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Sucre (Bolivia): Astrological Article and Chart

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

Sucre (Bolivia)
Date of birth
Sunday, September 29, 1538, 12:00 AM (Julian cal.)
City of birth
Sucre (Bolivia)
Scorpio
Aries
Cancer
Signs
Neptune
Moon
Sun
Planets
3
5
6
Houses
Water
Fire
Elements
1
Birth Path
Views
9,624

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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 Sucre (Bolivia) (Placidus House System) Horoscope and birth chart of Sucre (Bolivia), born September 29, 1538, 12:00 AM (Julian cal.), Sucre (Bolivia) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 33' 26° 06' 10° 07' 18° 27' 04' 14° 35' 25° 57' 47' 15° 40' 10° 21' 25° 37' 15° 07' 55' 15° 06' 19° 00' 24° 27' 19° 50'
Select an object to display more information
Aries
Taurus
Gemini
Cancer
Leo
Virgo
Libra
Scorpio
Sagittarius
Capricorn
Aquarius
Pisces
Sun 15°07' Libra, in House III
Sun Aspects
Sun opposite Midheaven orb 3°20'
Sun opposite Neptune orb 4°59'
Sun sextile Moon orb 4°43'
Sun trine Pluto orb 6°33'
Sun sextile Uranus orb 4°45'
Sun square Ascendant orb 7°19'
Moon 19°50' Sagittarius, in House VI
Moon Aspects
Moon trine Midheaven orb 1°22'
Moon opposite Jupiter orb 6°07'
Sun sextile Moon orb 4°43'
Moon square Saturn orb 5°47'
Moon semi-sextile Venus orb 0°49'
Mercury 0°55' Scorpio, in House IV
Mercury Aspects
Mercury trine Jupiter orb 4°57'
Mercury trine Ascendant orb 6°51'
Mercury square Pluto orb 7°37'
Venus 19°00' Scorpio, in House V
Venus Aspects
Venus conjunction Mars orb 5°27'
Venus inconjunction Midheaven orb 0°33'
Moon semi-sextile Venus orb 0°49'
Venus bi-quintile Jupiter orb 0°56'
Mars 24°27' Scorpio, in House V
Mars Aspects
Venus conjunction Mars orb 5°27'
Mars sextile Saturn orb 1°09'
Mars bi-quintile Midheaven orb 0°00'
Mars sesqui-quadrate Neptune orb 0°39'
Mars inconjunction Jupiter orb 1°29'
Mars sesqui-quadrate Ascendant orb 1°40'
Jupiter 25°57' Gemini, in House XII
Jupiter Aspects
Jupiter square Saturn orb 0°20'
Moon opposite Jupiter orb 6°07'
Mercury trine Jupiter orb 4°57'
Mars inconjunction Jupiter orb 1°29'
Jupiter semi-square Uranus orb 0°36'
Venus bi-quintile Jupiter orb 0°56'
Jupiter sesqui-quadrate Pluto orb 2°24'
Saturn 25°37' Virgo, in House III
Saturn Aspects
Jupiter square Saturn orb 0°20'
Mars sextile Saturn orb 1°09'
Moon square Saturn orb 5°47'
Saturn semi-square Uranus orb 0°15'
Saturn sesqui-quadrate Pluto orb 2°04'
Uranus 10°21' Leo, in House II
Uranus Aspects
Uranus opposite Pluto orb 1°48'
Uranus trine Neptune orb 0°14'
Saturn semi-square Uranus orb 0°15'
Jupiter semi-square Uranus orb 0°36'
Sun sextile Uranus orb 4°45'
Uranus trine Midheaven orb 8°05'
Neptune 10°07' Я Aries, in House IX
Neptune Aspects
Sun opposite Neptune orb 4°59'
Neptune square Ascendant orb 2°20'
Uranus trine Neptune orb 0°14'
Neptune sextile Pluto orb 1°34'
Mars sesqui-quadrate Neptune orb 0°39'
Neptune conjunction Midheaven orb 8°20'
Pluto 8°33' Я Aquarius, in House VII
Pluto Aspects
Uranus opposite Pluto orb 1°48'
Neptune sextile Pluto orb 1°34'
Pluto inconjunction Ascendant orb 0°45'
Sun trine Pluto orb 6°33'
Saturn sesqui-quadrate Pluto orb 2°04'
Mercury square Pluto orb 7°37'
Jupiter sesqui-quadrate Pluto orb 2°24'
North Node 14°35' Taurus, in House X
Lilith 15°06' Scorpio, in House IV
Fortune 3°04' Taurus, in House X
Vertex 26°06' Aquarius, in House VIII
East Point 15°40' Cancer, in House I
Ascendant 7°47' Cancer
House II 10°20' Leo
House III 15°09' Virgo
House IV 18°27' Libra
House V 17°28' Scorpio
House VI 13°00' Sagittarius
House VII 7°47' Capricorn
House VIII 10°20' Aquarius
House IX 15°09' Pisces
Midheaven 18°27' Aries
House XI 17°28' Taurus
House XII 13°00' Gemini
Ascendant 7°47' Cancer
Ascendant Aspects
Neptune square Ascendant orb 2°20'
Pluto inconjunction Ascendant orb 0°45'
Mercury trine Ascendant orb 6°51'
Mars sesqui-quadrate Ascendant orb 1°40'
Sun square Ascendant orb 7°19'
Midheaven 18°27' Aries
Midheaven Aspects
Moon trine Midheaven orb 1°22'
Sun opposite Midheaven orb 3°20'
Mars bi-quintile Midheaven orb 0°00'
Venus inconjunction Midheaven orb 0°33'
Neptune conjunction Midheaven orb 8°20'
Uranus trine Midheaven orb 8°05'
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

