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The birth of Pegasus

 


For thousands of years, horses have played critical roles in human societies around the world. These equines helped early farmers plow their fields, transported people farther and faster, and gave warriors a competitive edge in battle. But experts have long puzzled over the deceptively simple question of where domestic horses actually came from. https://www.sott.net/article/460136-Domestic-horses-mysterious-origins-may-finally-be-revealed



The  chart for the upcoming lunar eclipse of Nov.19 drawn for Toulouse, France where the research was carried out,  can help explain the findings.  The eclipse Sun is placed in the 12th house.

12th house

It rules great cattle, such as horses, oxen, elephants, of which Ezra notes "Those which serve as a mount for men". http://www.skyscript.co.uk/temples/h12.html

The eclipse Moon [27ta] is conjunct the star Algol – the severed head of  Medusa from which the winged horse Pegasus was born.

Pegasus was an immortal flying horse. He was the son of the god of the sea, Poseidon, and the winged and snake-haired gorgon Medusa. As shown in the image above Pegasus was born when the Greek hero Perseus cut off the head of the monster Medusa. From Medusa’s headless neck, Pegasus sprang, fully formed.  He is a popular and enduring figure who has special meaning to many people. For example, Pegasus meanings include freedom, power, and the eternal spring of imagination and creativity.

A powerful figure in his own right, Pegasus joined forces with Greek gods and heroes to help them achieve nearly impossible feats. The domestication of the horse “transported people farther and faster, and gave warriors a competitive edge in battle”.


The research was published in Nature on October 20. Here is the chart for the converse progression of the eclipse to that date. Notice that the eclipse axis aligns with the horizon so that the eclipse is triggered.

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