Whether you care about horoscopes or not, you probably know your zodiac sign. You’ve probably known it for most of your life.
Zodiac signs were originally based on the stars. But over thousands of years, our view of the stars has shifted. That means your sign might not be what you think.
As Earth orbits the sun, the sun appears against a changing backdrop of stars.
The 12 zodiac signs were originally based on the constellations behind the sun, from our perspective on Earth. Ancient astronomers and astrologers used these patterns to measure time, and to tell the future.
October 28, for example, is in Scorpio because 2,000 years ago, this constellation was more or less behind the sun on that date. But this year, the constellation behind the sun on October 28 is Virgo.
There are three reasons the zodiac signs no longer line up with the constellations they’re named after.
The Wobble
Earth wobbles like a top. A spinning top starts to wobble soon after it is set into motion. Earth does the same thing, only more slowly.
It takes 26,000 years for the North Pole to trace out a complete circle in the sky, pointing at different stars along the way. Scientists call this wobbling motion axial precession.
This wobble means that our view of the stars shifts by one degree every 72 years. Over centuries, this difference builds up.
And it’s not just the northern stars that shift in our view because of Earth’s wobble, but all stars — including all the zodiac constellations.
Take the spring equinox, usually around March 20, the first day of spring in the Northern Hemisphere (and the start of the zodiac calendar in Western astrology).
On the equinox 3,000 years ago, the sun was in front of Aries.
But by around 130BC, Greek astronomer Hipparchus observed that our view of the stars had shifted.
Nowadays, the sun is in front of Pisces on the equinox. In about 600 years, it will enter Aquarius. Astrologers call this the Age of Aquarius (though they disagree on when it will occur). In 3,000 years, it will be in front of Capricorn. And so on.
This shift was discovered by Hipparchus. Since you can’t see stars during the day, he waited for a lunar eclipse — when the moon is directly opposite the sun — and used the moon’s position to work out where the sun was.
By comparing his measurement with earlier ones, he found that our view
of the stars shifts by about one degree per century — not too far from modern measurements.
Today, Western astrology uses the tropical zodiac system, which is based on the positions of the stars more or less as they would have appeared to Hipparchus, and not as they appear today.
That means that the zodiac signs familiar to Americans are in sync not with the stars, but with the seasons: Aries starts on the first day of spring, even though the sun is now in front of Pisces then.
In contrast, the Indian system of astrology uses the sidereal zodiac, which accounts for Earth’s wobble and aligns zodiac signs to the stars.
While these two systems were initially aligned, they have been drifting apart ever since. Western astrologers are well aware of this mismatch, but they don’t see a problem with basing the signs on the stars as they were two millennia ago.
“Astrologers using the tropical zodiac are just using what they consider to be an equally valid system,” said Dorian Greenbaum, a historian of astrology at the University of Wales Trinity Saint David in the UK.
Size Matters
The zodiac signs were created around 2,500 years ago by the Babylonians.
Their star catalogues listed at least 17 zodiac constellations. But they eventually simplified these into the 12 zodiac constellations we know today, each 30 degrees wide, as if slicing the sky into 12 equal slices.
But constellations aren’t really the same size. In 1928, when astronomers divided the sky into 88 officially recognised constellations, each one was shaped like its own uneven puzzle piece.
“They are not nice equal pieces,” said Stacy Palen, emeritus professor at Weber State University in the US. “They’re like jagged shapes that are not symmetric in any way.”
Based on these redrawn boundaries, the sun spends more than twice as much time in front of Virgo as it does in front of Cancer. And it spends only a week in front of Scorpio — if you include Ophiuchus, that is. Which brings us to the last reason why the 12 signs don’t align with the zodiac constellations.
Ophiuchus
It is the 13th constellation along the sun’s path, according to astronomers. Ophiuchus means “serpent bearer” in ancient Greek, and is usually depicted as a man holding a snake.
So for people born during the sign of Scorpio 2,000 years ago, Ophiuchus was more likely behind the sun on their birthday. (And because of Earth’s wobble, most Sagittarians today were also born when Ophiuchus was behind the sun.)
We don’t really know why the Babylonians left out Ophiuchus from their zodiac signs. They may have originally had a different name for it. But historians believe that when Babylonians simplified their zodiac system, they wanted the 12 zodiac signs to match the 12 months of their calendar. Ophiuchus didn’t make the cut.
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