Hamburg School of Astrology

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The Hamburg School of Astrology originated in Hamburg, Germany, and revolved around the research and teachings of surveyor/astrologer/amateur astronomer Alfred Witte. The term Hamburg School of Astrology originated in 1923 at the Second German Astrological Congress in Leipzig, Germany, where the astronomer/astrologer Dr. Wilhelm Hartmann was a participant.

Early students of Alfred Witte were Friedrich Sieggrün and Ludwig Rudolph. In his search for Pluto, Witte claimed four planets beyond Pluto, and Sieggrün claimed yet another four. These bodies are in the Transneptunian regions, where many planetary discoveries are being validated today. Ludwig Rudolph printed and published Witte's findings, the core of which were published in the Rulebook for Planetary Pictures (Regelwerk für Planetenbilder) in 1932. An increasing amount of the research of the Hamburg School revolved around work with astrological midpoints and use of the extra planets.

Unfortunately, Witte and Rudolph were pursued by the Gestapo as enemies of the Third Reich. Alfred Witte committed suicide before being sent to a concentration camp, and Ludwig Rudolph was indeed interned, the Rulebook for Planetary Pictures banned and burned by the Nazis.

Reinhold Ebertin, an (unofficial) student of Hamburg School methods, eliminated the use of the hypothetical trans-neptunian objects while maintaining the core teachings of the Hamburg School, renamed them "Cosmobiology" (German: Kosmobiologie), and published them in The Combination of Stellar Influences in 1940, last updated in English in 1972.

After the fall of the Third Reich, the Hamburg School reconvened, and Ludwig Rudolph, having survived concentration-camp internment, played the key role in perpetuating the teachings of the Hamburg School. The Hamburg School astrologer Hermann Lefeldt combined Witte's theories with more astrological traditions such as the use of astrological houses. However, other Hamburg practitioners maintained their focus on working only with astrological midpoints [1], abandoning traditional practices, including the 12 houses and rulerships.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Brummund: Astropsychologische Charaktermerkmale, Ludwig Rudolph Verlag, Hamburg, 1972.
  • Brummund: Regelwerk-Neufassung, Brummund Verlag, Hamburg, 1990.
  • Witte: Der Mensch - eine Empfangsstation kosmischer Suggestionen, Ludwig Rudolph Verlag, Hamburg, 1975.
  • Witte: Regelwerk für Planetenbilder, Ludwig Rudolph Verlag, Hamburg, 1959.
  • Witte: Rulebook for Planetary Pictures, Ludwig Rudolph Verlag, Hamburg, 1977.