwise through the twelve constellations, the autumnal equinox must be the true hour hand. It can be seen to have reached the bottom of the clock (the six o’clock position, the depths of the dark ages) about 1500 years ago when it passed through Libra into Virgo. It reached this point after 12,000 years of decline and most of the great ancient civilizations were lost or destroyed. But in 498AD it stopped going down, and since this time has been slowly rising from the Kali yuga low point. In around 1698AD it passed into the Dwapara yuga (ascending Bronze Age). Since that time it has been bringing the light of better times, first manifest as the Renaissance. And now it can be seen quickening its pace as we are approaching Leo, eventually on its way back to the higher ages, and ultimately, the zenith of another Golden Age.

Happy autumnal equinox!

To learn more about this topic please visit Walter Cruttenden’s profile or join him at the 9 th annual Conference on Precession and Ancient Knowledge this October 17-19 in Rancho Mirage, California. www.CPAKonline.com

Featured Image: A celestial clock found in Cathédral St. Jean in Lyon (14th century). Photo credit: Alex Quici

By Walter Cruttenden

 

Comments

I think the procession on this table is a really cool thing. My question is how often in these signs does the earth axis change and cause floods?

Troy Mobley

Would enjoy receiving updates. Thank you.

Great article! I am really interested in this sort of stuff.

Walter Cruttenden's picture

Walter

Walter Cruttenden is a financial markets innovator, an active founder investor in growth companies that serve a social need, and is incredibly passionate about human history and astronomy. Currently, Walter serves as Chairman of Acorns, a micro investing company, which he... Read More

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