THE DAY OF THE RED SNAKE

A Journey into the Complex World of Mongolian Astrology

THE DAY OF THE RED SNAKE

Vintage Mongolian Constellation Chart. Circa 1549/ Andrew Fare / Alamy

Unlike in Europe, where horoscopes are viewed as a purely secular and entertaining pastime, especially one that was often frowned upon due to traditional religious beliefs, following a horoscope is part of a widely accepted spiritual practice for Mongolians. Astrology and horoscopes are an integral part of the Buddhist tradition, which is widely practiced in Mongolia, making it a respected part of Mongolian culture.

Contents

The Arrival of Buddhism in Mongolia

Buddhism spread in Mongolia in three waves.

The first wave is considered to be the introduction of Buddhism before the mid-thirteenth century, before the reign of Kublai Khan (1215–94), Chinggis Khan’s grandson. Historically, two forms of Buddhism had spread in Central Asia as early as the first century CE: Hinayana, known as Buddhism of the Lesser Vehicle, and Mahayana, known as Buddhism of the Great Vehicle. Later, during the time of the Turkic Khaganate (sixth to eighth centuries) and the rule of the Khitan dynasty (tenth to eleventh centuries), Buddhist texts were actively translated and disseminated. However, they were, of course, only accessible to the nobility.

The second wave occurred during the formation of the Mongol Empire. At that time, Sakya Pandita Künga Gyeltsen (1182–1251), the head of the Sakya school, was invited from Tibet to the court of Godan, Chinggis Khan's grandson, to preach Buddhism. The preacher’s nephew Phagpa Lama Lodrö Gyeltsen (1235–1280) later became the spiritual teacher of Kublai Khan and was even proclaimed the ‘state tutor’. Sakya Pandita founded several monasteries and translated the main Buddhist sutra, the 'Kangyur' (The Direct Words of the Buddha), along with other Indian and Tibetan texts into Mongolian. Phagpa Lama is also famous for creating the so-called Mongolian 'square script' (Mong. Dörvöljin bichig), which was intended to be used not only for the Mongolian language but also for the languages of other peoples within the expanding empire.

Sakya Pandita 18th century Eastern Tibet/The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Wikimedia Commons

Sakya Pandita 18th century Eastern Tibet/The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Wikimedia Commons

In 1267, Kublai Khan also invited the renowned astronomer Jamal al-Din al-Bukhari from the Maragha Observatory of the Hulagu Ulus.11The Hulegu Ulus, or Ilkhanate (1256–1335)was a state formed by Chinggis Khan's grandson Hulegu, which occupied the lands of present-day Iran, Azerbaijan, Pakistan, and several other countriesIn 1271, Kublai established the Institute of Muslim Astronomy, and an observatory was built in the capital Khan BalgasiThe Mongolian name for the capital of the Yuan Empire, present-day Beijing. The city is also known as Khanbaliqfor the invited Muslim astronomers, where more than thirty scholars worked under the leadership of al-Bukhari.

In 1276, Kublai Khan commissioned engineer Guo Shoujing (1231–1316) to develop a new calendar. To accomplish this, Guo Shoujing reorganized the Khanbaliq Observatory. Using new instruments and previous observations, he determined the year length to be 365.2425 days (only 0.0003 days longer than modern measurements). This value matched the precision of the Gregorian calendar, which would not appear until 300 years later, in 1582, and was used in the Shoushi Li calendar, the work on which was completed in 1281. The Shoushi Li calendar was used for several centuries under the Yuan, Ming, and Qing dynasties.

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The third wave and final wave of Buddhist teachings occurred after the fall of the Yuan Empire in the mid-sixteenth century. Kublai Khan's descendant Altan Khan (1507–1582) invited the prominent Lama of that time, Sonam Gyatso, to Mongolia. Altan Khan presented the Lama with a golden seal inscribed with 'The Seal of Vajradhara—Dalai Lama. May there be victory!' Sonam Gyatso became the first person to be officially granted the title of Dalai Lama. 'Dalai' in Mongolian means 'ocean', and 'Dalai Lama' translates to 'Ocean of Wisdom', implying that his compassion and knowledge are comparable to the ocean. Dalai Lama Sonam Gyatso founded many monasteries in Mongolia and contributed to the spread of Buddhism throughout the country.

