The Astrology Podcast

Midpoints in Astrology: Historical Origins

25 snips
Mar 27, 2026
A historical detective story tracing midpoints back to two 17th-century students of Placidus who coined “equidistances.” The tale follows suppression by the Inquisition and later Nazi censorship, a near-erasure, and a quiet survival via obscure references. It then covers the technique’s 20th-century recovery in Germany and its spread through different astrological movements.
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INSIGHT

Myths About Ptolemy And Bonatti Are Mistaken

  • Claims that Ptolemy or Guido Bonatti mentioned midpoints are mistaken; mistranslation and name confusion caused myths.
  • Chris cites modern translations showing Ptolemy doesn't discuss general midpoints and Bonatti lacks them entirely.
ANECDOTE

Bonatis Mentions Equidistances Cautiously

  • Antonio Francesco di Bonattis (1687) mentioned 'Mundane Parallels and Equidistances' cautiously, saying he hadn't verified them but found the logic plausible.
  • His cautious publication survived the Inquisition and became a later conduit for the idea.
INSIGHT

Albert Kniepf Reintroduces Midpoints In Germany

  • Midpoints re-enter astrology in early 20th-century Germany, traced to Albert Kniepf who studied classical texts and taught Alfred Witte.
  • Kniepf likely revived the technique from Placidus' appendix or Bonatis, transmitting it to Witte pre-WWI.
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