Category Archives: Divination Master Post

Fortuna Major / Greater Fortune (Geomancy Figures)

Name of the Figure: Fortuna Major (Greater Fortune); sometimes called Arriving or Incoming Help
Element: Earth
Planet: Sun (rising)
Sign: Aquarius
Quality: Entering
Fortune: Good

Fortuna Major is the Greater Fortune of the geomantic figures. It has a plethora of symbolic attributes that may be useful to someone looking to use geomancy as a framework for magic, but as far as divination goes, it is relatively straightforward in its meaning. From a strictly symbolic standpoint, it may be said to represent a river flowing between two mountains while the Sun rises. Whether this is the case or not, it represents a peculiar form of fortune that is not blind luck.

Illustration of the geomantic figure Fortuna Major, Greater Fortune

If we accept preliminarily the symbolic depiction and also the common view that one point means the element in the figure is active, then Fortuna Major is formed by activating the passive elements (Earth and Water) and by keeping the active elements (Fire and Air) passive. Metaphorically, the water flowing and cutting its own path through life by moisturizing the earth can be taken to show the type of fortune that Fortuna Major indicates: the hard-won one.

All, or at least most traditional sources agree that Fortuna Major is a slow figure, promising success but also delay. This can be good or bad depending on what the querent needs. For instance, it can be slightly worrying for illness, and someone in prison is probably looking at a longer sentence, but the figure remains broadly good. It is a symbol of fortitude. In good things, while it may show delay, it also promises stability.

In general, Fortuna Major promises success through effort, Nothing will be handed to the querent for free, but at the same time, the fact that this figure shows up indicates that the querent has the potential to achieve what he wants. It also has the general attributions of the Sun, signifying gold, renewal and similar.

Common Keywords: success through effort, perseverance, constancy, stability for good or ill, renewal, gold, some delay, great satisfaction, triumph

Fortuna Major in the Geomantic Houses (these are only examples. Use context to guide your interpretation)

HousePossible Meanings
FirstOf great stature, resilient, kingly, a nobleman, steadfast, long life, health, honorable, well-known, accomplished
SecondWealth, accumulation, riches, fortune
ThirdWell-being of siblings, good for short trips, True rumors
FourthGood in stable things, inheritance, good for parents and for the father
FifthFriendship, good grace, talent, success of a mediator
SixthGain through small animals and servants, slow recovery
Seventhlasting union, honorable partner
EighthWealth through partners of all kinds, long life, honorable death,
NinthGood science or skill, Long travel, Honor and success through travel, Piety, Faith
TenthKings, honorable people, achieving honors, promotion
EleventhGood friends, Achievement of hope, help from government
TwelfthLong prison sentence, freedom from occult enemies, gain through large animals
ThirteenthSuccess in the past or present, stamina, power, ability to achieve what one wishes
FourteenthSuccess in the future, Still need for a lot of work
FifteenthSuccess, Accomplishment of most things through effort
Possible meanings of Fortuna Major in the various Geomantic Houses. Note that this is not meant to be exhaustive, and it only serves to jog your interpretive muscles

MQS

nec sequar nec ducam

When Questions Are Deceptive Even if Querents Are Honest (Example Reading)

Sometimes people ask me, “What happens if I ask you a deceptive question?” to which the honest answer is, “I’ll be more likely to get the answer wrong” The underlying assumption is that I either pull answers out of my ass or I get them through some infallible magical process, so that either my getting the answer wrong is proof that divination is bogus or a querent’s deceptive behavior should have no bearing on my ability to answer.

Neither of these assumptions is true. Divination is a process of symbol-reading that equates the combinations of a given comprehensive set of symbols with certain states of being in the past, present or future.

A symbol is not some arbitrary squiggle. Keep in mind that symbolic means “that throws together”. It’s the opposite of diabolic, which means “that throws apart”. Our whole perception is symbolic, as we equate X with Y at every turn, linking various states of being together (“we throw them together”) in our perception. Car approaching means danger of becoming crayon smears on the asphalt. If our mind didn’t work symbolically it wouldn’t be able to link facts together, and we’d already be dead.

As I said somewhere else, if you show up at the doctor’s insisting your leg hurts even if it doesn’t, sooner or later you are going to get a diagnosis and a prescription. If the doctor touches you where it hurts but you say it doesn’t hurt, that also changes the diagnosis. The doctor is reading you and your behavior as symbols that he “throws together”, i.e., connects with certain predictions about the past, present or future. An honest and cooperative querent is as valuable as an honest and cooperative patient, except that patients understand this, querents sometimes don’t.

Detecting a querent’s lies is not impossible, just as it’s not impossible for a perceptive doctor to call a patient’s bluff, but it’s damn hard. It is especially hard with divination, because unlike a doctor visit, a divination will always give an outcome, that is, its symbols will always come up in a certain order. If a married querent asks you “will I get married?”, you are still going to have a spread of cards or a chart or some other set of symbols in front of you saying something.

In my (fortunately limited) experience with deceptive querents, the divination always contains the truth of the matter. In the example of the married querent, there should be indications of an existing marriage. Unfortunately, it is extremely easy to misread the symbols as meaning something else on the backdrop of what the querent said.

But a question is not deceptive just when the querent is maliciously trying to call you out as a fraud. Well-meaning querents can inadvertently frame their questions deceptively. Here’s an example.