Astrology as a Science

In Mongolia, the Mahayana (Great Vehicle) and Vajrayana (Preliminary Vehicle) branches of Buddhism are widely practiced. In both of these traditions, astrology is taken very seriously, and it is not hugely different from astronomy.

In the Tibetan-Mongolian Buddhist educational system, astronomy and astrology are considered one of the traditional sciences. The Buddhist educational system encompasses five major fields of knowledge, known as the 'Five Great Sciences' (in Mongolian, Ikh Tavan Ukhaan), and five auxiliary fields of knowledge, known as the 'Five Minor Sciences' (in Mongolian, Baga Tavan Ukhaan).

A page from the Mongolian astrological treatise/Alamy

A page from the Mongolian astrological treatise/Alamy

The five major sciences are linguistics (Mong. duun ukhaan), logic (Mong. uchir shaltgaany ukhaan), medicine and pharmacology (Mong. anagaakh/tejeekhüyn ukhaan), arts and crafts (Mong. urlakhuyn ukhaan), and self-knowledge, which includes Buddhist philosophy, psychology, and meditation (Mong. dotood ukhaan).

The five minor sciences include poetry (Mong. zokhist ayalguu), rhetoric (Mong. ilt ögüülеkh), versification (Mong. evsüülen nairuulakh), acting and dance (Mong. duurial büjig), and astronomy, astrology, and mathematics (Mong. odon zurkhai). It is worth noting that students studying medicine were required to study astrology, whereas astrologers were not obligated to study medicine.

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In Judaism, many prominent authorities rejected astrology. In Christianity, astrology was banned by the Council of Laodicea (fourth century AD). In Islam, astrology was often equated with witchcraft and considered sinful, even with many famous astronomers and astrologers from the Muslim world, such as Nasir al-Din al-Tusi, Al-Biruni, and Ulugh Beg, being well-known in history.

In Buddhism and Hinduism, however, astrology is part of religious teachings, philosophy, and medicine. In AyurvedaiAn alternative form of medicine originating in Indiaand Tibetan medicine, astrology is used for diagnosis alongside other methods.

Astrology in Mongolian is called 'Zurkhai.' The word 'Zurkhai' comes from the verb 'zurakh', meaning 'to draw' or 'to trace'. This is because Lamas used to perform mathematical calculations with a sharp stick on special blackboards sprinkled with ash. A specific algorithm was used where each newly calculated number was written after erasing the previous one with ash. At the end of the calculation, only the final result remained on the board.

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The Mongolian physician, philosopher, and thirtieth-generation descendant of Genghis Khan, Luvsandanzanjantsan, who lived in the seventeenth century (1639–1704), wrote such well-known works as 'The Essence of Astrology: A Light Clarifying What to Accept and What to Reject' ('Zurkhain Gol Avkh Orkhiig Todotgogch Gerel') and ‘The Guide to Shid Astrology’ ('Shidiin Zurkhain Garin Avlaga'). From the seventeenth century onwards, specialized colleges, called datsans, dedicated entirely to medicine—such as the 'Mamba Datsan'—and to astrology—such as the 'Zurkhain Datsan' (Astrological Datsan)—began to be established in monasteries.

The Mongolian historian and philosopher Sümbe Khambo Ishbaljir (1704–1788) adapted astrology and Tibetan medicine to Mongolian geographical latitudes and local plants, writing the treatise 'New Astrology of Perfect Virtue' ('Tögs Buyant Shine Zurkhai'). Later, in the eighteenth to twentieth centuries, many famous astrologers lived and wrote in Mongolia, such as Tsakhar Gewsh Luvsanchültëm (1740–1810), Mindjuurdorj (seventeenth century), Doyodbaldan (1860–1920), and many others.

