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Zodiac

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

Beautiful photographs of the twelve Zodiac constellations in the night sky, with connecting lines and labels to help identify them.

The zodiac is a special area in the sky that stretches about 8° north and south of the path the Sun appears to follow over the year, called the ecliptic. This path is important because the Moon and bright planets also move through this area as they orbit the Sun.

The zodiac is divided into 12 equal parts, called "signs", each covering 30° of the sky. These signs match up closely with 12 groups of stars called constellations, which have names like Aries, Taurus, Gemini, Cancer, Leo, Virgo, Libra, Scorpio, Sagittarius, Capricorn, Aquarius, and Pisces.

People have used the zodiac for thousands of years to help tell the time of year. Ancient Babylonian astronomers created this system during the 1st millennium BC, and it later spread to Greek astronomy and other cultures. Even today, scientists still use a version of this system to track objects in our Solar System.

Name

The word zodiac comes from an old Latin word. That Latin word came from Ancient Greek. It means "of or relating to little animals." This name fits because many of the twelve zodiac signs are animals or creatures from myths.

In English, the word zodiac can also refer to a twelve-year cycle from East Asian traditions, known as the Chinese zodiac. This cycle uses animals to represent each year. People often use it to talk about personality and life events.

Main articles: Chinese zodiac, Earthly Branches

Usage

Modern zodiac wheel showing the 12 signs used in horoscopic astrology

The zodiac has been used since ancient times, beginning in the Roman era. It is based on ideas from Hellenistic astronomy and Babylonian astronomy. A famous book, the Almagest, by Ptolemy, explains how the zodiac was created.

Today, the zodiac is mainly connected to horoscopic astrology. It also describes the part of the sky where planets move, about 8 degrees above and below the path the Sun seems to follow. For example, the Moon follows a smaller path, only 5 degrees above and below that same line.

History

Further information: Former constellation

Early history

Roman Egyptian coin of Antoninus Pius (dated year 8 of his reign or 145 AD) showing his portrait and a Zodiac wheel with the busts of Helios and Selene in the center

Long ago, around the 14th century BC, people in Egypt made a list of special stars called decans. These appeared in ancient tombs and temples. Later, around the first half of the 1st millennium BC, people in Babylon divided the Sun's path in the sky into 12 equal parts. They called these parts "signs," and each one covered 30 degrees of the sky. This was one of the first ways to measure positions in the sky.

Babylonian astronomers used stars as markers to find the positions of planets. They measured where planets were by comparing them to these marker stars near the Sun's path. They also made special tables to predict where planets would be in the future.

Hebrew astronomy and astrology

A sixth-century mosaic zodiac wheel in synagogue Beth Alpha incorporating Greek-Byzantine elements, Israel

Some stories from ancient Hebrew writings mention ideas that might connect to the 12 signs of the zodiac. For example, some writers thought the special creatures described in these writings matched the signs of the zodiac, like a lion for Leo and a bull for Taurus.

Hellenistic and Roman era

The ideas about the zodiac from Babylon spread to Greece and Rome. Greek writers like Ptolemy wrote books explaining how the signs of the zodiac worked. Ptolemy helped create a system where the zodiac was linked to the seasons, like spring and summer, instead of just the stars.

Zodiac circle with planets, c. 1000 – NLW MS 735C

Hindu zodiac

The zodiac also reached ancient India, where it was changed to match their own star system. Even though the names and symbols were different, the basic ideas stayed the same. For example, one sign in India was called "dhanu," which means "bow," just like the sign Sagittarius, which means "archer."

Middle Ages

The 1st century BC Dendera zodiac (19th-century engraving)

During the Middle Ages, many people in Europe and the Middle East were interested in the zodiac. Books were written about the stars, and some churches even had beautiful windows showing the zodiac signs. Astrologers used special tools to figure out what the stars might mean for people's lives.

Medieval Islamic era

In the time of ancient Islam, many people believed the stars could tell the future. They used the zodiac to help decide important events, like when to start building a city. Some leaders even used astrology to pick lucky dates. However, not everyone agreed with this, and some religious leaders thought it was wrong to try to predict the future.

Early modern

Later on, sailors used the zodiac to help them navigate the seas. They had special books that told them where the Sun and Moon were in the sky. Kings and artists also loved the zodiac, and it appeared on coins and in paintings.

