Jyotisha — Vedic Astrology ”The Science of Light” — The Eye of the Vedas.A Complete Guide to Its History, Cosmology, and Techniques 

Jyotisha — Vedic Astrology

A Complete Guide to Its History, Cosmology, and Techniques

ジョーティシュ(インド占星術)完全ガイド

“The Science of Light” — The Eye of the Vedas

1. What Is Jyotisha?

Jyotisha (also spelled Jyotish) is a system of astrology that has developed across the Indian subcontinent for thousands of years. It is widely known as Vedic Astrology. The name comes from the Sanskrit roots jyoti (light) and isha (lord or master) — literally “the science of light” or “lord of light.”

While Western astrology tends to focus on psychological tendencies and character analysis, Jyotisha places its greatest emphasis on predicting concrete events — specifically, when and what will happen. This capacity for precise timing is made possible by the Dasha system, a planetary period cycle unique to Vedic astrology.

The Place of Jyotisha
  • One of the six Vedangas (auxiliary limbs of the Vedas). Known as “the Eye of the Vedas.”
  • Purpose: understanding individual destiny, identifying auspicious and inauspicious periods, determining timing for religious rituals
  • Scope: individuals (Jataka), nations and world events (Muhurta / Samhita), electional astrology
  • Key distinction from Western astrology: sidereal (fixed-star) zodiac + the Dasha planetary period system
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2. History of Jyotisha

2.1 Origins: The Vedic Age (before 2000 BCE)

The earliest traces of Jyotisha appear in the Rigveda. The concept of the Nakshatras (lunar mansions) — used to track the moon’s movement through the sky and connect it to agriculture, ritual, and seasonal change — is already present in this ancient text. At this stage, Jyotisha was primarily concerned with lunar cycles and seasonal observation, not the horoscopic astrology we know today.

This early form of Jyotisha is sometimes called Kala Jyotisha (the science of time and calendar), serving as a practical guide to determining auspicious moments for ritual.

2.2 Vedanga Jyotisha (1200–500 BCE)

The oldest surviving astrological text, the Vedanga Jyotisha, is attributed to the sage Lagadha. It systematizes rules for calculating the movements of the sun, moon, and planets. Jyotisha was formally recognized as one of the six Vedangas — the auxiliary disciplines of the Vedas:

VedangaMeaningContent
ShikshaPhoneticsCorrect pronunciation and meter of Vedic chanting
ChandasProsodyPoetic meter and form of Vedic verses
VyakaranaGrammarSanskrit grammar (Panini’s Ashtadhyayi)
NiruktaEtymologyMeaning and interpretation of Vedic words
KalpaRitualProcedures and rules for Vedic sacrifice
JyotishaAstrology / AstronomyCelestial movement, time, and fate

2.3 Greek and Babylonian Influence (300 BCE – 300 CE)

Following Alexander the Great’s Indian campaign (327–326 BCE), Greek astrological concepts began flowing into India, triggering a major transformation of the tradition:

  • The 12 zodiac signs (Rashis) were adopted from Greek astrology
  • The system of 7 planets (Sun, Moon, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, Saturn) became established
  • The concept of the horoscope — mapping the sky at the moment of birth — took root
  • The Lagna (Ascendant) became central to chart interpretation

The landmark text of this period is the Yavanajataka (c. 175 CE, by Sphujidhvaja). Yavana means “Greek,” and this text represents the first major Sanskrit translation and adaptation of Greek horoscopic astrology.

2.4 The Classical Period (400–1200 CE)

This era produced the most important canonical texts that remain foundational today:

TextAuthor / PeriodSignificance
Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra (BPHS)Parashara (c. 600–1000 CE)The supreme classical authority. Source of nearly all techniques. K.N. Rao’s most cited text.
Brihat JatakaVarahamihira (505–587 CE)Encyclopedic classical work. Scientific and systematic in approach.
Sarvartha ChintamaniVenkatesh Daivajnya (c. 1600)Comprehensive treatment of yogas and chart combinations.
Jataka ParijataVaidyanatha Daivajnya (c. 1400)Widely used practical reference for chart interpretation.
YavanajatakaSphujidhvaja (c. 175 CE)The Indianization of Greek astrology. Historically pivotal.

