Focus On: (23) Thalia

Basics

Class: S-type asteroid
Location: Main belt
Orbit length (approx): 4.26 years
Discovered: 15th December 1852 (time unknown), from London, U.K., by John Russell Hind
Notes: Mainly contains iron and magnesium silicates.
Events at time of discovery:

  • December 15 – Birth of Henri Becquerel, French physicist, Nobel Prize laureate
  • December 19 – Birth of Albert A. Michelson, German-born physicist, Nobel Prize laureate
  • December 28 – Birth of Leonardo Torres Quevedo, Spanish engineer, one of the pioneers of computing and the radio control, inventor of El Ajedrecista (The Chess Player)


Naming information

Name origin: Ancient Greek muse of comedy and bucolic poetry.
Mythology: ‘Thalia’ translates to “Rich Festivity” or “Blooming”. Possibly, with Apollo, parent of the Korybantes, worshippers of Cybele.

Thalia on an antique fresco from Pompeii.
Thalia on an antique fresco from Pompeii. Photo by Sailko.

Astrological data

Discovery degree: 20+ Taurus
Discovery Sabian: A Finger Pointing to a Line in an Open Book
Discovery nodal signature: TaurusSagittarius
Estimated orbital resonances: Earth 4:17, Mars 1:2, Ceres 12:11, Jupiter 14:5, Chiron 12:1
Discovery chart details: Noon. Thalia was sesquiquadrate Mercury-Chiron and sextile Asbolus. Mars also conjunct Chiron, both trine Vesta-Uranus alongside retrograde Mercury. Jupiter square Neptune. Saturn-Nessus-Sedna minor T-square, with Sedna stationary. Venus sextile Pholus; Ceres trine Nessus.


Summary and references

Interpretations offered so far include “a happy, jubilant, entertaining, and comical personality”[1]; abundance, good cheer, comedy[2]. Correspondences further suggest the role of comic narrative in telling particularly meaningful or emotionally challenging stories; also serendipity.

References:
1) Path-strology: A Handful of Fun (and Unique) Asteroids in the Natal Chart
2) TAKE Astrology: Asteroids in Astrology


Noon discovery chart for (23) Thalia: 15th December 1852, London, U.K.
Noon discovery chart for (23) Thalia: 15th December 1852, London, U.K.
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