Sucre is the constitutional capital of Bolivia, the capital of the Chuquisaca Department and the 6th most populated city in Bolivia. Located in the south-central part of the country, Sucre lies at an elevation of 2,810 meters (9,214 feet). This relatively high altitude gives the city a subtropical highland climate with cool temperatures year-round.

Its pre-Columbian name was Chuquisaca; during the Spanish Empire it was called La Plata.

Before the arrival of the Spanish, the city of Chuquisaca had its own autonomy with respect to the Inca Empire (the Charcas were the only people that did not pay the ransom for the Inca captive).

Today Sucre remains a city of major national importance and is an educational and government center, being the location of the Bolivian Supreme Court. Its pleasant climate and low crime rates have made the city popular amongst foreigners and Bolivians alike. Notably, Sucre contains one of the best preserved Hispanic colonial and republican historic city centres in the Western Hemisphere. This architectural heritage and the millenarian history of the Charcas region has led to Sucre's designation as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

History
On September 29, 1538, Sucre was founded under the name Ciudad de la Plata de la Nueva Toledo (City of Silver of New Toledo) by Pedro Anzures, Marqués de Campo Redondo. In 1559, the Spanish King Philip II established the Audiencia de Charcas in La Plata with authority over an area which covers what is now Paraguay, southeastern Peru, Northern Chile and Argentina, and much of Bolivia. The Audiencia de Charcas was a subdivision of the Viceroyalty of Peru until 1776, when it was transferred to the newly created Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata. In 1601 the Recoleta Monastery was founded by the Franciscans and in 1609 an archbishopric was founded in the city. In 1624 St Francis Xavier University of Chuquisaca was founded.

Very much a Spanish city during the colonial era, the narrow streets of the city centre are organised in a grid, reflecting the Andalusian culture that is embodied in the architecture of the city's great houses and numerous convents and churches. Sucre remains the seat of the Roman Catholic Church in Bolivia, and a common sight is members of religious orders dressed in traditional habit. For much of its colonial history, Sucre's temperate climate was preferred by the Spanish royalty and wealthy families involved in silver trade coming from Potosí. Testament to this is the Glorieta Castle. Sucre's University (Universidad Mayor Real y Pontificia de San Francisco Xavier de Chuquisaca) is one of the oldest universities in the new world.

On May 25, 1809 the Bolivian independence movement was started with the ringing of the bell of the Basilica of Saint Francisco. This bell was rung to the point of breakage, but it can still be found in the Basilica today: it is one of the most precious relics of the city. Until the 19th century, La Plata was the judicial, religious and cultural centre of the region. It was proclaimed provisional capital of the newly independent Alto Peru (later, Bolivia) in July 1826. On July 12, 1839, President José Miguel de Velasco proclaimed a law naming the city as the capital of Bolivia, and renaming it in honor of the revolutionary leader Antonio José de Sucre. After the economic decline of Potosí and its silver industry, the Bolivian seat of government was moved from Sucre to La Paz in 1898. Many argue Sucre was the location of the beginning of the Latin American independence movement against Spain. The first "Grito Libertario" (Shout for Freedom) in any Western Hemisphere Spanish colony is said to have taken place in Sucre in 1809. From that point of view, Bolivia was the last Spanish imperial territory in South America to gain its independence, in 1825. In 1991 Sucre became a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

The city attracts thousands of tourists every year due to its well-preserved downtown with buildings from the 18th and 19th centuries. Nestled at the foot of the twin hills of Churuquella and Sika Sika, Sucre is the gateway to numerous small villages that date from the colonial era, the most well-known of which is Tarabuco, home of the colorful "Pujllay" festival held each March. Most of these villagers are members of one of the indigenous ethnicities. Many dress in clothing distinctive to their respective villages.

The dominant planets

Why is it interesting to study an event's astrological chart? The natal chart, dominant planets and their distribution for "Sucre (Bolivie)" 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 "Sucre (Bolivie)" 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