The first otoch Lama of Mongolia, one of the two solar and lunar disciples of the Supreme Saint Zanabazar, who lived between 1639 and 1704. The monk was a famous religious figure, traveler and astrologer/Wikimedia Commons

The first otoch Lama of Mongolia, one of the two solar and lunar disciples of the Supreme Saint Zanabazar, who lived between 1639 and 1704. The monk was a famous religious figure, traveler and astrologer/Wikimedia Commons

Kalachakra

Tibetan-Mongolian calendars and horoscopes are based on the teachings and sutra 'Kalachakra Tantra', which the Buddha taught 2,800 years ago in Andhra Pradesh, South India. From India, the teachings spread to Burma* [*modern-day Myanmar], the Malay Peninsula, and Indonesia, but by the fourteenth century, the Kalachakra teachings had been lost in these regions. Between the eleventh and thirteenth centuries, the teachings were transmitted from India to Tibet, and today, the lines of transmission exist within Buddhist schools such as Sakya, Kagyu, and Gelug. In Mongolia, the Gelug tradition—known in Mongolian as 'Sharyn Shashin' (Yellow Faith)—is widespread, and there are also followers of the Kagyu tradition, known in Mongolian as 'Ulaany Shashin' (Red Faith).

Kalachakra in Sanskrit means 'Wheel of Time', and in Mongolian, it is 'Tsagiin Khüree' (tsag—time, khüree—rotating circle). In Mongolia, it is also referred to as the 'Teaching of the Wheel of Time', as well as by its Tibetan name, 'Düinkhor'.

Mandala Depicting Kalachakra And Vishvamata, Tibet/Alamy

Mandala Depicting Kalachakra And Vishvamata, Tibet/Alamy

The leader of the Buddhist Sangha Bogd Gegeen IV (1775–1813) received the Kalachakra initiation from Lama Lhova Jalsrai in Lhasa in 1804. In 1806, he founded the Düinkhor Datsan (monastic college) in the capital of Mongolia, Ikh Khüree (Mong. Great Monastery, modern-day Ulaanbaatar), where the Kalachakra sutra was studied. Following this, the Teaching of the Wheel of Time began to spread in Mongolia, and Düinkhor Datsans started to be established in monasteries. In the nineteenth century, the Kalachakra teachings were transmitted to the Buryats of Siberia, and in the twentieth century, the Kalachakra teachings spread among the Kalmyks along the Volga River and in Tuva. In Buryatia, Kalmykia, and Tuva, departments dedicated to Düinkhor began to appear in monasteries.

 Baruun khüree or Gandantegchinlen, the town of the lamas, Urga, Mongolia.  July 1913/Stéphane Passet/Musée Albert-Kahn/Wikimedia Commons

Baruun khüree or Gandantegchinlen, the town of the lamas, Urga, Mongolia. July 1913/Stéphane Passet/Musée Albert-Kahn/Wikimedia Commons

According to this teaching, time is the measure of external changes in the world and the universe, as well as internal changes in the human body, which are both cyclical. External changes include cycles of the sun, moon, planets, seasons, lunar phases, et cetera, and the Kalachakra sutras contain complex mathematical formulas and algorithms for calculating these cycles. This constitutes the astronomical, astrological, and cosmological aspects of Kalachakra. Internal body cycles include life stages such as childhood, maturity, old age, menstrual cycles, sleep cycles, and breathing, and the Kalachakra literature contains descriptions of the human body and explanations and descriptions of the energy system using concepts such as 'chakras', 'channels', and 'drops'. These descriptions are also part of Tibetan medicine.

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In Tibetan-Mongolian astronomy and astrology, external cycles encompass the movements of the sun, moon, five planets, lunar phases, the twenty-seven lunar constellations, and the sixty-year Jupiter cycle. The Tibetan-Mongolian calendar is lunisolar, meaning it uses lunar months and a solar year. This calendar measures the intervals of time between new moons. Twelve lunar months are shorter than a solar year, so occasionally, approximately once every three years, a leap month is added.

External and internal cycles are, of course, interconnected. People experience these cycles according to their karma, as a result of their thoughts, words, and deeds, performed both in this life and past reincarnations. Therefore, people have limited ability to directly influence their fate and existence within these cycles.