Case Study

I’m currently gathering recommendations as a reader, in case I decide to offer paid readings from the blog in the future. I was reading for a young woman in her late thirties in exchange for her recommendation a couple of days ago. She asked me about her love life, but asked nothing specific.

We’ve talked about querents’ assumptions, but readers have assumptions, too. One of the typical assumptions of many readers is that if someone is getting a reading, the person must be a mess in need of major help, so readers tend to give a less favorable reading of any outcome. In this case, this assumption would have led me to make a mistake.

Here’s the spread that came out in response to the question (I know I haven’t talked about tarot on this blog yet, but I’ll explain my approach another time. Note that the querent has given me permission to talk about the reading)

A tarot reading about the querent’s love life
Tarocchi di Layla, design by Elisa Scerrato

The cards of the cut were the Empress (the querent) and the Moon. The Moon can have a huge variety of meanings, from deception to silence to maternity to influence on people to many, many more. Mostly it is a bit of a red flag when it falls next to a significator. But the rest of the cards were wonderful.


Mqs: “You’re in a relationship, right?”
Querent: “yes”
Mqs: “it’s a longstanding one, though. Marriage?” (Hermit at the beginning showing slowness/long time, plus Sun and Justice showing a union of love)
Querent: “yes!”
Mqs: “It’s a good marriage. It has settled into its rhythms (Justice and Wheel) but there is still a great deal of love (Sun)”
Querent: “yes, we love each other.”
Mqs: “there is a clean, pure (Stars) energy (Devil) around this union (Justice above). You have different characters (Justice and Devil) but it doesn’t seem to matter, and any obstacle (Devil) is overcome (Chariot).”
Querent: “it’s true”
Mqs: “Is he older than you? (He’s represented by the Pope)
Querent: ” Quite a bit”
Mqs: “But he’s very dynamic (Juggler next to Pope)”
Querent: “Definitely. He does a lot of sport.”

At this point I was a bit startled. The cards were wonderful. There didn’t seem to be any issue. This is relatively common when the querent doesn’t ask a very specific question (she only told me the topic). Still that Moon next to her bothered me. Why was it there? The cards didn’t point to any cheating or issue.

Mqs: “Are you somewhat taciturn?”
Querent: “Yes, I tend to keep to myself.”

That was an explanation, but it still wasn’t satisfying. It was an odd thing for the cards to point out in the cut.

Mqs: “Are you dissatified?” (The Moon can mean sadness)
Querent: “A bit”
Mqs: “But not with your marriage”
Querent: “No, I’m happy with my husband”
Mqs: (looking at the Juggler next to the husband, which is the significator card for work) “Does he work?”
Querent: “yes”
Mqs: “do you work?”
Querent: “I don’t”
Mqs: “Are you dissatisfied that your husband works but you don’t?”
Querent: “yes! I think that’s how I feel”
Mqs: (laughing) “So the question is about work, not love”

Her face lit up with understanding, as if she hadn’t thought about it. “That’s right!” she said enthusiastically, “I wanna know about work!”

I think this interaction shows very well how, even if not meaning to, querents can veil one issue by wrapping a different topic around it. The querent in this case wasn’t trying to deceive me. Her subconscious mind simply used the topic of her love life to lead me to her real issue. This, by the way, is why it’s important to be able to have a frank conversation with querents.

MQS

Populus / The People (Geomancy Figures)

Name of the Figure: Populus (The People); sometimes called Double Way
Element: Water
Planet: Moon (waxing)
Sign: Capricorn
Quality: Common
Fortune: Mixed

Populus is the opposite of Via, the other figure of the Moon. Its properties are in many ways diametrically opposite. Where Via forces a radical transformation of every figure it comes into contact with, flipping it into its opposite, Populus passively accepts every figure as it is, like a mirror or a bunch of clay waiting to be shaped. This latter comparison is very apt, as in Medieval (Aristotelian) philosophy, the Moon was seen as receptacle and a symbol of matter, which was capable of receiving all forms, just as the Moon receives her light from the Sun, but was ultimately beyond complete formation.

Illustration of the Geomantic figure Populus, the People

The Medievals, who were fond of finding similitudes and parallels everywhere, also saw the common folk as matter and the Emperor or King as the form-giver, just like they saw the female as matter and the male as form, so they must have felt a great thrill in finding all these correspondences at play in Populus, which also represents people (just like in astrology the Moon rules common people). If Via represents the Moon’s changeable nature, Populus is her passivity.

Populus is formed of the highest number of points of any Geomancy figure, eight, in contrast to Via, which had the least with four. This brings to light another common meaning of Populus: that of indicating “lots” of something, for good or ill.

Some old Geomancers considered Populus extremely bad, some saying that if Populus was the Judge, the chart wasn’t valid. I find this to be nonsense. We already have a limited number of possible charts to play with, and if we exclude those ending in Populus we eliminate a whole bunch more. Plus, in my experience, Populus is a neutral figure, augmenting the good and bad of other figures.