Twelve signs

The zodiac signs in a 16th-century woodcut

Main article: Astrological sign

Depiction of the southern hemisphere constellations in an 11th-century French manuscript (from the Limoges area, probably in the milieu of Adémar de Chabannes, fl. 1020–1034)

The zodiac has twelve equal parts, called signs. Each sign covers 30 degrees of the sky. These signs have special names and symbols from many cultures. A fun rhyme helps remember them:

The ram, the bull, the heavenly twins,
And next the crab, the lion shines,
    The virgin and the scales,
The scorpion, archer, and the goat,
The man who holds the watering-pot,
    And fish with glittering scales.

The Sun moves through each sign for about the same amount of time, but the days can change a little each year. This is because Earth's path around the Sun is not a perfect circle.

HouseUnicode CharacterEcliptic Longitude
(aλ b)
Latin nameGlossGreek name (Romanization of Greek)Sanskrit nameSumero-Babylonian name
1♈︎︎AriesRamΚριός (Krios)Meṣa (मेष)MUL LU.ḪUN.GA "Agrarian Worker", Dumuzi
2♉︎︎30°TaurusBullΤαῦρος (Tauros)Vṛṣabha (वृषभ)MULGU4.AN.NA "Divine Bull of Heaven"
3♊︎︎60°GeminiTwinsΔίδυμοι (Didymoi)Mithuna (मिथुन)MULMAŠ.TAB.BA.GAL.GAL "Great Twins"
4♋︎︎90°CancerCrabΚαρκίνος (Karkinos)Karka (कर्क)MULAL.LUL "Crayfish"
5♌︎︎120°LeoLionΛέων (Leōn)Siṃha (सिंह)MULUR.GU.LA "Lion"
6♍︎︎150°VirgoMaidenΠαρθένος (Parthenos)Kanyā (कन्या)MULAB.SIN "The Furrow"* *"The goddess Shala's ear of grain"
7♎︎︎180°LibraScalesΖυγός (Zygos)Tulā (तुला)MULZIB.BA.AN.NA "Scales"
8♏︎︎210°ScorpioScorpionΣκoρπίος (Skorpios)Vṛścika (वृश्चिक)MULGIR.TAB "Scorpion"
9♐︎︎240°Sagittarius(Centaur) ArcherΤοξότης (Toxotēs)Dhanuṣa (धनुष)MULPA.BIL.SAG, Nedu "soldier"
10♑︎︎270°CapricornMountain Goat or Goat-Horned / Sea-GoatΑἰγόκερως (Aigokerōs)Makara (मकर)MULSUḪUR.MAŠ "Goat-Fish" of Enki
11♒︎︎300°AquariusWater-BearerὙδροχόος (Hydrokhoos)Kumbha (कुंभ)MULGU.LA "Great One" (i.e. Enki), later "pitcher"
12♓︎︎330°Pisces2 FishἸχθύες (Ikhthyes)Mīna (मीन)MULSIM.MAḪ "Tail of the Swallow"; DU.NU.NU "fish-cord"

Constellations

These two maps of the constellations, made long ago, both show the zodiac constellations along a curved line. This line is called the ecliptic.

In tropical astrology, the zodiacal signs are different from the real constellations they are named after. This is because Earth's tilt has changed over time. Also, the Sun does not spend the same amount of time in each constellation. For example, Virgo takes up five times more space than Scorpius. The zodiacal signs are ideas made from the constellations. Each sign takes up exactly one-twelfth of the full circle, but the time the Sun spends in each sign changes a little because of the shape of Earth's orbit.

18th-century star chart illustrating the feet of Ophiuchus crossing the ecliptic

Sidereal astrology tries to match the zodiac signs more closely to the real constellations, but it needs to be adjusted sometimes to stay correct.

The path of the Sun crosses through 13 constellations from old lists. Besides the twelve constellations that give their names to the zodiac signs, the path also goes through Ophiuchus, which sits between Scorpius and Sagittarius. Sometimes people think this means the list of traditional signs has changed, but this is not true.

Some other constellations are sometimes thought of as part of the zodiac too, and planets can pass through up to 25 different constellations. Ancient lists included Orion, Perseus, Auriga, and Andromeda. Today, we know planets can also go through Crater, Sextans, Cetus, Pegasus, Corvus, Hydra, Orion, and Scutum. Very rarely, Venus might pass through Aquila, Canis Minor, Auriga, and Serpens.