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However, there is also a third cycle of time, known as the 'alternative Kalachakra'—a cycle that includes tantric initiation, two stages of practice, and the attainment of the state of a Buddha. This cycle is not only an alternative to the external and internal Kalachakra but also an antidote to their harmful influences. Through the meditative systems of the Kalachakra teachings, practitioners can transcend their dependent position on external and internal cycles and more effectively achieve their goals and help other beings attain enlightenment.

'Kalachakra' also refers to the deity—yidam, the text of the sutra (book) of Kalachakra, and the teaching and worldview system itself. Kalachakra is the patron deity, the yidam of astronomy and astrology, in this sense reminiscent of the ancient Greek muse of astrology, Urania. Mongolians often refer to Kalachakra as the God of the Wheel of Time (Tsagiin Khürdni Burkhan) or the God Düinkhor (Düinkhor Burkhan).

Buddhist monks wear red bandanas during special 'Avalokesteshvara Initiation' prayers during the fourth day of a teaching session led by Tibetan spiritual leader The Dalai Lama at The Kalachakra Ground near The Mahabodhi Temple in Bodhgaya on January 8, 2010. Exiled Tibetan spiritual leader The Dalai Lama is spending a week in the eastern Indian city where Buddha attained enlightenment, where he will pray and deliver teachings to followers/ DIPTENDU DUTTA/AFP via Getty Images

Buddhist monks wear red bandanas during special 'Avalokesteshvara Initiation' prayers during the fourth day of a teaching session led by Tibetan spiritual leader The Dalai Lama at The Kalachakra Ground near The Mahabodhi Temple in Bodhgaya on January 8, 2010. Exiled Tibetan spiritual leader The Dalai Lama is spending a week in the eastern Indian city where Buddha attained enlightenment, where he will pray and deliver teachings to followers/ DIPTENDU DUTTA/AFP via Getty Images

The initiation of Kalachakra and the two stages of practice constitute a complex of meditative practices of the highest class of tantra, with the ultimate goal of achieving enlightenment. The initiation progresses slowly, step by step, and includes parallels between the external and internal Kalachakra, as well as the use of intricate mandalas—models of the universe and the human body.

For someone who grew up outside this tradition, the idea of Kalachakra is almost incomprehensible. But even for true Buddhists, this practice is considered extraordinarily complex. The initiation of Kalachakra is performed by several teachers, including the Dalai Lama. The Dalai Lama's initiation is offered to a group of people at once. During the initiation, the teachings are explained to the listeners, a process that lasts more than seven days. Both very advanced students and ordinary people can participate in the initiation. It is believed that only advanced students can fully receive and master the teachings, but simply being present at the ceremony is considered a blessing that will ease a person's path to enlightenment in future incarnations.

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Since 1954, the Dalai Lama has conducted dozens of Düinkhor initiations for many thousands of people in various countries around the world, including India, the United States, and Canada, as well as in European countries and Australia. He also conducted the Kalachakra initiation in Mongolia, in Ulaanbaatar, in 1991 and 1995.

Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama prays at the Mahabodhi Temple premises along with other monks during the sixth day of the Kalachakra Festival in Bodhgaya on January 6, 2012. Kalachakra 2012, a festival of teachings and meditations will take place from January 1, 2012 for ten days in the northern Indian state of Bihar and will be attended by Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama/DIPTENDU DUTTA/AFP via Getty Images

Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama prays at the Mahabodhi Temple premises along with other monks during the sixth day of the Kalachakra Festival in Bodhgaya on January 6, 2012. Kalachakra 2012, a festival of teachings and meditations will take place from January 1, 2012 for ten days in the northern Indian state of Bihar and will be attended by Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama/DIPTENDU DUTTA/AFP via Getty Images

The Destruction of Tradition in the Twentieth Century

Following the example of the Soviet Union and under its influence, the Mongolian People's Republic experienced the Great Repressions (Ikh Khelmegdüülelt) during the 1930s. Tens of thousands of people were persecuted, including aristocrats, former officials, Buddhist hierarchs, ordinary monks, wealthy herders, and leaders of the Communist Party—the Mongolian People's Party. Later, also under Soviet influence, Mongolia adopted the Cyrillic script.

