Guest guest Posted October 2, 2007 Report Share Posted October 2, 2007 Dear All, Here is the info to start a discussion on 'Lagna lord in 9th house' . Let us have a worthy discussion on the same. ========================================= Lagna lord in 9th House -- If lagna lord is in 9th, the native would be lucky and dear to people. He will be a devotee of God Vishnu. He would an efficient individual, efficient especially in speech and oratory. With wife, children and good amount of wealth (essentials for a good worldly life) he will lead a good life. He will have many respectable relatives. He will do many good deeds and would be a righteous individual. It could be said that he is an individual with `Satwa Guna', meaning he will have the ability to keep the same balanced state of mind both in happiness and sadness. Bestowed with many good qualities, he will excel as a popular and radiant individual. [Note that father is NOT mentioned in any of the above results] If lagna lord is in 9th, the native would be lucky and dear to people. He will be a devotee of God Vishnu. He would an efficient individual, efficient especially in speech and oratory. With wife, children and good amount of wealth (essentials for a good worldly life) he will lead a good life. - Parasara Hora Since 9th is the house signifying luck it is natural to say that the native would be lucky, and a devotee of god. But why God Vishnu? There is specific reason for this derivation. The trines signify the trinity. Lagna signifies Brahma; 9th Vishnu; 5th Siva. This derivation primarily comes from the zodiac itself. In the Zodiac Aries being the first sign signifies creation and thus Brahma; 5th being Leo, the house of Sun, signifies Siva, 9th being the Sagittarius, the house of Jupiter, signifies Vishnu. There is a saying `Jeevastu Narayana', meaning `Jupiter signifies Narayana (God Vishnu floating in the primordial ocean which caused the creation of the universe). Thus 9th signifies god Vishnu and that is why it is derived that lagna lord in 9th will make the native a devotee of God Vishnu. Thus we get a cute rule - Rule 8: The significance of all the 12 houses are related to the 12 signs from Aries onwards as well. Aries could signify creation, so as lagna; Taurus could signify food so as 2nd and so on. Much significance that gets associated to the houses is derived in this way. This understanding can be used while deriving results using `House Base' system as well. Parasara tells us that if lagna lord is in 9th he would be an efficient individual - why? Note that 9th is a house that is in the visible part of zodiac. (1 to 7 = Invisible or hidden half; 7 to 12 = visible or popular half). Thus the qualities of the native would be well visible to the public; he is lucky, spiritual, and righteous. All these help him in being an efficient and successful individual. But this logic does not help us in clarifying the derivation - he would be an efficient individual, efficient especially in speech and oratory. What speech has to do with 9th? First it may seem that - no, there is no relation. But note that Parasara is simply extending the previous rule stated. 9th Sign of zodiac is Sagittarius owned by Jupiter, and all the qualities such as Speech, efficiency in speech, interest in telling spiritual and puranic stories, good knowledge are all related to Jupiter itself. Thus it is quite natural to derive the result `the native would be efficient especially in speech and oratory'. This ability of the native will persist even to his old age, as indicated by the fact that 9th is 8th (longevity) from 2nd house (speech). Lagna lord in 9th gives beneficial results to 9th, causing longevity of speech, or in other words, the ability to amaze people with wonderful knowledge bits and excellent speaking abilities even in old age. Why it is said that he would live a good life with wife, children and wealth? Note that these are the prime conditions for being a lucky person in worldly life. As a balanced, efficient, lucky individual he is sure to have the prime necessities for worldly happiness - which happens to be `wife, children and wealth'. Also note that 9th is 5th from 5th, and in essence LL in 9th bestows good results for 5th indicating - beneficial results for children (5th house). Similarly 9th is 3rd, an upachaya (growth and well being) house from 7th. Thus LL in 9th gives beneficial results to 9th, indicating growth and well-being of 7th (wife) as well. LL in 9th aspects 3rd house, which is 2nd from 2nd (a rule discussed earlier) and thus provides good results for 2nd house as well, providing good wealth. Thus in short, it turns out that - `wealth, wife and children' is a well thought-out derivation, supported by logic in many ways. If lagna lord is in 9th, the native will have many respectable relatives. He will do many good deeds (He would a righteous individual); keep the same balanced state of mind both in happiness and sadness (He is an individual with `Satwa Guna') ; will have many good qualities. He will excel as a popular and radiant individual. - Meenaraja Hora Why many respectable relatives - who are they? If Meenaraja wanted to indicate the native will have a good father, it would have been easy to understand, since 9th signifies father. But he says - `many respectable relatives'. Of course respectability is a quality of 9th house and therefore no doubt on that. A good respectable father is also a possibility. What about other relatives - intended? From the discussion of 3rd house, we already know that - In male horoscope, 9th house can indicate - wife's sister, brother's wife, sister's husband and wife's brother. In female horoscope, 9th house can indicate - husband's brother, sister's husband, brother's wife, husband's sister. Son's son and daughter, Daughter's son and daughter, Mother's brother (the traditional husband as per some sects) are also indicated by 9th house itself. It is due to all these reasons that Meenaraja resorted to the statement, `LL in 9th (bestows good results for 9th and therefore) indicate having many respectable relatives to the native'. Meenaraja tells us that `the native will keep his equally balanced state of mind in happiness and sadness' - why? It is because he is a spiritual individual. Spiritual awareness helps the native to achieve the same without much effort. In a calm mind the divine reflects and the beneficial results follow. The remaining derivations of Meenaraja are also easy to understand in this context. Because we are discussing 9th house, there is unique