Common Keywords: passivity, receptivity, stability, a situation that may have various influences at play but in the end won’t change much, many people, groups of all kinds, crowd, togetherness, lots of anything that may make sense in the context, large, big, numerous

Populus in the Geomantic Houses (these are only examples. Use context to guide your interpretation)

HousePossible Meanings
FirstA long and/or mediocre life, a mutable life subject to many influences, lots of water, phlegmatic temperament, companionable
SecondLots of money, great wealth, many objects
ThirdMany siblings or cousins, neighbors, small trip by water or near a body of water
FourthCities, castles, buildings, abundance, fertile terrain
FifthGreat harvest, many children, gathering of artists (like an exposition), A fun gathering
SixthMany servants or small animals, dangerous illness
SeventhMany acquaintances, Good marriage, Pliable but unstable partner, Many public enemies
EighthTears, A funeral, Lots of money from the partner
NinthLong travel especially by water, pilgrimage with other people, a class or learning group, a spiritual gathering
TenthA gathering of important people (like a cabinet meeting), elevation of regular people, Rebellion of the common folk
EleventhLots of money from the government, Lots of friends
TwelfthMany occult enemies, evil machinations, groups of prisoners
ThirteenthPublic favor, stable past, good company
FourteenthThe public is against, many obstacles or lots of opposition, stable future
FifteenthSome delay, stability in the end, good if coming from good figures, bad if from bad ones
Possible meanings of Populus in the various Geomantic Houses. Note that this is not meant to be exhaustive, and it only serves to jog your interpretive muscles

MQS

Via / The Way (Geomancy Figures)

Name of the Figure: Via (The Way); some give it as Candela (Candle)
Element: Water
Planet: Moon (waning)
Sign: Leo
Quality: Common
Fortune: Mixed

When interpreting Via, there’s a couple of notions to keep in mind. First, its interesting geomantic property of turning every figure into its opposite: If you add Via to Conjunctio, meaning connectivity, you get Carcer, isolation; if you add Via to Puella, innocence and balance, you get Rubeus, vice and lying; if you add Via to Caput Draconis, the beginning of something, you get Laetitia, its peak, etc. This is because Via has one point in each elemental row: one point in the Fire row, one in the Air row, one in the Water row, one in the Earth row. One point, when added to another single point, turns it into an even double point, while when added to a double point it turns it into an odd number again.

Illustration of the Geomantic figure Via, the Way

This property of Via connects well with its meaning of change, travel, etc. It is an active, transformative figure, indicating that the situation will not stay as it is. Something that began one way will finish as something different.

Another interesting and often mentioned property of Via is that it has the least amount of points of any figure in Geomancy, four. This can mean that Via stands for a small amount of something, whether for good or ill. This, however, is usually only in questions of quantity (“Will I get back the money?” “Yes, but only a small part.”)

Finally, because it is in contrast with the other figure of the Moon, Populus, which is the crowd, Via can represent aloneness, not necessarily in a bad sense. It can show someone doing something alone, following their own path. It may indicate independence. However, if you dabble in the old manuscripts, you will see that depending on the author Via is attributed better or worse qualities depending on that author’s own ideas. I personally find it a neutral figure, if an unstable one.

Common Keywords: Travel, path, journey, going, moving, acting, making inroads, change, transformation, one, only, lonely, small, little, small amount

Via in the Geomantic Houses (these are only examples. Use context to guide your interpretation)

HousePossible Meanings
FirstA traveler, wayfarer, piligrim, small stature, phlegmatic temperament, changeable, A short life
SecondTraveling merchant, Little money, change in the economic situation, poverty
ThirdShort trip, visit, younger siblings, arrival of news, partly true rumors, the garden or neighborhood
Fourthmixed end results, instability at the end, a trip to see one’s parents of father, little inheritance
FifthFew children (possibly one), going to a party, little pleasure
Sixthshort illness, change in the health, servants are arriving or fleeing (traditionally), small animals, small gain from animals
SeventhUnstable partner, highwaymen, little company, gain or loss of support (depending on how one is at the present moment)
EighthFleeing danger or fearful situation, little money from other people
NinthLong travel, little faith, unworthy knowledge or teacher, a process of transformation, inner journey
TenthUnstable government, Unstable profession, change of job, traveling for work, authority figures are not to be trusted
Eleventhvain hope, little hope, little help, changeable friends, few of them
TwelfthRelease from prison, Freedom from addiction, Few enemies
ThirteenthUnstable past, ability to change, good for traveling, positive journey or path
Fourteenthquick solution, the situation will evolve or change, issues while traveling
FifteenthThere will be travel or change for good or ill, Quick solution
Possible meanings of Via in the various Geomantic Houses. Note that this is not meant to be exhaustive, and it only serves to jog your interpretive muscles

MQS

Vera Sibilla | Health Correspondences

Here is a quick (and non exhaustive) list of the main health-related meanings of the Vera Sibilla. I almost never accept health readings, and I am in no wise an expert in the field (either medically or ‘cartomantically’). However health issues can come up in general readings or, if serious, even when consulting about something else. Usually you’ll find the card(s) of the organ(s) close to the 4♠ and/or K♣ or K♠, but it’s not always so. I presuppose that those reading this post are well-adjusted adults who know their limits, so I’m not going to spend too much type lecturing you on what you ought or ought not to do. Just be wise.

