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Tlaxcala (Mexico): Astrological Article and Chart

You will find below the horoscope of the event Tlaxcala (Mexico) with its interactive chart and planetary dominants.

Tlaxcala (Mexico)
Date of birth
Tuesday, October 3, 1525, 12:00 AM (Julian cal.)
City of birth
Tlaxcala (Mexico)
Taurus
Scorpio
Cancer
Signs
Moon
Sun
Neptune
Planets
10
4
3
Houses
Water
Earth
Elements
8
Birth Path
Views
8,953

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Astrology DataBase on November 22, 2024 at 7:15 PM, CEST
70,582 people and events, 34,500 of which with a known time of birth
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Astrology chart of Tlaxcala (Mexico) (Placidus House System) Horoscope and birth chart of Tlaxcala (Mexico), born October 3, 1525, 12:00 AM (Julian cal.), Tlaxcala (Mexico) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 27° 17' 10° 11' 29° 31' 22° 56' 14' 13° 26' 19° 48' 11° 51' 19° 35' 26° 50' 19° 20' 49' 38' 19° 10' 20° 15' 55' 16° 49'
Select an object to display more information
Aries
Taurus
Gemini
Cancer
Leo
Virgo
Libra
Scorpio
Sagittarius
Capricorn
Aquarius
Pisces
Sun 19°20' Libra, in House III
Sun Aspects
Sun opposite Midheaven orb 3°36'
Sun sextile Mars orb 0°54'
Sun square Pluto orb 2°30'
Sun trine Uranus orb 7°28'
Sun square Ascendant orb 7°30'
Moon 8°14' Taurus, in House X
Moon Aspects
Moon opposite Mercury orb 0°23'
Moon opposite Venus orb 2°25'
Moon conjunction Jupiter orb 5°11'
Moon sextile Neptune orb 1°56'
Moon trine Pluto orb 8°34'
Mercury 8°38' Scorpio, in House IV
Mercury Aspects
Moon opposite Mercury orb 0°23'
Mercury conjunction Venus orb 2°49'
Mercury trine Neptune orb 1°32'
Mercury opposite Jupiter orb 4°47'
Venus 5°49' Scorpio, in House IV
Venus Aspects
Mercury conjunction Venus orb 2°49'
Moon opposite Venus orb 2°25'
Venus trine Neptune orb 4°22'
Venus bi-quintile Uranus orb 0°02'
Venus semi-square Mars orb 0°34'
Venus opposite Jupiter orb 7°37'
Venus bi-quintile Saturn orb 0°17'
Venus quintile Pluto orb 0°59'
Mars 20°15' Sagittarius, in House V
Mars Aspects
Mars trine Midheaven orb 2°41'
Sun sextile Mars orb 0°54'
Venus semi-square Mars orb 0°34'
Mars bi-quintile Ascendant orb 0°35'
Mars opposite Uranus orb 8°23'
Mars bi-quintile Jupiter orb 0°48'
Jupiter 13°26' Я Taurus, in House X
Jupiter Aspects
Moon conjunction Jupiter orb 5°11'
Mercury opposite Jupiter orb 4°47'
Jupiter trine Pluto orb 3°23'
Jupiter sextile Neptune orb 3°14'
Venus opposite Jupiter orb 7°37'
Jupiter semi-square Saturn orb 1°05'
Mars bi-quintile Jupiter orb 0°48'
Saturn 29°31' Я Pisces, in House IX
Saturn Aspects
Saturn trine Ascendant orb 2°41'
Venus bi-quintile Saturn orb 0°17'
Saturn quintile Uranus orb 0°19'
Saturn quintile Pluto orb 0°42'
Jupiter semi-square Saturn orb 1°05'
Uranus 11°51' Я Gemini, in House XI
Uranus Aspects
Uranus square Neptune orb 1°40'
Uranus semi-square Ascendant orb 0°01'
Venus bi-quintile Uranus orb 0°02'
Saturn quintile Uranus orb 0°19'
Mars opposite Uranus orb 8°23'
Sun trine Uranus orb 7°28'
Uranus bi-quintile Pluto orb 1°02'
Neptune 10°11' Я Pisces, in House VIII
Neptune Aspects
Mercury trine Neptune orb 1°32'
Moon sextile Neptune orb 1°56'
Uranus square Neptune orb 1°40'
Venus trine Neptune orb 4°22'
Jupiter sextile Neptune orb 3°14'
Neptune sesqui-quadrate Ascendant orb 1°39'
Pluto 16°49' Capricorn, in House VI
Pluto Aspects
Sun square Pluto orb 2°30'
Jupiter trine Pluto orb 3°23'
Pluto square Midheaven orb 6°07'
Saturn quintile Pluto orb 0°42'
Venus quintile Pluto orb 0°59'
Uranus bi-quintile Pluto orb 1°02'
Moon trine Pluto orb 8°34'
North Node 27°17' Я Capricorn, in House VII
Lilith 19°48' Taurus, in House X
Fortune 7°55' Capricorn, in House VI
Vertex 19°10' Scorpio, in House IV
East Point 19°35' Cancer, in House XII
Ascendant 26°50' Cancer
House II 22°13' Leo
House III 20°53' Virgo
House IV 22°56' Libra
House V 25°54' Scorpio
House VI 27°17' Sagittarius
House VII 26°50' Capricorn
House VIII 22°13' Aquarius
House IX 20°53' Pisces
Midheaven 22°56' Aries
House XI 25°54' Taurus
House XII 27°17' Gemini
Ascendant 26°50' Cancer
Ascendant Aspects
Saturn trine Ascendant orb 2°41'
Uranus semi-square Ascendant orb 0°01'
Mars bi-quintile Ascendant orb 0°35'
Neptune sesqui-quadrate Ascendant orb 1°39'
Sun square Ascendant orb 7°30'
Midheaven 22°56' Aries
Midheaven Aspects
Sun opposite Midheaven orb 3°36'
Mars trine Midheaven orb 2°41'
Pluto square Midheaven orb 6°07'
Display Parameters
Calculation Parameters

