History of Chinese Astrology
Chinese astrology has gained a lot of popularity with the renewed interest in the art of Feng Shui. The stream is largely contributed to by readings in astronomy and the various solar and lunar calendars referred to...
5 major planets
- Mercury, associated with water and represented by the black tortoise
- Venus, associated with metal and represented by the white tiger
- Mars, associated with fire and represented by the vermilion bird
- Jupiter, associated with wood and represented by the azure dragon
- Saturn, associated with earth and represented by the yellow dragon
- Rat: disciplined, charismatic, over-ambitious
- Ox: dependable, hardworking, narrow-minded
- Tiger: unpredictable, passionate, obstinate
- Rabbit: sensitive, elegant, opportunistic
- Dragon: stately, noble, prejudiced
- Snake: mystic, creative, distrustful
- Horse: popular, perceptive, gullible
- Ram: sincere, artistic, pessimistic
- Monkey: motivator, dignified, manipulative
- Rooster: organized, perfectionist, egotistical
- Dog: honest, loyal, judgmental
- Pig: sturdy, trusting, fatalistic
- 0 - Yang – metal
- 1 – Yin – metal
- 2 - Yang – water
- 3 - Yin – water
- 4 - Yang – wood
- 5 - Yin – wood
- 6 - Yang – fire
- 7 - Yin – fire
- 8 - Yang – earth
- 9 - Yin - earth
The Chinese Zodiac commences with the celebrations of the Chinese New Year. The two distinct types of readings depend on birth and position of celestial bodies. In fact, the reason why the Chinese New Year falls on a different day each year is that the lunar calendar follows the fortnightly cycles of the moon. Chinese astrology is very old and most of the art has been handed down by word of mouth. In the absence of ancient texts, the only plausible explanation is that the animals connected with each month are empirically associated with human behavior. These animal stereotypes have survived on the basis of the characteristics seen in every human being.
Chinese astrology follows four signs, year, month, day and hour (of birth). These are the four pillars or ascendants on which Chinese astrology is based. Chinese astrology does not imply that the readings predict fate, it specifies the parameters set by the place and time of birth. However, it also helps to inspect and identify the affect of family and culture on the individual. Chinese philosophy and astrology are fascinating, depending on 'balance' and 'range of capability'.

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