Other constellations have stories connected to the zodiac ones. For example, Piscis Austrinus, The Southern Fish, is linked to Aquarius. In old drawings, it seems to catch the water poured from Aquarius' jug. Aquila, The Eagle, might have been linked to the zodiac because of its bright star, Altair. Long ago, Hydra marked a special line in the sky and was connected to Leo, which is often shown standing on the snake on the Dendera zodiac.

Name1977 IAU boundaries (approximate)Solar stayBrightest star
Aries19 April – 13 May25 daysHamal
Taurus14 May – 19 June37 daysAldebaran
Gemini20 June – 20 July31 daysPollux
Cancer21 July – 9 August20 daysTarf
Leo10 August – 15 September37 daysRegulus
Virgo16 September – 30 October45 daysSpica
Libra31 October – 22 November23 daysZubeneschamali
Scorpius23 November – 29 November7 daysAntares
Ophiuchus30 November – 17 December18 daysRasalhague
Sagittarius18 December – 18 January32 daysKaus Australis
Capricornus19 January – 15 February28 daysDeneb Algedi
Aquarius16 February – 11 March24 daysSadalsuud
Pisces12 March – 18 April38 daysAlpherg

Precession of the equinoxes

Further information: Axial precession, Epoch (astronomy), Sidereal and tropical astrology, Astrological age, and Ayanamsa

The zodiac system began in Babylonia about 2,500 years ago. It was created during a time called the "Age of Aries." At that time, people did not know about the precession of the equinoxes, a slow wobble of Earth's axis.

Today, the zodiac can be used in two ways. One way keeps the signs fixed to the stars (sidereal). The other ties the signs to the Sun's position at the March equinox (tropical). Western astrology uses the tropical way, while Hindu astrology uses the sidereal way. Because of the precession of the equinoxes, these two systems move apart slowly.

In Western astrology, the sign Aries is now found in the constellation Pisces. This is why we hear about the “Age of Pisces.” The sidereal system corrects for this shift using something called the ayanamsa. The idea of precession was discovered by Hipparchus around 130 BC. Later, Ptolemy wrote about it in his book, the Almagest. He explained that Greek astronomers started their zodiac at the point where the Sun is during the March equinox. They called this the first degree of Aries. This is known as the tropical zodiac.

In modern astronomy

The zodiac is a part of space that is about 8° above and below the path the Sun appears to follow in the sky over a year, called the ecliptic. This area includes where the Moon and the main planets travel. Because most planets orbit close to Earth's path, this area is narrow.

Astronomers once used the zodiac to measure positions in the sky, starting from a point called the "first point of Aries." The zodiac is split into twelve equal parts, or signs, each covering 30° of this path. Today, astronomers usually use a different system based on Earth's axis, but the zodiac still helps us learn where planets and the Moon move. The zodiac also gives its name to a faint glow in the night sky called the zodiacal light, caused by sunlight reflecting off tiny particles between the planets.

Unicode characters

In Unicode, the symbols for the zodiac signs are in a special area called "Miscellaneous Symbols". You can make these symbols look like regular text by adding a special code U+FE0E, or make them look like colorful pictures (emojis) by adding U+FE0F.

Unicode charactertextemoji
U+2648 ♈ ARIES♈︎♈️
U+2649 ♉ TAURUS♉︎♉️
U+264A ♊ GEMINI♊︎♊️
U+264B ♋ CANCER♋︎♋️
U+264C ♌ LEO♌︎♌️
U+264D ♍ VIRGO♍︎♍️
U+264E ♎ LIBRA♎︎♎️
U+264F ♏ SCORPIUS♏︎♏️
U+2650 ♐ SAGITTARIUS♐︎♐️
U+2651 ♑ CAPRICORN♑︎♑️
U+2652 ♒ AQUARIUS♒︎♒️
U+2653 ♓ PISCES♓︎♓️
U+26CE ⛎ OPHIUCHUS⛎︎⛎️

Images

Diagram showing the path of the Sun across the sky as seen from Earth, helping us understand how stars appear to move throughout the year.
A beautiful stained glass window from Angers Cathedral showing Christ surrounded by symbols of the zodiac and musical angels, celebrating heavenly joy and the stars.
An intricate Ottoman sundial displayed in the Debbane Palace museum.
An ancient moveable tool used to track the positions of the sun and moon in the zodiac, showing how people in the Middle Ages studied the stars and seasons.
An old star map from 1810 showing constellations in the night sky, including a now-obsolete constellation called 'Vulpecula et Suesor' (the Fox and the Geese).

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Zodiac, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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