2.5 The Islamic and Mughal Period (1200–1800)

Even during Muslim rule, Jyotisha survived under the patronage of regional kingdoms in Rajasthan, Bengal, and elsewhere. Cross-fertilization with Arabic astrology gave birth to the Tajika school — a hybrid tradition incorporating Arabic annual chart techniques and aspect calculations into the Indian framework.

2.6 The Modern Era (1800–present)

During British colonial rule, Jyotisha was marginalized as “superstition.” After Indian independence in 1947, it experienced a major revival and is now practiced worldwide.

FigureActive PeriodContribution
B.V. Raman1912–1998Pioneer who introduced Jyotisha to the English-speaking world. Founded the Astrological Magazine.
K.N. Rao1931–presentForemost living authority. Studied over 50,000 charts. Founded the astrology school at Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, New Delhi.
Hardev Sharma Trivedic. 1900–1983Eminent mundane astrologer. K.N. Rao’s principal teacher.
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3. Cosmological and Philosophical Foundations

3.1 Karma and Dharma — The Philosophical Basis

Jyotisha is rooted in the concept of karma (action and its consequences) shared by Hindu and Buddhist philosophy. The planetary configuration at the moment of birth is understood to reflect the karma — the accumulated results of past actions — that a soul brings into this life.

Three Layers of Karma in Jyotisha
  • Dridha (fixed) karma: Immutable destiny. Events clearly indicated by the chart.
  • Adridha (mutable) karma: Fate that can be altered through free will and effort.
  • Dridha-Adridha: Partially changeable karma — between the two extremes.

The purpose of Jyotisha is not fatalism, but awareness: “Know your destiny, accept what cannot be changed, and actively shape what can.”

3.2 Purusharthas — The Four Goals of Life

Hindu philosophy recognizes four legitimate aims of human existence. In Jyotisha, each group of houses corresponds to one of these goals:

GoalMeaningAssociated Houses
Dharma (Righteousness)Fulfilling one’s moral and spiritual duty1H, 5H, 9H
Artha (Wealth)Pursuit of material prosperity2H, 6H, 10H
Kama (Desire)Fulfillment of emotional and sensory desires3H, 7H, 11H
Moksha (Liberation)Release from the cycle of rebirth4H, 8H, 12H

3.3 The Three Gunas and the Planets

GunaQualityAssociated Planets
Sattva (Purity)Clarity, harmony, wisdomSun, Moon, Jupiter
Rajas (Activity)Passion, action, desireMercury, Venus
Tamas (Inertia)Inertia, ignorance, materialismSaturn, Mars, Rahu, Ketu
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4. Structure of the Horoscope

4.1 Sidereal vs. Tropical Zodiac

Jyotisha (Indian)Western Astrology
Zodiac TypeSidereal (fixed-star zodiac)Tropical (vernal-equinox zodiac)
Reference PointActual positions of fixed starsVernal equinox (shifts due to precession)
AyanamshaRequired (~23–24° correction)Not used
Current Difference~23–24° (Lahiri ayanamsha)
Sun at Spring EquinoxLate Pisces0° Aries

The Ayanamsha is the correction value applied to convert tropical positions to sidereal. The most widely used standard is the Lahiri Ayanamsha, adopted by K.N. Rao and the Indian government’s calendar reform committee.

4.2 The Lagna (Ascendant) — Core of the Chart

In Jyotisha, the Lagna (also called Ascendant) is the degree of the zodiac rising on the eastern horizon at the exact moment of birth. It is the single most important reference point in the entire chart.

Why the Lagna Matters
  • The Lagna’s sign becomes the 1st House, setting the entire house framework (Whole Sign Houses)
  • The planet ruling the Lagna’s sign is called the Lagna Lord — the chart’s most important planet
  • The Lagna represents the physical body, self, overall personality, and direction of life
  • Two people born on the same day but at different times will have different Lagnas — and entirely different charts

