Joined to. Applied to any body that is embraced within the orbs of any
aspect to any other body; more specifically applicable to a conjunction.
Joy. A term employed by some of the older authorities to indicate an
affinity between certain planets and certain Signs, not necessarily of the
character of Dignities. The original application of the term as anciently
employed has been lost in the course of the centuries, and other meanings have
been attached to the term. According to one theory a planet is in joy when,
itself in debility, another planet with which it enjoys some similarity is
posited in one of its Dignities. Thus Saturn was presumed to experience a
sympathetic joy when Mars is in Capricorn, the Sign ruled by Saturn, and in
which Mars is exalted; also that it there opposes and afflicts Cancer, ruled by
the Moon. It feels a "joy" when Mercury is posited in either of its
triplicities, since the Signs they rule belong to the same Triplicities:
Capricorn-Virgo and Aquarius-Gemini. Also when Venus is in either of its Signs,
because both trine Saturn's Signs: Taurus-Capricorn, Libra-Aquarius. A malefic
experiences "joy" when another malefic afflicts either Sun, Moon, or
any benefic which is in one of its Dignities. Thus Jupiter is in its joy when
the Sun inhabits a Jupiter-ruled Sign - either Sagittarius or Pisces, or Cancer
where Jupiter is in its Exaltation; or any Sign of its Triplicity - which
includes all the Fire and Water Signs. Also when the Moon or Mars are in their
respective Signs or Triplicities. Mars "joys" when the Sun is
exalted; when the Moon is in her Sign, or when Saturn is in Capricorn. While
not exalted in Leo, Mars was said to "joy" in the Sign, because both
are of a fiery nature. The term belongs to an epoch when astrological writers
were more poetic than scientific.
In short, any planet "joys"
when another planet is placed in one of its Essential Dignities. Some
authorities have confused this with what is termed the Thrones of the planets,
viz.: the Signs they rule.
Latterly planets have been said to
"joy" in certain Houses: Saturn, in the Twelfth; Jupiter, in the
Eleventh; Mars, in the Sixth; Venus, in the Fifth; Mercury, in the First; the
Sun, in the Tenth; the Moon, in the Third.
It is also said that the Sun and
Jupiter "joy" in each other's Houses, as do Saturn and Mercury, and
Venus and the Moon. All of which added together leaves the term in ill-repute,
and generally in disuse among modern astrologers. The term has a certain merit
and might well be restored, if confined to the congeniality of a planet in a
House. In that way it can be said that Dignity and Debility result from Sign
placement, and Joy from House placement.
Julian Calendar. v.
Calendar.
Julian Day. For calculating long intervals of time it was found desirable to
eliminate the months and years, and number the days consecutively. Hence one
such numbered day is identified by the prefix J.D., meaning Julian Day. (v. Day.)
This table of Julian Days is a
convenience in computing the num- ber of elapsed days between any two dates.
Merely set down the J.D. for the two days and subtract: the difference will be
the number of elapsed days. For dates that are separated by only 2 or 3 years,
it will be necessary to use only the last three or four digits. These tables
can be applied to any years, if care is exercised to see that a table for a
bissextile year is used for a bissextile year, and one for a common year is
used for a common year.