* A planet less than 1° from the next House cusp is considered to be posited in the said House. 2° when the AS and the MC are involved

About this event

Tlaxcala, officially Tlaxcala de Xicohténcatl, is the capital city of the Mexican state of Tlaxcala and seat of the municipality of the same name. The city did not exist during the pre Hispanic period but was laid out by the Spanish as a center of evangelization and governance after the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire. It was designated as a diocese but eventually lost this status to Puebla as its population declined. The city still has many of its old colonial structures including the former Franciscan monastery, as well as newer civic structures such as the Xicohtencatl Theatre.

History

The name Tlaxcala most likely comes from a Nahuatl phrase which means “place of corn bread.” The Aztec glyph for the Mesoamerican dominion is two hills from which emerge a pair of hands making a tortilla.

The site of the modern city did not have a settlement for most of the pre Hispanic era. The area was ruled by a coalition of four dominions called Tepeticpac, Ocotelolco, Tizatlan and Quiahuiztlan which united in the 14th century to defend themselves against the Aztecs and other enemies. In the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, Tlaxcala was one of the most important areas of Mesoamerica with commercial ties to the Gulf of Mexico to the Pacific Ocean as well as Central America.

As the Aztec Empire grew, it conquered Tlaxcala's neighbors but left the dominion in order to perform annual ritual combat called the “flower wars” which aimed to not conquer but capture soldiers for sacrifice. The conquest of the surrounding area also cut off Tlaxcala's commerce. This remained the case until the arrival of the Spanish in the early 16th century. Hernán Cortés took advantage of this situation, enlisting the Tlaxcalans as allies against the Aztecs, giving them a base to attack from and regroup after the La Noche Triste when they were initially expelled from Tenochtitlan.

Despite the military alliance of the Tlaxcalans, they did not have a single capital. After the Spanish conquest terminated, the Europeans selected the current site to solidify their hold on the Tlaxcalans as well as have a base for evangelization. The most likely time that the city was founded was spring of 1522. Tlaxcala was the fifth diocese to be established in the Americas and the second in Mexico after Yucatán. The first bishop was Julian Garces and the seat was established in 1527. However, since there was a cathedral in the city of Puebla and not in Tlaxcala, the seat was moved to Puebla in 1539 and has remained there since. The original territory of the diocese included the states of Puebla, Tlaxcala, Veracruz, Tabasco, Hidalgo and Guerrero, but as new diocese were erected, the territory reduced to the present, states of Puebla and Tlaxcala. In 1903, the name of the Diocese of Tlaxcala was changed to the Diocese of Puebla.