A♥ – Conversation / Conversazione = throat, mouth, doctor visits

2♥ – House / Casa = the skeleton (but it is also a card of good health, stability, protection)

3♥ – Balcony / Belvedere = the eyes, vertigo

4♥ – Love / Amore = the sexual organs, but also the eyes (especially eyesight issues)

5♥ Happiness / Allegrezza al Cuore = blood circulation, inherited diseases that run in the family, broadly good health and recovery, some say the neck

6♥ Money / Denaro = immune system, past diseases or inherited diseases (if reversed new diseases)

7♥ Scholar / Letterato = mind and brain. Reversed it is also connected with impotence in more than one sense

8♥ Hope / Speranza = kidneys, bladder, liquids, breasts. Reversed also the lymphatic system

9♥ Faithfulness / Fedeltà = good health broadly, but with negative cards or if reversed difficult recovery (the illness is faithful to us), chronic issues, also illnesses from pets and animals, but this is rare

10♥ Perseverance / Costanza = the spine and the back, a tendency to put on weight, long illness

J♥ Boyfriend / Amante = rarely it can indicate the hands

Q♥ Girlfriend / Amatrice = all things feminine, female sexual organs, the scalp and hair

K♥ Gentleman / Gran Signore = all things masculine, male sexual organs, incredible recovery

A♣ Marriage / Imeneo = injections, the male sexual organ, immune system

2♣ The Peacock/Pride / Superbia = beauty, recovery (reversed it is connected with the eyes and with all those attitudes that prevent recovery)

3♣ Journey / Viaggio= movement, muscles, the limbs and the hips

4♣ Friend / Amica = nurses and helpful figures, figuratively the need to seek one or a new one

5♣ Fortune / Fortuna = good luck (when reversed slow recovery)

6♣ Surprise / Consolante Sorpresa = caught diseases (reversed with bad cards can also show utter bodily collapse)

7♣ Gratification / Gran Consolazione = resilience, vitamins and all things that fortify us (reversed a disordered life, anxiety, weakness, depletion)

8♣ Reunion / Riunione = Arms, recovery from illness (reversed also depression, retention, constipation)

9♣ Cheerfulness / Allegria = food, nutrition, drinking, mouth, throat, ears, good health (reversed also excesses, the kidneys, the liver, the bladder)

10♣ Levity / Leggerezza = intestines, glands of all kinds, the respiratory system

J♣ Helper / Domestico = problems (including mental) typical of boys, a male nurse, physical activity

Q♣ Maiden / Giovane Fanciulla = problems (including mental) typical of girls, the skin, a female nurse

K♣ Doctor / Dottore = the GP, the need to get a checkup

A♦ Room / Stanza = convalescence, recovery, visit, a doctor’s surgery, the female sexual organ (reversed it can be the unpleasant discovery of an illness)

2♦ Letter / Lettera = diagnosis, prescriptions, tests, anxiety

3♦ Gift / Omaggio = objects used during surgery and possibly inserted in the body, crystallizations in the body, lymphatic system

4♦ Falsehood / Falsità = heart

5♦ Melancholy / Malinconia = spleen, tiredness, sadness

6♦ Thought / Pensiero = nervous system, a doctor’s opinion or your opinion on what to do about health

7♦ Child / Bambino = illnesses typical of babies and young kids

8♦ Handmaid / Donna di Servizio = allergies, feet, legs, joints, movement

9♦ Fools / Deliranti = lungs, mental diseases, all double organs, medical oversight

10♦ Thief / Ladro = Stomach, the ingestion of noxious things

J♦ Messenger / Messaggero = usually test tesults

Q♦ Wife / Donna Maritata = diseases typical of women, chronic diseases

K♦ Merchant / Mercante = baldness, physical defects, medical expenses

A♠ Sorrow / Dispiacere = head, the mind, infections (reversed also fertility)

2♠ Old Lady / Vecchia Signora = bones and teeth, problems typical of old people, longevity

3♠ Widower / Vedovo = it’s a serious and complex card, all kinds of deficiencies, serious mental issues, complications, when reversed also abuses of all kinds, harmful conducts, removal of organs or limbs

4♠ Sickness / Ammalato = sickness in general, tiredness, depletion

5♠ Death / Morte = blood, deadly or serious diseases, smoking, toxic substances, self-harm

6♠ Sighs / Sospiri = lungs, bronchi, anxiety, fears, etc. Reversed also the urinary system

7♠ Tragedy / Disgrazia = strokes, surgery, hives, heatstrokes, pressure, burns, dangerous allergies

8♠ Desperation and Jealousy / Disperato per Gelosia = legs, all problems you cause to yourself, serious mental issues, reversed it can indicate paralysis and accidents

9♠ Prison / Prigione = blockages, constipation, the buttocks, umbilical cord, pregnancy, impotence

10♠ Soldier / Militare = liver, muscles, strength, resistance

J♠ Enemy / Nemico= parasites, viruses, medications hurting the body, substance abuse

Q♠ Rival / Nemica = removal of organs or body parts (especially when reversed), dangerous diseases that don’t manifest themselves, nasty side effects of medication

K♠ Priest / Sacerdote = the specialist doctor

The Meanings of the Geomantic Houses

In European geomancy, the places occupied by the figures in the Shield are assigned the meaning of the houses of an astrological horoscope. I have no idea if this corresponds to older Middle-Eastern practice or if it is a European innovation. Certainly, if Astrology hadn’t been attached to Geomancy by the Arab magi of old (which it probably was), it got coupled with it as soon as it reached Europe, since Astrology was not only extremely popular–it was also the only method of divination that was not unanimously frowned upon by the church, the reason being that it was perfectly embedded within the shared understanding of how the cosmos was thought to factually work, so that the anticipations given by astrology could be defended as being just part of how life worked and, therefore, scientific (in the old meaning of science). Astrology was indeed often condemned, but it was hard to condemn it without condemning a lot more stuff that the church liked.