4.3 The 12 Houses (Bhavas)

HousePrimary SignificationsNatural Significator
1H (Lagna)Self, body, character, health, overall life directionSun
2HWealth, family, speech, food, right eye, accumulation, death (Maraka)Jupiter
3HSiblings, courage, short travel, communication, writingMars
4HMother, home, real estate, education, inner happiness, vehiclesMoon
5HIntelligence, children, past-life merit, speculation, creativity, romanceJupiter
6HIllness, enemies, debts, service, competition, daily workMars, Saturn
7HSpouse, partnerships, the public, foreign lands, death (Maraka)Venus
8HLongevity, transformation, secrets, research, mysticism, sudden changeSaturn
9HFortune, religion, higher education, father, guru, philosophyJupiter, Sun
10HCareer, social status, power, government, fameSaturn, Mercury
11HGains, fulfillment of desires, friends, elder siblingsJupiter
12HLoss, liberation, foreign lands, hospitalization, meditation, expenditureSaturn, Ketu

4.4 The 9 Planets (Navagraha)

Jyotisha works with 9 Grahas (planets — literally “that which seizes”). Unlike Western astrology, Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto are not used. Instead, Rahu and Ketu — the moon’s nodal axis — play a crucial role.

PlanetSanskrit NameNatureKey Significations
SunSuryaHot, dry, kinglySoul, authority, father, government, heart, bones
MoonChandraCool, moist, variableMind, mother, emotions, the masses, liquids, travel
MarsMangalaHot, dry, masculineCourage, energy, brothers, land, surgery, accidents
MercuryBudhaNeutral, variableIntelligence, communication, commerce, nervous system
JupiterGuru / BrihaspatiWarm, moist, expansiveWisdom, teachers, children, religion, wealth, growth
VenusShukraWarm, moist, feminineBeauty, love, arts, wife, pleasure, vehicles
SaturnShaniCold, dry, slowKarma, delay, hardship, laborers, solitude, discipline
Rahu—— (North Node)Shadow planet, amplifyingAmplification, foreign cultures, taboo-breaking, ambition
Ketu—— (South Node)Shadow planet, separatingLiberation, past lives, spirituality, separation

4.5 The 12 Signs (Rashi) and Their Rulers

#Rashi (Sign)SanskritRuling PlanetQuality
1AriesMeshaMarsFire, Movable
2TaurusVrishabhaVenusEarth, Fixed
3GeminiMithunaMercuryAir, Dual
4CancerKarkaMoonWater, Movable
5LeoSimhaSunFire, Fixed
6VirgoKanyaMercuryEarth, Dual
7LibraTulaVenusAir, Movable
8ScorpioVrishchikaMarsWater, Fixed
9SagittariusDhanuJupiterFire, Dual
10CapricornMakaraSaturnEarth, Movable
11AquariusKumbhaSaturnAir, Fixed
12PiscesMeenaJupiterWater, Dual
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5. Planetary Strength

5.1 Dignity — The Basic Framework of Strength

StatusDescriptionEffect
Uccha (Exaltation)The sign where the planet functions at its peakVery strong, highly beneficial
Swagrahi (Own Sign)The planet is in its own signStrong, expresses its full nature
MoolatrikonaA specific “comfort zone” signStable and reliable strength
Mitra (Friendly Sign)Sign ruled by a friendly planetModerately strong
Sama (Neutral Sign)Sign ruled by a neutral planetAverage
Shatru (Enemy Sign)Sign ruled by an inimical planetWeakened
Neecha (Debilitation)The sign of greatest weaknessSignificantly weakened

5.2 Exaltation and Debilitation Chart

PlanetExaltation (degree)Debilitation (degree)
SunAries 10°Libra 10°
MoonTaurus 3°Scorpio 3°
MarsCapricorn 28°Cancer 28°
MercuryVirgo 15°Pisces 15°
JupiterCancer 5°Capricorn 5°
VenusPisces 27°Virgo 27°
SaturnLibra 20°Aries 20°
RahuGemini (or Taurus)Sagittarius (or Scorpio)
KetuSagittarius (or Scorpio)Gemini (or Taurus)

5.3 Dispositor and Combustion

The planet ruling the sign that another planet occupies is called its Dispositor. If a chain of dispositors ultimately returns to a planet in its own sign, that planet is the Final Dispositor and holds special power in the chart.

Combustion occurs when a planet comes too close to the Sun (generally within 8–10°), significantly reducing its power. K.N. Rao cautions against over-emphasizing combustion, noting that combust planets still function in practice.