At the time of the Spanish conquest, the Tlaxcala area was heavily populated but with epidemics, emigrations and the construction of the Nochistongo canal to drain the Valley of Mexico, most of the indigenous population disappeared. A document of 1625 states that there were 300,000 in the city in the 16th century but only 700 remained by that time it was written. The city was begun in 1537 with the construction of the San Francisco monastery. The city became the center of Tlaxcala identity during the colonial period. Its commerce was originally centered in the main square but was eventually moved to the outskirts of town. One important project that was traded here was the cochineal insect, used to make red dye. When New Spain was divided into five major provinces, Tlaxcala became the capital of one of them, with roughly the same dimensions as the pre Hispanic coalition of dominions. Tlaxcala was promised certain rights as an ally during the Conquest. When a number of these were not met, a codex was produced here called the Lienzo de Tlaxcala as a complaint to the Spanish Crown. However, despite the complaints, most of the indigenous eventually lost their lands around the city and lost many of their commerce rights in it.

In 1692, a revolt occurred against Governor Manuel de Bustamante y Bustillo due to the scarcity of grain.

The city of Tlaxcala became a municipality in 1813, under the Spanish Constitution of 1812.

French forces were forced out of the city in 1867 after which Tlaxcalan forces went with Porfirio Díaz to liberate Puebla and after that, Querétaro and Mexico City.

During the end of the 19th century, the politics of the city were dominated by Próspero Cahuantzi, who promoted public works such as kiosks, streets, public markets, bridges and government buildings. The city changed from oil lamps to electric light in the historic center, the state government palace was remodeled and the Xicohtencatl Theatre was built. Electricity for the city was generated through a hydroelectric works in a canal on the Los Negros River.

After the Mexican Revolution, the city recovered and began to grow again, reaching a population of 6,000 by 1927. In the mid 20th century, public education was enhanced at the middle and high school levels. More public works were undertaken to give the city the appearance it has today.

The dominant planets

Why is it interesting to study an event's astrological chart? The natal chart, dominant planets and their distribution for "Tlaxcala (Mexique)" for example? Because a branch of astrology analyses events by referring to the astrological chart of their creation or beginning. Thus, it is possible to cast the chart for a company, a city, a country, an earthquake, a scientific discovery and so forth.

Through chart analysis and forecast, this branch of astrology provides information about the quality of a given event and reviews its positive or negative potential (success of a company, a project, an encounter etc.). Or it can simply allow you to analyse the static natal chart itself (natural disaster, invention etc.) for astrological research purpose.

Of course, in the case of these mundane or specific event charts, an astrological portrait is irrelevant. But all the rest remains valid: dominants, statistics for the positions of planets, signs, houses etc. These kinds of charts' interpretative techniques constitute a full-fledged discipline in itself, different from that of personal charts.

One must be careful when interpreting those event charts for two reasons: firstly, the major difficulty is to determine the exact date that symbolizes the event - and the exact time if possible. If we take, for example the creation of a company, there are several possible dates: the date when the partners agreed to create it is a first possibility; the date the statutes were registered, or the date of the company's legal incorporation, shortly afterwards, are also valid. We could also imagine that the date and time of the creation of its name also represent its birth. In any case, the issue is to identify "what symbolically represents best the creation of that event". This is the real first difficulty, in most cases.

The other reason why one must be cautious is only because this discipline is more difficult to study - its outcomes are less reliable than those of a personal chart. Good results are yielded, indeed, but pleading in favour or against it is not the point here. The technique exists, just as mundane astrology and the study of planetary cycles are there to explain world events located in space and time.

Therefore, these pages give the natal chart of "Tlaxcala (Mexique)" with the position of planets, signs and houses, as well as the graphs of the dominants and planetary distributions.

Hemispheres and Quadrants for this event

Elements, Modes and Polarities for this event

Dominants: Planets, Signs and Houses for this event