movable foundation of all astronomical and astrological
activity. At the same time the "Opus Quad-
ripartitum" of the great Alexandrian was corrupted
with Talmudic subtleties and overlaid with mystical
and allegorical meanings, which were taken chiefly
from the Jewish post-Talmudic belief concerning
demons. This deterioration of astrology is not sur-
prising if we bear in mind the strong tendency of all
Semitic races to fatalism and their blind belief in
an inevitable destiny, a belief which entails spiritual
demoralization. The result was that every con-
ceivable pursuit of mankind, every disease, and indeed
every nation had a special "heavenly regent", a
constellation of definitely assigned position from the
course of which the most daring prophecies were
deduced.
Up to the time of the Crusades, Christian countries
in general were spared any trouble from a degenerate
astrology. Only natural astrology, the correctness
of which the peasant thought he had recognized by
experience, secured a firm footing in spite of the
prohibition of Church and State. But the gradually
increasing influence of Arabic learning upon the civi-
lization of the West, which reached its highest point
at the time of the crusades, was unavoidably followed
by the spread of the false theories of astrology. This
was a natural result of the amalgamation of the
teachings of pure astronomy with astrology at the
Mohammedan seats of learning. The spread of as-
trology was also furthered by the Jewish scholars
living in Christian lands, for they considered astrology
as a necessary part of their cabalistic and Talmudic
studies. The celebrated didactic poem, "Imago
Mundi", written by Gautier of Metz in 1245, has a
whole chapter on astrology. Pierre d'Ailly, the noted
French theologian and astronomer, wrote several
treatises on the subject. The public importance of
astrology grew as the internal disorders of the Church
increased and the papal and imperial power declined.
Towards the close of the Middle Ages nearly every
petty prince, as well as every ruler of importance,
had his court astrologer, upon whose ambiguous ut-
terances the weal and woe of the whole country often
depended. Such a person was Angelo Catto, the
astrologer of Louis XI of France. The revival of
classical learning brought with it a second period of
prosperity for astrology. Among the civilized peoples
of the Renaissance period, so profoundly stirred by
the all-prevailing religious, social, and political fer-
ment, the astrological teachings which had come to
light with other treasures of ancient Hellenic learn-
ing found many ardent disciples. The romantic
trend of the age and its highly cviltivated sensuality
were conditions which contributed to place this art
in a position far higher than any it had attained in
its former period of prosperity. The forerunners of
Humanism busied themselves with astrology, and
but few of them perceived the dangerovis p.sychical
effect of its teachings upon the masses. Towards
the end of the thirteenth century the Florentines
employed Guido Bonatti as their official astrologer,
and, although Florence then stood alone in this re-
pect, it was scarcely a hundred years later when
astrology had entered in earnest upon its triumphant
course, and a Cecco d'Ascoli was already its devoted
adherent. In Petrarch's day the questionable ac-
tivity of the astrologers at the Italian courts had made
such progress that this clear-sighted Humanist (Do
remeci. utr. fortun. I, iii, sqq; Epist. rer. famil.. Ill,
S, etc.) again and again attacked astrology and its
representatives with the keenest weapons of his wit,
though without success, and even without any fol-
lowing except the weak objections of Villani and the
still more ineffectual polemics of Salutato in his di-
dactic poem "De fato et fort una". Emperors and
popes became votaries of astrology — the Emperors
Charles IV and V, and Popes Sixtus IV, Julius II,
Leo X, and Paul III. When these rulers lived as-
trology was, so to say, the regulator of official life;
it is a fact characteristic of the age, that at the papal
and imperial courts ambassadors were not received
in audience until the court astrologer had been con-
sulted. Regiomontanus, the distinguished Bavarian
mathematician, practised astrology, which from that
time on assumed the character of a bread-winning
profession, and as such was not beneath the dignity
of so lofty an intellect as Kepler. Thus had astrology
once more become the foster-mother of all astron-
omers. In the judgment of the men of the Renais-
sance — and this was the age of a Nicholas Coperni-
cus — the most profound astronomical researches and
theories were only profitable in so far as they aided in
the development of astrology. Among^ the zealous
patrons of the art were the Medici. Catharine de'
Medici made astrology popular in France. She erected
an astrological observatory for herself near Paris, and
her court astrologer was the celebrated "magician"
Michel de Notredame (Nostradamus) who in 1555
published his principal work on astrology — a work
still regarded as authoritative among the followers
of his art. Another well-known man was Lucas
Gauricus, the court astrologer of Popes Leo X and
Clement VII, who published a large number of as-
trological treatises. In Germany Johann Stoffler,
professor of mathematics at Tiibingen, Matthias Lan-
denberg, and, above all, Philip Melanchthon were
zealous and distinguished defenders of astrology.
In Pico della Mirandola (Adversus Astrologos libri
XII) and Paolo Toscanelli astrology encountered its
first successful antagonists; later in the Renaissance
Johann Fischart and the Franciscan Nas were among
its opponents. (Cf. Fhilognesius, Practica Practi-
carum, Ingolstadt, 1571.)
Gabotto's charming essay, " L'astrologia nel quat-
trocento", in "Rivista di filosofia scientifica". VIII,
378, sq., gives much information concerning astrology
in the fifteenth century. A. Graf's "La fatality nelle
credenze del medio evo" (in "Nuovo Antologia",
3d series, XXVIII, 201, sqq.) is also of value for
astrology at the turning point of the Middle Ages.
Some of the late Roman astrologers, among whom
was probably Firmicus Maternus, thought to reform
astrology by idealizing it and raising its moral tone.
The same purpose animated Paolo Toscanelli, called
Maestro Pagollo, a physician greatly respected for
the piety of his life, who belonged to the learned and
artistic circle which gathered around Brother Am-
brosius Caraaldulensis in the Monastery of The Angels.
There were special professors of astrology, besides
those for astronomy, at the Universities of Pavia,
Bologna, and even at the Sapienza during the pon-
tificate of Leo X, while at times these astrologers
outranked the astronomers. The three intellectual
centres of astrology in the most brilliant period of
the Renaissance were Bologna, Milan, and Mantua.
The work of J. A. Campanus, published at Rome
in 1495, and often commented on^ namely, "Oratio
initio studii Perugire habita ", throws a clear light
on the lack of comprehension shown by the Churcli
Fathers in their attitude towards pagan fatalism.
Among other things it is here said: "Quanquam
Augustinus, sanctissimus ille vir quidem ac doc-
tissimus, sed fortassis ad fidem religionemque pro-
pensior, negat quicquam vel boni vel mali astrorum
necessitate contingere".
In the Renaissance, religion, also, was subordinated
to the dictation of astrology. The hypothesis of an
astrological epoch of the world for each religion was
widely believed by Italian astrologers of the time,
who obtained the theory from Arabo-Judaic sources.
Thus it was said that the conjunction of Jupiter with
Saturn permitted the rise of the Hebrew faith;
that of Jupiter with Mars, the appearance of the
Clialdaic religion; of Jupiter with the sun, the Egj-p-
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ASTROLOGY
22
ASTROLOGY