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6. Aspects (Planetary Influence)

Jyotisha’s aspect system differs fundamentally from Western astrology. In the Indian system, planets cast their influence forward in the direction of increasing house numbers. Every planet aspects the 7th house from itself (the opposition), but Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn have additional special aspects:

PlanetStandard Aspect (7th)Special Aspects
Sun, Moon, Mercury, Venus7th houseNone
Mars (Mangala)7th houseAlso 4th and 8th houses
Jupiter (Guru)7th houseAlso 5th and 9th houses
Saturn (Shani)7th houseAlso 3rd and 10th houses
Rahu / Ketu7th house (debated)5th and 9th (varies by school)
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7. Dasha — The Planetary Period System

7.1 What Is a Dasha?

The Dasha system is what most powerfully distinguishes Jyotisha from all other astrological traditions. It assigns each planet a specific period of years during which it “rules” the native’s life. By identifying which Dasha is active at any given time, Jyotisha can specify when events are likely to occur — a capability Western astrology’s transit system cannot match with the same precision.

The Revolutionary Power of Dasha

“The ability to say when — that is Jyotisha’s greatest strength. The same chart may show prosperity under a Jupiter Dasha and hardship under Saturn. No other astrological tradition has a timing system of comparable precision.”

— K.N. Rao’s foundational philosophy

7.2 Vimshottari Dasha (The Most Widely Used System)

The Vimshottari system divides 120 years among the 9 planets. The sequence and duration are fixed; the starting point depends on the nakshatra occupied by the Moon at birth.

PlanetDasha Duration
Sun (Surya)6 years
Moon (Chandra)10 years
Mars (Mangala)7 years
Rahu18 years
Jupiter (Guru)16 years
Saturn (Shani)19 years
Mercury (Budha)17 years
Ketu7 years
Venus (Shukra)20 years
Total120 years

7.3 Three-Tier Structure and Other Dasha Systems

Dasha periods subdivide into three layers:

  • Maha Dasha (major period): spans years to two decades
  • Antar Dasha (sub-period): the Maha Dasha subdivided among the 9 planets
  • Pratyantar Dasha (sub-sub-period): weeks to months in duration

K.N. Rao’s standard practice requires confirming predictions through Maha Dasha × Antar Dasha × transits simultaneously.

Dasha SystemCharacteristicUsage
Vimshottari120-year cycle based on birth nakshatraMost widely used worldwide
Ashtottari108-year cycleSome South Indian traditions
Chara Dasha (Jaimini)Sign-based dasha systemK.N. Rao uses as complement to Vimshottari
Yogini Dasha36-year cycle, 8 planetsNorth Indian traditions
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8. Nakshatras — The 27 Lunar Mansions

The Nakshatras represent one of the oldest layers of Jyotisha. The 360° zodiac is divided into 27 equal segments of 13°20′ each, reflecting the moon’s approximately 27-day orbit. Each nakshatra has its own deity, symbol, and ruling planet.