The Geomantic Shield, therefore, got assigned the meanings of the astrological houses. As far as I can tell from reading the old manuscripts, the difference between the Shield chart and the square astrological chart was not very marked–if at all. Most manuscripts assign the meanings of the houses to the Shield itself, without bothering to turn the Shield into an astrological chart. This is even true when they describe the modes of perfection. A few manuscripts do show the astrological chart at one point or another, but only to remark on the similarity with the Shield chart.

A Geomantic Shield
The same chart as an astrological horoscope

I may be wrong, but I get the sense that the distinction between Shield chart and Astrological chart was only emphasised following the Golden Dawn’s reshuffling of the houses by following Agrippa. Basically, the GD (again, following Agrippa) assigned the four Mothers to the angles, the four Daughters to the succedent houses and the four Nieces to the cadent houses. This is in line with the old occult fascination for making up bogus secrets to get people interested in your person. People needed to keep occupied, in a world where Monopoly hadn’t been invented yet.

It is also in sharp contrast to the old practice of following the numerical order of the figures (First House = First Mother, Second House = Second Mother, etc., shown in the image above) Note, furthermore, that in the old practice, the Witnesses and the Judge were usually considered normal houses (often called the thirteenth, fourteenth and fifteenth houses.)

The meanings of the houses, as said, correspond more or less to those of a horary chart. You will find that not all sources agree. Here’s a good start (it’s not exhaustive, but it’s something.)

HouseFigureAttributes
First1st MotherThe Querent, Querent’s Body, Appearance, Mind, “Here”
Second2nd MotherQuerent’s possessions, Moveable Goods, Money, Assets, Sustenance
Third3rd MotherSiblings, Neighbors, Letters, News, Communication, Rumors, Short Trips, Regular Journey, Lower Education
Fourth4th MotherThe Father, The Parents in general, Old Relatives, Lineage, House, Property, City, Castle, Buried Treasures, Fields, End of the Matter
Fifth1st DaughterJoy, Mirth, Fun, Festivities, Clothes, Children, Pregnancy, Art, Self-Expression, Sexual Activity, Harvest, Messengers, Diplomats
Sixth2nd DaughterSickness, Trouble, Toil, Difficulties, Surgery, Small animals (pets, goats, sheep, etc.), Servants, Employees
Seventh3rd DaughterMarriage, Partnerships, Partners, Public Enemies, Other People, The Public, Thieves, “There”
Eighth4th DaughterDeath and the Dead, Money from other people, Dowry, Fear, Failure
Ninth1st NieceLong Journeys, Pilgrimages, Church, Spirituality, Higher Education, Faith, Teachers, Courses, Higher Knowledge and Skills, Church People and Prelates, God
Tenth2nd NieceThe Mother, Honor, Ascension, King, Emperor, Government, Job, Profession
Eleventh3rd NieceFriends, Help, Money from the Government, Wishes, Hopes, Fortune, Luck
Twelfth4th NieceEvil, Secret Enemies, Addiction, Prison, Curses, Hexes, Large Animals (Large Cattle, Horses, etc.), Impotence to act
ThirteenthR. WitnessThe Querent, The Querent’s side, What’s in Favor of the Querent, The Past
FourteenthL. WitnessOpposition to the Querent, The Other Party, The Future
FifteenthJudgeAnswer, Ultimate Development of the Question
The meanings and attributes of the Geomantic houses

Note: All images are from the App ‘Simple Geomancy’

MQS

Anatomy of a Geomantic Figure

In a way, Geomantic figures are to Geomancy what cards are to Cartomancy. They represent the basic bundles of meanings that get shuffled around to form the sentence that will answer the question. So we need to familiarise ourselves with them.

Each Geomantic figure is made up of four rows of points. Each row can contain one or two points, so a figure can contain a minimum of four points (Via) and a maximum of eight (Populus.)

On the right, Populus (eight points); on the left, Via (four points); the result is Via

At least since Medieval Geomancy (and possibly before) each of the four rows corresponds to one of the four Aristotelian/Empedoclean elements: Fire, Air, Water, Earth. The question, however, is how important this notion is. Medieval and Renaissance geomancers seem to have almost completely disregarded this set of correspondences beyond the initial mention of them. This seems to conform to a certain premodern gusto for correspondences. If you read Christopher Cattan’s book on Geomancy, you’ll know the amount of practically useless information about elements and astrology that he shoves down our throats before getting to the practical side, where such information is never elaborated on nor used.

To put it more positively, the Medieval mindset was extremely different from our postmodern one. To the Medieval (and the Renaissance is, in spite of all we hear about it, but a colorful appendage to the Middle Ages) the world was an inherently coherent, fully interconnected system of correspondences, wherein the lower and smaller was inscribed into the larger and higher. The Macrocosm/Microcosm distinction played a major role. The Microcosm, i.e., the world of men, was in small what the Macrocosm was in large. Humans themselves, in their complexion, faculties and powers, mirrored the larger scheme of things.

Because all was seen as interconnected, it was impossible for a writer to describe a single art without describing its connection to the whole, as on such connection dependended the art’s legitimacy in the common view. This is why the four rows of a Geomantic figure, for instance, are made to correspond to the head, neck, trunk and feet of a human (microcosm) as well as to the four elemental spheres (macrocosm.)The very attempt to astrologize Geomancy must have catered to the double need to understand it in light of what was considered an already legitimate science on one hand, and to inject the omnipresent beloved astrological symbolism in it on the other.