point to note. Why 9th house signify father? If 4th is mother (as indicated by the ownership of Moon in Cancer, 4th sign from Aries), then the natural thing was to say that 10th signify father, since the same is 7th from 4th as well. But all the medieval texts, tell us that - father is signified by 9th house. Why? Note that 9th indicate `Mother's mother's brother - the traditional husband as per customs followed by several sects'. The Vedic tradition NEVER supported such a system - then how come astrological texts attribute the significance of father to 9th house instead of 10th? It would be interesting to note the following points in this context. * Only books of Jain (Garga hora etc) and South Indian tradition attribute 9th house to father. [i am yet to see any other ancient Rishi hora sloka (other than Garga Hora sloka) which attribute the significance of `father' to 9th house. Of course astrology did not originate in South India but in the banks of `Saraswati River'. It is the ancient Jain siddhas who spread it through out India, especially in south India] * All ancient text agree on the fact that 9th house signifies Guru. * While discussing 4th house (and in many other places) Parasara indicated that father is signified by 10th house rather than 9th. * In many traditions (including non-vedic and vedic; Agama and Nigama) father was the first Guru of the native, especially related to Upanayana etc. Many texts say that - Guru IS father, equating both of them, possibly because Upanayana (providing sacred thread) is considered as the second birth of the native. I think - 1) Emphasis with Jain and South indian traditions attribute the significance of father to 9th indicate that the tradition of marrying `mother's brother' was very common among both of them. 2) This points to the agama (non-vedic) origin of astrology as well. Even Mihira tells us that `Astrology is an Agama sastra' emphasizing its non-vedic nature. But Mihira was so authentic and popular, that from the period of Mihira onwards considering 9th as father got accepted by almost all the followers of astrology (south indian and north indian; non-vedic and vedic; Jain and Hindu) alike. Note that currently there is almost no text available (except BPHS) that tells us that - 10th house signifies father. It is cute fact to note. 3) Texts like Parasara hora (BC 1400) could be an effort to mix the Agama system of astrology (some streams of which like the Jains, followed customs like marrying `mother's brother') with the other streams (which never followed such a custom). This could be a controversial statement. But if it is so, this also points to the fact why texts like BPHS are popular in north, while south instead depends on older Rishi horas (like Skanda hora, Garga hora etc) and the text of Mihira who accepts that astrology is an Agama sastra (Knowledge of Tantric origin). 4) It is also possible that the above statement is wrong. It is possible that except Jains (Garga Hora) no other Rishi horas followed the system of ascribing the significance of father to 9th house (we need to study the available quotes). It is possible that any such indications we may find in BPHS are later interpolations. If the above statements are true we would have to resort to the statement "No Rishi Hora except Garga Hora attributes the significance of father to 9th house. As per them father is signified by 10th house". This is a subject with good scope for astrological research. Research and come out with ancient quotes that support your arguments. 5) Essentially thus the fact springs up that the Jain contribution to the development of astrology in India - is far more than what we currently ascribe them to. Similarly the contribution of Vedic tradition and literature to the development of Nirayana astrology is far less than what we ascribe them to. Possibly ancient indian astrology is a branch of science developed by the Asura Tantric culture of Harappa (which covered many other parts of the world such as Iran, Assyria etc as well) and spread throughout India mostly through the Jain Siddhas. That was why it was still Agama sastra (Tantric knowledge branch) even at the period of Mihira (i.e. AD 550). Note that even Aryabhata was a Jain. Since Sage Garga - a Jain sage - who wrote Garga Hora lived around BC 1400, and was a contemporary of Skanda (the originator of Nirayana astrological knowledge who wrote Skanda Hora), it turns out that the Jain tradition is as old as Vedic tradition. The Saiva Agama tradition existed prior to that even in the Harappan period. So the flow of this eternal knowledge branch known as Nirayana Astrology in ancient India would be from Saiva Agama tradition to Jain Tradition to South India through the sea shore (Gujarat and Orissa). And then by the period of Mihira getting accepted by the whole of India - mixing both Agamic Nirayana Zodiacal astrology and Vedic Tropical Astrology. Mutual interactions and give and take must have happened in between as well - but it is fair to say that till the period of Mihira (AD 550), Nirayana zodiacal Astrology and Sayana Tropical astrology were treated separately in India - the first considered as Agamic and the second as Vedic (Nigamic). The non-vedic nature of astrology is also evident from the fact that, astrology texts don't even mention the name of Lagatha or his student Suchi, who wrote the text `Vedanga Jyotisha' in BC1400, a text dealing with astronomy and calendar system known to and followed by vedic tradition. Thus possibly all the 18 sages mentioned by astrological classics were outside vedic tradition - no wonder the hindu brahmin fanatics prior to the period of Mihira never tried to save those astrological texts - from extinction. The other stalwart of the same era, Aryabhata (AD 522) was a follower of Jain religion. It should be said that - together they saved this knowledge of Nirayana astrology from complete extinction. We have drifted away a bit during this discussion, from our major subject that is `Lagna lord in various house' but still I think it is worth it. Now let us go back and continue our study - The 9th house signifies things such as - luck, guru, vishnu, purana, story telling, father, meditation, kind donations, righteous deeds, devotion etc. Thus the placement of lagna lord in 9th generates special importance to the derivations related to the same. - by Sreenadh (sreesog) ========================================= Love, Sreenadh Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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