#NakshatraRulerZodiac RangeKey Symbol / Theme
1AshwiniKetuAries 0°–13°20′Twin horsemen, healing, swift beginnings
2BharaniVenusAries 13°20’–26°40′Yama (god of death), transformation, restraint
3KrittikaSunAries 26°40’–Taurus 10°Agni (fire), the razor, purification
4RohiniMoonTaurus 10°–23°20′Prajapati, fertility, growth, abundance
5MrigashiraMarsTaurus 23°20’–Gemini 6°40′Soma, deer’s head, gentle searching
6ArdraRahuGemini 6°40’–20°Rudra (Shiva), the storm, radical change
7PunarvasuJupiterGemini 20°–Cancer 3°20′Aditi, the return of light, renewal
8PushyaSaturnCancer 3°20’–16°40′Brihaspati, nourishment, spiritual growth
9AshleshaMercuryCancer 16°40’–30°Naga (serpent), clinging, hidden wisdom
10MaghaKetuLeo 0°–13°20′Pitris (ancestors), royal throne, authority
11Purva PhalguniVenusLeo 13°20’–26°40′Bhaga, creative joy, rest and pleasure
12Uttara PhalguniSunLeo 26°40’–Virgo 10°Aryaman, friendship, contracts, patronage
13HastaMoonVirgo 10°–23°20′Savitri, the hand, skill and craftsmanship
14ChitraMarsVirgo 23°20’–Libra 6°40′Tvashtr, the jewel, beauty and brilliance
15SwatiRahuLibra 6°40’–20°Vayu (wind), independence, flexibility
16VishakhaJupiterLibra 20°–Scorpio 3°20′Indra-Agni, determination, goal achievement
17AnuradhaSaturnScorpio 3°20’–16°40′Mitra, friendship, loyalty, teamwork
18JyeshthaMercuryScorpio 16°40’–30°Indra, the elder, protection and seniority
19MulaKetuSagittarius 0°–13°20′Nirriti (dissolution), the root, destruction and renewal
20Purva AshadhaVenusSagittarius 13°20’–26°40′Apas (water goddess), purification, declaration
21Uttara AshadhaSunSagittarius 26°40’–Capricorn 10°Vishvedevas, victory, lasting achievement
22ShravanaMoonCapricorn 10°–23°20′Vishnu, listening, learning, connection
23DhanishthaMarsCapricorn 23°20’–Aquarius 6°40′Ashta Vasus, music, abundance, speed
24ShatabhishaRahuAquarius 6°40’–20°Varuna (cosmic ocean), healing, mystery
25Purva BhadrapadaJupiterAquarius 20°–Pisces 3°20′Aja Ekapada (the one-footed goat), fierce spiritual fire
26Uttara BhadrapadaSaturnPisces 3°20’–16°40′Ahir Budhnya (serpent of the deep), depth, stability
27RevatiMercuryPisces 16°40’–30°Pushan (shepherd), nourishment, journey’s end
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9. Yogas — Planetary Combinations

A Yoga (literally “union”) is a special planetary configuration that produces a distinct effect. Jyotisha texts enumerate hundreds — some say thousands — of yogas. Those that produce beneficial results are called Shubha Yogas; harmful ones are Ashubha Yogas.

9.1 Major Auspicious Yogas

YogaFormationEffect
Raja YogaLord of a Kendra (1, 4, 7, 10H) and lord of a Trikona (1, 5, 9H) conjunct or mutually aspectPower, status, success. The most important benefic yoga.
Dhana YogaLord of 2H or 11H combines with lord of 5H or 9HGreat wealth and financial gains
Gaja Kesari YogaJupiter and Moon in Kendra (1, 4, 7, 10H) relationshipWisdom, fame, noble character
Hamsa YogaJupiter in own sign, exaltation, or Moolatrikona in a KendraWisdom, piety, spiritual authority, renown
Malavya YogaVenus in own sign, exaltation, or Moolatrikona in a KendraBeauty, arts, wealth, happiness
Ruchaka YogaMars in own sign, exaltation, or Moolatrikona in a KendraCourage, leadership, military success
Shasha YogaSaturn in own sign, exaltation, or Moolatrikona in a KendraAuthority over the masses, organizational power
Budhaditya YogaSun and Mercury in the same signIntelligence, eloquence, scholarship

9.2 Viparita Raja Yoga (The Paradoxical Yoga)

A paradoxical yoga formed when the lords of the “dusthana” houses (6H, 8H, 12H) relate to each other without afflicting other houses. Despite arising from houses of hardship, it ultimately produces rise, success, and victory — often after periods of loss or struggle. Three types:

  • Harsha Yoga: Lord of 6H in 8H or 12H
  • Sarala Yoga: Lord of 8H in 6H or 12H
  • Vimala Yoga: Lord of 12H in 6H or 8H

9.3 Neecha Bhanga Raja Yoga (Cancellation of Debilitation)

When a planet is in debilitation (Neecha), certain conditions can cancel or reverse that weakness — transforming it into a source of remarkable strength. Cancellation (Bhanga) occurs when one or more of the following apply:

  • The ruler of the debilitated planet’s sign is in a Kendra from Lagna or Moon
  • The planet that would exalt the debilitated planet is in a Kendra from Lagna or Moon
  • The debilitated planet is itself in a Kendra from Lagna or Moon
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10. The Methodology of K.N. Rao

10.1 Who Is K.N. Rao?

Kotamraju Narayana Rao (born October 12, 1931) is the foremost living authority on Jyotisha. After retiring as Comptroller and Auditor General of India, he dedicated himself entirely to astrology. He founded the Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan astrology school in New Delhi — now the world’s largest — and has researched over 50,000 charts. With more than 40 books to his name, he is often described as having divided Vedic astrology history into “before Rao and after Rao.”