All this is well and good. But the point remains that we don’t really know how knowledge of the elements is supposed to help us in a geomantic reading. For that matter, we don’t even know what the numbers One and Two are supposed to mean. What does it mean that the figure called Puella has a single point in its Fire row and two in its Air row? Old manuscripts never explain it. Most modern interpreters see one point as an indication that the corresponding element is active or manifest, two that the element is passive or unmanifest (Nick Farrell has proposed a slight variation of the interpretation, though. Check his blog, which is an endless source of fascinating information on all things magic.) They then launch into endless rationalizations on the complex meaning of these elemental configurations.

Puella, with two points in its second row (Air)

I don’t share this passion for overanalysis, especially because all this has very little bearing on how actual readings work. John Michael Greer says that old geomancers did not mention all this analytical stuff because it was implicit in their view. I am more inclined to suspect that all this overinterpretation of Geomancy is exquisitely new and very typical of our age. If you are familiar with the ridiculous lengths people will go to in order to justify this or that smear on the cardboard of an ancient tarot card as a deep esoteric secret, you’ll see immediately what I mean.

The Medieval mind was very much acquainted with symbols, but it was also very much used to explaining them outright when they saw them. That’s how we got endless libraries of pedantic manuscripts. But their explanations were rarely tortuous and mind-bending. Because symbols were seen as natural parts of the cosmos, the interpretation of symbols was not something to melt your brains on.

We, on the other hand, learn about symbols in roundabout ways, usually only after we’ve become actively interested in them, and when we do find them, we tend to exaggerate in the interpretation to compensate for the fact that we live in a mundane world of nihilism and meaninglessness. So maybe Puella has two points in its Air row because it symbolizes lack of communication or reasoning ability or some such. It’s more likely that the interpretation of the figures stemmed from a combination of how they more or less looked plus remnants of the old Arabic tradition plus the astrological associations.

What is true, however, is that single and double points have different practical effects on the operation of Geomantic Addition, as mentioned previously. Two points act as a mirror for the corresponding number of points in the other figure, while one point changes the number of points in the other figure from odd to even or from even to odd. In this sense, the current interpretation that one point represents activity and two points represent passivity does seem to hold some water.

This is especially noticeable in the figures of Via and Populus, shown above. Populus, whose every row is made up of two points, passively accepts the figure it is added to, replicating it. Via, on the other hand, is made up of one point in every row, so it turns any figure into its opposite. Interestingly, both figures are attributed to the Moon, astrological ruler of mirrors and chief symbol of change. When you add Via and Populus, you get Via, and whether this is because Populus mirrors Via or because Via changes Populus to its opposite is a matter of interpretation.

The astrological attributions of the figures are as follows:

FigurePlanetSign
Via (Way)MoonLeo
Populus (People)MoonCapricorn
Fortuna Major (Greter Fortune)SunAquarius
Fortuna Minor (Lesser Fortune)SunTaurus
Puer (Boy)MarsAries (sometimes given as Libra)
Rubeus (Red)MarsGemini
Puella (Girl)VenusLibra (sometimes given as Aries)
Amissio (Loss)VenusLibra
Acquisitio (Gain)JupiterAries
Laetitia (Happiness)JupiterTaurus
Carcer (Prison)SaturnPisces
Tristitia (Sadness)SaturnScorpio
Albus (White)MercuryCancer
Conjunctio (Conjunction)MercuryVirgo
Caput Draconis (Dragon’s Head)North Node, The BeneficsVirgo
Cauda Draconis (Dragon’s Tail)South Node, The MaleficsSagittarius
The astrological correspondences of the sixteen Geomantic figures

You may find tables with different attributions.

The figures are also assigned to the four elements (four each). John Michael Greer says that the figures are assigned an outer element and an inner element, but I don’t know where he pulled this from, as I’ve never seen it in older manuscripts. It may be I’m simply ignorant, but until I see confirmation of this practice I will forebear from using the double element.

Another classification that was considered very important in the past was between incoming or entering and outgoing or exiting figures. This tells us whether something will happen quickly or not, or whether it will last or not. Furthermore, the figures are said to be fortunate, unfortunate or mixed, although some ‘unfortunate’ figures can be good and vice versa. Don’t put too much stock into this classification in good and bad, as whether a figure is good or bad depends on the question. Fortuna Minor is often given as bad, only because it is the opposite of Fortuna Major, but it is actually mostly good.

FigureElementQualityFortune
ViaWaterCommonMixed
PopulusWaterCommonMixed
Fortuna MajorEarthEnteringGood
Fortuna MinorFireExitingBad
PuerAirExitingBad
RubeusFireExitingBad
PuellaWaterEnteringGood
AmissioFireExitingBad
AcquisitioAirEnteringGood
LaetitiaAirExitingGood
CarcerEarthCommonBad
TristitiaEarthEnteringBad
AlbusWaterEnteringGood
ConjunctioAirCommonMixed
Caput DraconisEarthEnteringGood
Cauda DraconisFireExitingBad
The Geomantic figures with their element and their movement

Vera Sibilla Reading – Will He Get a Job?

Occasionally I get to do a reading that is worth discussing. This reading was done last November. A friend of ours, a mature woman, was worried that her son, 21, wasn’t going to find a job. The cards were:

“Will my son find a job?” Vera sibilla reading

The first card, the Merchant, is the theme card for the son’s work. It is reversed, showing the difficult moment. Immediately after comes the Fortune card, which technically should be a stroke of luck in the person’s destiny. Following is the Sighs card, which represents delay and waiting, in its main meanings. It also shows that the card the young woman is looking at is something the querent is worried about or is expecting. The Maiden, the Queen of Clubs, is usually a significator for a young woman. However, it also has the peculiar function of showing where the problem lies: it’s the card she is facing away from and pointing her finger at. Finally, there’s the Death card. Usually it’s not good to end a reading with the Death card, but in this case the reading was clear enough.

