Cancer (Astrology) : Background

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Cancer (astrology)

Cancer (♋︎) ("crab" in Latin) is the fourth astrological sign in the zodiac, originating from the constellation of Cancer.
It spans from 90° to 120° celestial longitude. Under the tropical zodiac, the Sun transits this area between
approximately June 22 and July 22,[2] and under the sidereal zodiac, the Sun transits this area between
approximately July 16 and August 17.[3]
In astrology, Cancer is the cardinal sign of the Water trigon, which is made up of Cancer, Pisces, and Scorpio.[4] It is
one of the six negative signs, and its ruling planet is the Moon. Though some depictions of Cancer feature
a lobster or crayfish,[2] the sign is most often represented by the crab, based on the Karkinos. Cancer's opposite sign
is Capricorn.

Background[edit]
See also: History of astrology
Cancer is the fourth sign of the zodiac, which the sun enters at the summer solstice in the Northern Hemisphere, on
approximately June 21.[5] Those who are born from approximately June 21[6] to July 22 (depending upon the year)
are born under Cancer.[2] Individuals born during these dates, depending on which system of astrology they
subscribe to, may be called "Cancerians".[5] Cancer is a northern sign, and its opposite sign is Capricorn.[7][8][9] Cancer
is a cardinal sign.
Water is the element associated with Cancer,[10] and, alongside Scorpio and Pisces, it forms the water trigon.[11] The
water trigon is one of four elemental trigons in the zodiac, with the other three being fire, earth, and air.[12] When a
trigon is influential, it is said to affect changes on earth.[12] Cancer is said to be the house of Neptune and the
exaltation of Jupiter, both astronomical bodies over those born under Cancer.[7][8] Its ruling planet is the Moon.[13]

Mythology[edit]
In Hindu astrology, the sign of Cancer is named Karka and its Lord is Moon.[14] Divine associations with Cancer
in Renaissance astrology are Luna/Diana, both goddesses that represent the Moon, Cancer's ruling planet.[10]

Early history[edit]
"Cancer" is an ancient word of Indo-European origin, derived from a root meaning "to scratch."[15] In ancient Egypt,
the sign of Cancer was conceived as a scarab beetle, while in Mesopotamia it was represented by a turtle.[15] In
each case, the animal representative of the sign was perceived as "pushing" the sun across the heavens, initiating
the summer solstice.[15]
Latin cancer is the generic word for 'crab'.[15] According to Greek myth, the symbol of Cancer—often a crab, though
sometimes a lobster—is based on the Karkinos (Greek: "Cancer"), a crab crushed under the foot of Hercules, and
whose remains were placed in the sky by Hera, forming the Cancer constellation.[5] In Roman variations of the story,
it is Juno—Hera's counterpart in Roman mythology—who places the crab in the sky.[16] Naturalist Richard Hinckley
Allen, in 1899, deemed Cancer the "most inconspicuous figure in the zodiac," adding that its mythology "apologizes
for its being there by the story that when the Crab was crushed by Hercules, for pinching his toes during a contest
with the Hydra in the Marsh of Lerna, Juno exalted it to the sky."[16]

In the arts[edit]
During the Middle Ages, the zodiacal symbol of Cancer was included in devotional books and incorporated into
monumental sculptures.[15] The depiction of Cancer as a crab is most prevalent in Mediterranean and Western
European art.[15]
In Dante Alighieri's Paradiso, he makes reference to Cancer, writing:
Thereafterward a light among them brightened,
So that, if Cancer one such crystal had,
Winter would have a month of one sole day.

— Dante Alighieri, Paradiso[17]
Cancer is figured in Giovanni Maria Falconetto's 1517 painting, Cancer, as the guardian of the city of Verona.[18] The
Cancer symbol is also depicted in Agostino di Duccio's sculpture View of Rimini Under the Sign of Cancer (1450).
 In Giorgio Vasari's fresco, the Chamber of Fortune, Cancer is represented in the northern compartment of the
[19]

ceiling, pictured by Diana, holding the moon, along with a crab.[

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