10.2 The Three-Confirmation Rule and Key Teachings

The Triple Confirmation — K.N. Rao’s Core Principle
  1. Confirm the event in the Rashi chart (natal chart)
  2. Confirm it in the Navamsha (D-9 divisional chart)
  3. Confirm it through the Dasha (Maha Dasha × Antar Dasha)

“Do not predict an event unless at least two of the three confirm it.”

TeachingMeaning
“Never interpret transits without the Dasha”Transits are only meaningful in the context of the operative Dasha
“Never draw conclusions from a single technique”Rashi, Navamsha, and Dasha must all agree
“Good events require at least three concurrent indicators”One indication alone cannot support a prediction
“Retrograde planets act powerfully inward”Their effects are internal and strong — do not underestimate them
“Do not overstate combustion”Combust planets continue to function in practice
“Prioritize Dasha over aspects for timing”When it comes to timing, the Dasha is the primary tool

10.3 Navamsha (D-9) and Mundane Astrology

The Navamsha (D-9) is the most important of all divisional charts. Each sign is divided into 9 parts of 3°20′, and planets are relocated accordingly.

  • Reveals the character of the spouse and the quality of marriage
  • Confirms the “true strength” of planets seen in the Rashi chart
  • Reflects the second half of life (especially after age 35)
  • A planet strong in both Rashi and Navamsha is Vargottama — maximally powerful

Rao is equally known for his work in mundane astrology — predicting world events from national charts. His documented predictions include: the assassination of Indira Gandhi (1984), the death of Rajiv Gandhi (1991), the collapse of the Soviet Union (1991), and India’s nuclear tests (1998).

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11. Other Important Techniques

Ashtakavarga: A system in which each of the 8 planets assigns points (Bindus) to the 12 signs. The aggregate score (Sarvashtakavarga) identifies signs where transits produce favorable results. Signs scoring 28 or more are considered strong.

Muhurta (Electional Astrology): The art of selecting an auspicious moment to begin an important activity — a marriage, a business launch, a journey, a surgery. Periods like Rahu Kala (Rahu’s hour) and Yamaganda are avoided as inauspicious.

Synastry (Kundali Milan): Compatibility analysis between two charts, primarily for marriage. The Ashtakoot system evaluates 8 categories (Varna, Vashya, Tara, Yoni, Graha Maitri, Gana, Bhakoot, Nadi) for a total of 36 points. Nadi (9 points) is the most critical — matching Nadis between partners is considered highly inauspicious.

Prashna (Horary Astrology): A chart cast for the moment a question is asked, used to answer specific queries or when the birth time is unknown. K.N. Rao treats Prashna as a supplementary technique.

Jaimini Astrology: A distinct system attributed to the ancient sage Jaimini. Key features include the Chara Dasha (sign-based period system favored by K.N. Rao), the Karakas (significator hierarchy: AK, AmK, BK, etc.), Arudha Padas (social image calculation points), and Swamsha (the Navamsha position that indicates the soul’s spiritual direction).

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12. Comparison with Ba Zi (Four Pillars of Destiny)

JyotishaBa Zi (Four Pillars)Notes
Lagna (Ascendant)Day Master (Day Stem)Central reference point of the chart
Yogakaraka (most benefic planet)Yongshen (useful god)The element/planet that most benefits the native
Maraka / BadhakaJishen (harmful element)Negative influences in the chart
Maha Dasha (variable)Da Yun / Major Luck Cycle (10-year fixed)Long-term timing cycle
Antar Dasha + TransitsAnnual Luck (Liu Nian)Year-level timing
Navamsha (D-9)Day Branch (spouse palace)Marriage and second half of life
Conjunction (0°)Heavenly Stem CombinationPlanetary / stem bonding
Opposition (180°)Earthly Branch ClashOpposing forces
Nakshatras (27 lunar mansions)28 Mansions (Xiu)Moon-based sub-divisions
Muhurta (electional)Ze Ri (date selection)Choosing auspicious timing