The young man will not find a job. The stroke of luck (Fortune) is not real, but merely something he is waiting for (Sighs). To paraphrase, he’s not looking for a job. This is the problem (Maiden) that leads to a dead end (Death). For several months, therefore, the boy won’t find a job, simply because he is passively hoping it will drop in his lap. In July of 2023 I got confirmation that he hasn’t yet found one. Of course, the cards are time-bound. At this point it would be good to do another reading. We shall see.

Geomancy – From the Four Mothers to the Geomantic Shield Chart

In the previous article I’ve talked about how to generate the four Mothers of a Geomancy reading. These are the four geomantic figures you need in order to answer a question. As I discussed previously, the four Mothers, being actively created by you (or the questioner), represent your point of view, what you actively bring to the table. Afterward, we generate the four Daughters, which represent the consequence of your stance in the outside world around you.

This divides the Shield Chart into two halves: the right half, assigned to the querent or to what speaks in favor of the querent getting his wish; and the left half, assigned to the quesited or to the obstacles. These are like thesis and antithesis: as soon as the thesis is given, the antithesis is called into being automatically. The right half, the querent’s side, culminates into the Right Witness, while the left side culminates into the Left Witness. Here, the separation between thesis and antithesis reaches its apex, and can no longer be carried further, and must therefore be resolved. This is done by adding the Witnesses to form the Judge. This is the only figure in the chart that encompasses both right and left side, which is why the term “Judge” is fitting: the Judge must see the whole picture and take it into account in order to rule fairly.

Let us start with the Four Mothers, and let’s derive the Four Daughters from them.

the four Mothers of a Geomancy reading

Above you find the Four Mothers. These are seen from right to left. To obtain the first daughter, we need to take into account the first row of points in each of the four Mothers. In the example above, the first row of the first Mother has two points, the first row of the second Mother has one point, the first row of the third Mother has two points and the first row of the fourth Mother has one point. This means that the first Daughter is going to be formed of two points in the top row, one in the second, two in the third and again one in the fourth. The other three Daughters are formed in the exact same way, only, we take into account the corresponding row in the four Mothers (i.e., for the second Daughter, the second row of each of the four Mothers, for the third Daughter, the third row of each of the four Mothers, for the fourth Daughter, the fourth row of each of the four Mothers.) At this point, we have the base line of the Geomantic Shield.

From right to left, the four Mothers and the four Daughters

From this base line, which encompasses the two sides of the shield, we begin a new kind of operation, which will allow us to obtain the four Nieces. This operation is called Geomantic Addition. This is a very simple formula. Take the first two Mothers as an example. Now add the number of points in the top row of each. The sum is three (two in the first Mother, one in the second Mother.) Three is an odd number, and odd numbers are represented by a single point. Therefore, the result of this Geomantic Addition is going to be a figure whose first row is occupied by a single dot rather than two. Now we go through the same process row by row. Only at the end, with the fourth and final row, do we find that the operation gives a different result: here, both the first and the second Mother are made up of two points, so the result is four. Four is even, and even is represented by two points.

First MotherSecond MotherFirst Niece
O OOO
O OOO
O OOO
O OO OO O
The process to obtain the first Niece

In general, the process of Geomantic Addition can only yield four scenarios.

First VariableSecond VariableNumber of PointsOdd/EvenResult
O OO O4EvenO O
O OO3OddO
OO O3OddO
OO2EvenO O
All possible scenarios in the process of Geomantic Addition

By pairing first and second Mother together, we get the first Niece; third and fourth Mother yield the second Niece; first and second Daughter give us the third Niece; and third and fourth daughter result in the fourth and final Niece.

Four Mothers, four Daughters and four Nieces

At this point, we go over the process once more, pairing up the first and second Niece to obtain the Right Witness and the third and fourth to get the Left Witness.

the four Mothers, four Daughters, four Nieces and two Witnesses

The final addition yields the Judge, which is the only figure of the Geomantic Shield to result from the Left and Right side of the Shield communicating with each other.

The complete Geomantic Shield

This completes the operation. It is customary to derive a sixteenth figure by adding the figure of the querent, i.e., usually the first Mother, with the Judge, but this sixteenth figure is often not explicitly drawn on the shield, though it might sometimes, and there are examples of it in the old literature.

Note: all images are from the App ‘Simple Geomancy’

A Step by Step Deconstruction of a Geomancy Reading

In all Medieval handbooks of Geomancy, this method of divination is called something like “a brief science”, meaning an art that can be mastered with little effort. It was often sold as some kind of quick, “portable” oracle. This, I presume, is in comparison with Astrology, which back then required no small amount of mathematical knowledge, astrological software still being a couple of years away.

By comparison, anyone who can memorize a couple of meanings and rules and is capable of producing a Geomantic Shield (i.e., the chart) can obtain a quick answer.

