Astrology in Ancient Mesopotamia
The Science of Omens and the Knowledge of the Heavens
by Michael Baigent
Among the many significant discoveries excavated from
Assyrian king Ashurbanipal’s royal library in Nineveh were tablets documenting
the development of Mesopotamian astrology, now recognized as the earliest
astrological science.
Drawing upon translations of the Nineveh library tablets as well as many
other ancient sources, Michael Baigent reveals the roots of modern astrology in
the Babylonian science of omens. He explains how astrology in the Babylonian and
Assyrian empires was concerned not with individuals but with the king and the
state. He shows that by the first dynasty of Babylon, around 1900 to 1600 BC,
astrology had become a systematic discipline, the preserve of highly trained
specialists intent upon interpreting omens from the movements of planets and
stars. He explores Mesopotamian mythology as it relates to the planets and to
astrology as well as to Mesopotamian religion, magic, and politics–for the
mythology of Babylon and Assyria served the state and thus changed as the state
changed. He shows how this ancient form of astrology uniquely represents both
Sun and Moon as masculine entities and Saturn (Ninurta) as the principle of
order imposed on chaos. He examines the connections between ancient astrology
and the symbolism of Western religions, such as how the “Greek” or “Templar”
cross may symbolize the Babylonian god Nabu, now known as Mercury.
Tracing the hermetic transmission of this knowledge over the centuries from Mesopotamia to Egypt to Florence, Baigent reveals how the religious and magical aspects of early Babylonian cosmological speculation played a significant role in the Renaissance, influencing prominent figures such as Cosimo de Medici, Marsilio Ficino, and Botticelli.