Integration with WHGR Theory

The WHGR (World Historical Geopolitical Resonance) theory developed by Hiroshi Yamada (White & Green Co., Ltd.) integrates the Earthly Branch system from Four Pillars astrology with aspect-distance concepts from Jyotisha. A statistical study of the S&P 500 (6,598 trading days, 2000–2026) confirmed the following patterns at p < 0.05:

PatternNNext-Day Rise Ratep-valueCohen’s d
① Fire→Earth × SP-WHGR high × W neutral3372.7%0.0021+0.437
② SP neutral × W low × Water→Water5664.3%0.0134+0.278
Baseline (all days)6,59853.1%
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13. Learning Resources and Key Texts

Classical Texts (Essential Reading)

TextAuthorRatingContent
BPHS (Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra)Parashara★★★★★The foundational text of Jyotisha. Source of virtually all techniques. K.N. Rao’s primary authority.
Brihat JatakaVarahamihira★★★★★Scientific and encyclopedic classical work
Phaladeepika (Fala Sara)Mantreswara★★★★The most widely read practical classical text
Sarvartha ChintamaniVenkatesh Daivajnya★★★★Comprehensive treatment of yogas and combinations
YavanajatakaSphujidhvaja★★★★The Indianization of Greek astrology. Historically pivotal.

K.N. Rao’s Major Works

TitleContent
Astrology, Destiny and the Wheel of TimeIntegration of historical cycles with the Dasha system. Rao’s most philosophical work.
The Nehru DynastyAstrological analysis of the Nehru family’s destiny. His most celebrated predictive achievement.
Timing Events Through Vimshottari DashaPractical guide to event timing using the Dasha system
Time Tested Techniques of Mundane AstrologyMethods and case studies in world and national astrology
Yogis, Destiny and the Wheel of TimeAstrological analysis of saints and spiritual figures
Journal of AstrologyQuarterly journal edited by K.N. Rao. Extensive case studies.

Modern Learning Resources

ResourceTypeContent
Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan (New Delhi)SchoolK.N. Rao’s school. The world’s largest astrology institution.
Saptarishis AstrologyMagazine / WebsiteThe largest online archive of contemporary Jyotisha articles
AstroSage.comCalculation toolFree horoscope and Dasha calculation
Light on Life — David FrawleyBookOne of the best English-language introductions to Jyotisha
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Appendices

Appendix A: Planetary Dignity Chart

PlanetOwn Sign(s)ExaltationMoolatrikonaDebilitation
SunLeoAries 10°Leo 1–20°Libra
MoonCancerTaurus 3°Taurus 4–30°Scorpio
MarsAries, ScorpioCapricorn 28°Aries 1–12°Cancer
MercuryGemini, VirgoVirgo 15°Virgo 16–20°Pisces
JupiterSagittarius, PiscesCancer 5°Sagittarius 1–10°Capricorn
VenusTaurus, LibraPisces 27°Libra 1–15°Virgo
SaturnCapricorn, AquariusLibra 20°Aquarius 1–20°Aries

Appendix B: Natural Planetary Friendships

PlanetFriendsNeutralEnemies
SunMoon, Mars, JupiterMercuryVenus, Saturn
MoonSun, MercuryMars, Jupiter, Venus, SaturnNone
MarsSun, Moon, JupiterVenus, SaturnMercury
MercurySun, VenusMars, Jupiter, SaturnMoon
JupiterSun, Moon, MarsSaturnMercury, Venus
VenusMercury, SaturnMars, JupiterSun, Moon
SaturnMercury, VenusJupiterSun, Moon, Mars

Appendix C: House Classification

CategoryHousesSignificance
Trikona (Trines — most auspicious)1H, 5H, 9HHouses of Dharma. The most powerful benefic positions.
Kendra (Angles — strong)1H, 4H, 7H, 10HHouses of action and manifestation. Planets here are powerful.
Upachaya (Growth)3H, 6H, 10H, 11HHouses that improve over time. Malefics do well here.
Maraka (Death-inflicting)2H, 7HLords of these houses can trigger illness and death periods.
Dusthana (Houses of Difficulty)6H, 8H, 12HAssociated with illness, obstacles, and loss.
Panapara (Succedent)2H, 5H, 8H, 11HModerate strength positions.
Apoklima (Cadent)3H, 6H, 9H, 12HWeaker positions for most planets.
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