The
Link Between Astrology and Palmistry
Batya
Explores the Early Years of Chiromancy
By Batya Weinbaum
Wednesday,
January 9, 2008
I
have touched briefly before on how the practice of palmistry was still connected
to astrology during the early Western European Renaissance (see East Meets
West). We have also explored how each finger and mound were once thought
to correspond to an individual planet. In fact, the link between palmistry and
astrology was not broken until well into the 19th century, when palmistry had
already developed its own level of symbolism.
But
palmistry as an art expanded considerably through its connection to the more mysterious
art of astrology. The same sort who became involved in palmistry became equally
as absorbed in astrology, and vice versa. Mystics studied all aspects of the occult
and devised ways to connect its many tangential spokes.
Alchemical
and astrological research went hand in hand. Books published on either subject
usually had a chapter on palmistry, leading to further creative collaborations.
In 1647, the Frenchman Jean Belots Les Oeuvres assigned each of the phalanges
a zodiacal significance. Each finger was said to have housed three astrological
signs. Each augmented the power and nature of the characteristic governed by a
particular finger.
Belot
practiced outside of the court. He remained obsessed with occult sciences and
tied the usual chiromancy symbols with astrological glyphs. He aimed to deepen
the significance appointed to different parts of the hand.
Palms
were usually discussed in this period as being an expression of the complexities
of the macrocosm (the human, their astrological sign, and the position of this
sign within the cosmos) within the microcosm (the hand, the relation of this hand
to the whole human figure, and the presenting connection between the human figure
and the transcendental plane of astrology).
For
example, Rudolph Goclenius published Aphorisma Chiromantica in Nuremberg in 1592.
He then went on to lecture at Wittenberg University, and later procured yet another
job at Marburg. He combined medical, philosophical, and astrological research
with his interest in chiromancy.
Interested
readers might also have a look at Joannes Rothmans Chiromantiae Theorica
Practica. Through a close examination of hands, this volume, published in 1595,
anchored the abstract theory of astrology in the world of flesh and blood. Palmists
devoured Rothmans book, which Katherine Saint-Hill still attested to using
in the 19th century 400 years after its original publication. Ahead of
the age, the book and its author offered understandings of how a birth chart and
a palm reading could interrelate, even producing congruent forecasts.
Rothmans
popular book was the only German palmistry manual translated before the 20th century.
Posters
from London in 1651 advertised the publication of Fabian Withers Book of
Palmistry. This book also declared a connection between the rules and manuals
of divination, astrology, and the nature of the planets.
But
palmistry in England became rather disrespected during the 1650s. Distinctions
began to be made between astrology and astronomy. Even the magic of alchemy evolved
into a more scientific chemistry.
The
need for accuracy became the chief aim of the sciences. At the same time, the
desire for systematic approaches to the investigation of nature pushed chiromancy,
with its higher, more intuitive understandings, into the background. Fear and
superstition derailed the driving force of inner knowledge practices, such as
palmistry.