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Alfred Witte

 
(1878-1941)

German astrologer and founder of the Hamburg school of astrological interpretation. Witte was born in Hamburg, Germany, on March 2, 1878. As a young man, he worked for the city of Hamburg and then served in the German army during World War I. By the time the war started he had become interested in astrology and pursued his speculations while soldiering. He discovered a certain moving point in the zodiac that he found helpful in interpreting charts and he hypothesized the existence of a trans-Neptunian planet which he call Cupido. Such a planet would be discovered in 1930 and named Pluto.

After the War, Witte gathered a group of astrologers, especially Friedrich Sieggrün (1877-1951), to assist in developing his insights. The results were an innovative system of astrology that came to be known as Uranian Astrology or the Hamburg School, after Witte's hometown. As the system developed, Witte postulated first three additional planets, named Hades, Zeus, and Kronos, and then four additional imaginary planets. Criticism of the additional planets, unknown to anyone except Witte and his associates, was balanced by the good reports of satisfied clients.

Witte also introduced the idea of midpoints, another imaginary addition to the horoscope. As the name implies, a midpoint is a point halfway between any two planets in the chart. The combined influences of the two planets are evident at the midpoint. This combined influence is activated by planets in the present transiting the midpoint. The two planets and their midpoint together made a planetary picture and the various planetary pictures become an important element in chart interpretation.

The Hamburg School, as the Witte-Sieggrün system of interpretation was called, created a controversy in Germany for its challenge to traditional methods of astrological interpretation. Witte defended the system, for which he claimed outstanding results not provided by more traditional charts in several books, beginning with Regelwerk für Planetenbilder (1928).

Witte's system never gained support outside Germany and did not reemerge from the Nazi suppression of astrology in the late 1930s. It is remembered today primarily through cosmo-biology, the system developed by Reinhold Ebertin, one of Witte's students. The Hamburg school was championed by Hermann Lefeldt after the war. Lefeldt published both a revised German edition of Witte's book and an English translation.

The progress of Uranian astrology stopped by Witte's suicide in Hamburg on August 2, 1941, a death possibly related to the rise of Nazism and the resulting suppression of astrology in Germany.

Sources:

Brau, Jean-Louis, Helean Weaver, and Allan Edwards. Larousse Encyclopedia of Astrology. New York: New American Library, 1982.

Holden, James H., and Robert A. Hughes. Astrological Pioneers of America. Tempe, Ariz.: American Federation of Astrologers, 1988.

Witte, Alfred. Regelwerk für Planetbilder. 3d ed. Hamburg: Witte Verlag, 1935. Translated by Richard Svehla as Rules for Planetary Pictures. Hamburg: Witte Verlag, 1939.

Witte, Alfred, and Herman Lefeldt. Rules for Planetary Pictures. Translated by Kurt Knupfer. Hamburg: L. Rudolph (Witte Verlag), 1974.

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Wikipedia: Alfred Witte
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Alfred Witte

Alfred Witte (2 March 1878, 21:12 LMT, Hamburg – 4 August 1941, 4:01 MET, Hamburg) was a German surveyor, astrologer, an amateur astronomer, and the founder of the Hamburg School of Astrology. Witte revived and further developed the use of astrological midpoints for precision in astrological analysis and prediction.

Contents

Writings

In his early writings in the 1920s, he experimented with numerous historical astrology techniques, including the astrological houses, planetary formulae similar to Arabic parts, and for a brief period a new scheme of planetary rulerships. His approach to astrology was to verify assumptions by current reality checks rather than historical validation. He sought to approach astrology as a science, and the controversy over his assertion of the existence of Trans-Neptunian objects other than Pluto led to widespread ridicule and rejection during his later years.

Trans-Neptunian hypothesis

Witte proposed the existence of several hypothetical Trans-Neptunian objects. While modern technology has verified the existence of thousands of Trans-Neptunian objects, the specific Trans-Neptunian objects that are used by the Hamburg School and Uranian astrology have not yet been validated or disproven as of November 2007. Some members of the Hamburg School have for a number of years asserted that some of Witte's Trans-Neptunians may actually be the barycenters of clusters of Trans-Neptunian objects, and shun both the labels "planet" and "object" for this reason. Witte did however describe the colors of two of his inner Transneptunians, Cupido and Hades, in articles in the anthology Der Mensch - Eine Empfangsstation kosmischer Suggestionen. Witte was prohibited by the Third Reich from recording his observations during the last years of his life.

Witte was considered an enemy of the German Third Reich and his main book, the Rulebook for Planetary Pictures was banned and burned by the Nazis. He committed suicide, in anticipation of internment by the Nazis, in 1941. His work was resurrected by his students, among whom was Ludwig Rudolph, after 1945.

In the mid 20th century, a collection of Witte’s observations and techniques came to be described in the English speaking world as Uranian astrology.

See also

References

  • Rudolph, Ludwig, Witte, Alfred: Der Mensch – eine Empfangsstation kosmischer Suggestionen, Witte-Verlag, Hamburg, 1975: An anthology of Witte's writings during early experiments 1913-1924.
  • Fleischhauer, Carl Otto, Alfred Witte – Landmesser und Astrologe – und die Hess-Affäre, self-published Hamburg 1997, published by Michael Feist (Edition Astrologie), Hamburg, 2003, ISBN 3-00-012760-7.

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Occultism & Parapsychology Encyclopedia. Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology. Copyright © 2001 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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