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Morning Star Venus from Now until Oct 25th 2014

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In my previous blog I described the characteristics of Morning Star Venus vs Evening Star Venus.


Transiting Venus became a Morning star on Jan 11, 2014 when it formed an inferior conjunction to the Sun.  An Inferior conjunction is when Venus is in between the Earth and Sun while a Superior conjunction is when the Sun is in between the earth and Venus.

Venus is going to be a Morning Star from now until October 25, 2014 so we can expect transits of Venus during this time to be more war-like than would be the case if Venus were in her Evening Star phase.

A complete list of dates for Venus's Inferior and Superior Conjunctions with the Sun (as well as retrogrades etc.) may be found here.

Below is a color coded chart which shows recent Evening Star and Morning Star Venus.



From an Inferior conjunction to the following Superior Conjunction - Venus is a Morning Star.(Aggressive)
From Superior Conjunction to the next Inferior Conjunction - Venus is an Evening Star.(Peaceful)

One complete cycle of Venus in Morning and Evening star is called a Synodic Cycle which runs from Inferior conjunction to the next Inferior Conjunction or Superior Conjunction to the next Superior Conjunction.

One synodic cycle takes a little over a year and a half to complete or 584 days.

Every five synodic cycles forms a five pointed star pattern or a pentagram in the sky and takes about 8 years to complete.

Using the synodic cycles of Superior conjunctions to Superior Conjunctions of Sun and Venus from 2008 to 2016 we have the below 5 pointed star. 


Superior Conjunctions of Sun/Venus highlighted and degrees charted on astrology chart below.




Next, see an example of how these Synodic Cycles of Venus plays out in the Meredith Kercher Murder case. . . to be continued


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