|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
About the star : A lucid yellow star in the left Shoulder of the Rein-holder Auriga. Menkalinan is from the Arabic Mankib Dhi-al-'Inan, "The Shoulder of the rein-holder". Menkalinan, Menkalinam, Menkalina are variations on the title. (Allen). General influence of the constellation: According to Ptolemy the bright stars are like Mars and Mercury. The constellation is said to give self-confidence, interest in social and educational problems. Happiness, but danger of great vicissitudes (changes of circumstances effecting one's life). The native is fond of country life and may be a teacher or have the upbringing of young people. By the Kabalists Auriga is associated with the Hebrew letter Samech and the 15th Tarot Trump "The Devil". (Robson).
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
General influence of the star: It causes ruin, disgrace, and frequently violent death. (Robson). Menkalinan is of a Venusian nature, Robson asserts that it causes ruin, disgrace and frequently, violent death. If so, it would be a result of excess pleasure seeking. (Noonan). Menkalinan is basically of a Jupiter character, with a weak influence of Mars and Venus character. Only when really in good aspect is this fixed star rated as a positive acting one. Badly positioned, this star will be most unhelpful. If Jupiter is found in the same degree as Menkalinan, the native has a promise of fortunes honors, riches, popularity and exceptional friendships. In conjunction with Mars, it has been found that death occurred on occasion of official festivities, military exercises or battles. (Ebertin) |
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Remember, only the parallel and conjunction are important and the orb must be no more than 1 (one) degree. |
||||||||||||||||||||
Rising: The Charioteer lifts his team from ocean and wrests his wheels up from the downward slope of the horizon where icy Boreas lashes us with his bitter blasts. He will impart his own enthusiasms and the skills, still retained in heaven, which as driver of a chariot he once took pleasure in on earth (that is, the constellation is identffied with Erichthonius). The Charioteer will enable his son to stand in a light chariot and hold in check the four mouths curbed with foam-flecked bits, guide their powerful strength, and keep close to the curve round which they wheel. Again, when the bolts have been drawn and the horses have escaped from the starting-pens, he will urge on the spirited steeds and, leaning forward, he will seem to precede them in their swift career; hardly touching the surface of the track with his light wheels, he will outstrip the winds with his coursers' feet. Holding first place in the contest he will drive to the side in a baulking course and, his obstruction delaying his rivals, deny them the whole breadth of the circus-track; or if he is placed mid-way in the press, he will now swing to a course on the outside, trusting in the open, now keep close to the pointed turning- post, and will leave the result in doubt to the very last moment. As a trick-rider too he will be able to settle himself now on one, now on a second horse, and plant his feet firmly upon them; flying from horse to horse he will perform tricks on the backs of animals in flight themselves; or mounted on a single horse he will now engage in exercise of arms, now whilst still riding pick up gifts scattered along the length of the circus. He will possess virtuosity in all that is connected with such pursuits. Of this constellation, I think, Salmoneus may be held to have been born imitating heaven on earth, he imagined that by setting his team of four on a bridge of bronze and driving it across he had expressed the crash of the heavens and had brought to earth Jove's very self; however, while counterfeiting thunderbolts he was struck by real ones and, falling after the fires he had flung himself, discovered in death that Jove existed. You may well believe that under this constellation was born Bellerophon (Some sources identify the Charioteer with Bellerophon (Schol. Aratus, Phaea. 161). Men like Cato (the Censor, Bellerophon, see the Bellerophon story on the Pegasus page), who flew amid the stars and laid a road on heaven: the sky was the field over which he sped, whilst land and sea lay far beneath his feet, and his path was unmarked by footprints. By examples such as these are you to mark the rising figure of the Charioteer. (Manilus, book 5 of Astronomica, 1st century AD).
|
||||||||||||||||||||
| references | ||||||||||||||||||||