The more I delve into Geomancy’s Medieval practice, the more I realize that all modern attempts at reviving it hinge on some kind of rationalization or optimization of what was, essentially, a rather chaotic (though not random) method. It is typical of the pre-modern approach to rely on older authority and compile as many observations and rules as possible from previous sources, even when contradictory with each other, so as to have an endless array of techniques to throw at the chart in hopes of teasing out the wanted response. This is not unlike what modern astrologers do when they interpret birth charts, though I must say, unlike contemporary astrology, traditional geomancy does work.

Producing a Geomantic Shield, Step by Step

If rationalization it must be, then it makes sense first to understand what it is that a geomancy reading does, that is, what it accomplishes from a structural standpoint. This is a Geomancy Shield.

Example of Geomantic Shield

In this shield, not all the figures are generated by the querent/diviner. In fact, only the figures circled in red are actively produced by the person interested in the reading. These are made from right to left, following the numbered order.

The Four Mothers produced by the querent are in red, the Four Daughters in blue

Once the four main geomantic figures (called the “four Mothers“) are produced, every other passage is automatic and relies on certain geomantic operations to fill out the Shield. One such operation is very particular, in that it only occurs once throughout the reading, while the other one is repeated many times. I’m talking about the operation that produces the “four Daughters.” This consists in taking the first line from every one of the first four figures (the mothers) to produce the fifth figure or first daughter; then taking the second line from each of the four mothers to produce the sixth figure or second daughter, and so on, until we have four mothers and four daughters (the daughters are circled in blue.)

As you can see, for instance, if you take the first line from each of the four mothers, you get a first line of two points, a second line of one point, then a third line of two points and a last, fourth line of one point, which now occupies the fifth house.

Once this operation is over, it is never repeated again, and it leaves us with a double set of four figures each. These two sets are not unrelated (hence the names of mothers and daughters.) They must of necessity be comprised of the same number of points, albeit differently shuffled around. Still, as much as they are related, they represent a split of some type, a doubling of reality from one into two related but separate sides.

Now it is a matter of producing the rest of the chart. This is done by taking the figures two by two and “adding” them line by line. We pair the first and second mother together, then the third and fourth, then the fist and second daughter together, and then the third and fourth. Adding here means taking the points that comprise each line in the two figures, adding them and seeing if you get an odd or even number: if you get an odd number, the resulting line will have one point; if you get an even number, the resulting figure line will have two points. This produces the “four Nieces” which occupy the second row in the Shield. Take careful notice that, at this point, Mothers and Daughters have not interacted with each other yet.

The Four Nieces in Geomancy

Once we have the Mothers, the Daughters and the Nieces, we repeat the second operation once more by pairing up the Nieces, the first with the second and the third with the fourth. As you can appreciate, once more, Mothers and Daughters haven’t come into contact: the split hasn’t been mended.

The Two Witnesses coming out of the Four Nieces

The two figures resulting from the addition of the four Nieces are the two Witnesses, which are the first two members of the “Geomantic Court.” The Right Witness is the ultimate consequence of the four Mothers, while the Left Witness is the ultimate consequence of the four Daughters. We can’t produce any more figures without finally bridging the gap between the right side of the Shield and the left side. This is done by producing the fifteenth figure, the last one, called the Judge. This brings the operation to a close.

The Geomantic Court complete with the Judge is in blue

So, What are we doing in Geomancy?

Anyone familiar with Hegel’s dialectics cannot but look in admiration at what I have just described. We begin the operation with a set of four symbols (the four Mothers) which represent the querent’s active involvement, in the hope of knowing something. A querent that doesn’t want to know anything does not consult an oracle: he is not a querent, ‘querent’ meaning ‘asker’. Therefore, the four Mothers represent the question itself, not in a divinatory sense, but in a structural one: if someone doesn’t want to know something, the Four Mothers don’t appear.

Once this happens, reality splits into two, the Right side representing the querent, the Left side the quesited. This culminates in the reading of the Geomantic Court, in which the Right Witnesses pleads for the querent and the Left one for the quesited, among other possible interpretations. Other variants are: Right side good, Left side bad, Right side past, Left side future, Right side helpful, Left side hindering. These are all variations on the same theme.

The point is that from a Geomantic standpoint, duality comes into being as a result of someone either desiring something they don’t have or fearing they might lose something they have. Objective reality comes into being by “lapsing away” as it were from the Subject, creating a would of sort that requires a series of steps in order to be healed again (‘heal’ literally meaning ‘to make whole’). Try to think of a situation where you don’t need anything: you don’t need food, clothes, air, light, aspirations. You’d be very godly or very dead.

What I just said, therefore, is not a disparaging of dualism: without duality, unity cannot manifest, and remains a sterile, barren field. Without the split, the querent wouldn’t be able to know, or, indeed, to get. By pronouncing his sentence, the Judge makes the situation whole again, which is signified by the fact that only the eight figures with an even number of points can become Judge. Either the querent gets his wish or he doesn’t. But the making whole again presupposes the split, just as in dialectics the synthetic moment cannot be understood and appreciated but through the process of opposition that led to it.

What I just described is, as far as I know, never mentioned in Medieval or Renaissance works on Geomancy–one obvious reason being that dialectics in the Hegelian sense hadn’t been invented yet. Platonic dialectics (that is, conceptual dialectics) comes close, but again, all this seems implicit in the operations of Geomancy and never articulated. I harbor no delusion therefore of having discovered the secret meaning of the art. I am conscious, in fact, that I am merely organizing it according to a model that is familiar to me. But I must say Geomancy wears this model beautifully. It contains a whole philosophy of what it means to ask a question and to get an answer.