Under pressure from the Comintern, over 700 monasteries in Mongolia were destroyed between 1937 and 1939, wiping out almost all in existence. During World War II, while liberating Inner Mongolia and northern China from the Japanese, Soviet troops also destroyed some monasteries in Inner Mongolia.iIn the north of present-day China As a result, only a few monasteries survived in Mongolia, most of which were converted into museums. From 1946 to 1990, only one functioning monastery remained in the entire country—Gandantegchinlen in Ulaanbaatar.

During the repressions of the 1930s, the Gandantegchinlen Monastery in the capital was closed, and the Kalachakra temple within it, like hundreds of other temples, was destroyed. The monastery was reopened in 1944, but the Düinkhor sutras were not read there again until 1961. After democratic reforms in 1993, the Düinkhor temple in Gandantegchinlen Monastery was rebuilt. In August 1995, during his visit to Mongolia, the fourteenth Dalai Lama consecrated the datsan and bestowed the Kalachakra initiation to more than 100,000 people, after which the reading of the sutras and the performance of Kalachakra rituals resumed. In the 2010s, several Düinkhor datsans were established in the capital and the provinces.iaimagsMonks in these datsans study and practice Kalachakra rituals to achieve the state of Buddha. 'For the benefit of all living beings and to help people', the astrologer monks produce astrological calendars.

Kalachakra Tantric Institute, Dechengalapa Tempel, Gandan Monastery, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia/Alamy

Kalachakra Tantric Institute, Dechengalapa Tempel, Gandan Monastery, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia/Alamy

However, even during the socialist period in Mongolia, a traditional Lunar calendar continued to be published as many Mongolians wouldn't be able to manage their agriculture without it. It was called the 'Herdsman's Calendar',iMalchnii tsag toony bichigand censorship viewed it as just an ordinary calendar. It provided herders with lunar months, season starts, phases of the moon, and sunrise and sunset times for the sun and moon. The calendar also noted days according to the twelve-year animal cycle, such as the day of the Black Tiger or Black Rabbit. These details were essential for herders in determining the day for migration, shearing sheep, castrating young animals, and slaughtering livestock in the fall. Herders still consulted with elders or, occasionally, with surviving monks who had become laymen. This calendar was pocket-sized, measuring 14x10 cm, for the convenience of nomadic herders. After 1990, calendars began to be published in Mongolia that additionally included other astrological parameters, such as the element of the day, the number of the lunar mansion star, and various cycles.

'Cut Your Hair Whenever, But Chop a Tree on the Right Day'

In the early 1990s, Mongolian astrology researcher L. Terbish began publishing an annual Mongolian astrology calendar called 'Mongol zurkhain tsag toony bichig' ('Records of Times and Numbers in Mongolian Astrology'). The calculations in this calendar are based on the tradition of the 'Astrology of Perfect Virtue' (Tögs buyant zurkhai). Starting around 2010, other astrologers also began producing yearly calendars that broadly resemble Terbish's calendar, using the same tradition for their calculations. However, Terbish's calendar remains the most popular among the public.

Calendar of the Year of the Bull (2021-2022) by lama-astrologer Tuvden Dovdan/from open access

Calendar of the Year of the Bull (2021-2022) by lama-astrologer Tuvden Dovdan/from open access

These calendars detail the twelve-day animal cycle for each day, lunar month days (phases of the moon), and other cycles, such as the twenty-eight-day lunar mansion cycle, the nine-day mark cycle, and the eight-day element cycle. For instance, 1 June 2024 is the twenty-fourth day of the first month of summer, the Month of the Yellow Snake, a day with two black marks, and the Day of the Red Monkey. Each cycle has specific applications, with tables provided to determine what activities are favorable or unfavorable on a given day.

In Tibetan-Mongolian astrology, personal horoscopes are also created, though this practice is not widely used today. The famous Finnish Mongolist G.J. Ramstedt, who lived in Mongolia in the early twentieth century, wrote in his memoirs that seeing his rapid progress in both spoken and literary Mongolian, Mongols speculated that he had been a Mongol in a previous life. Astrologers in Urga (now Ulaanbaatar) often inquired about his birth date and place to determine, through astrology, which Mongol’s soul had returned to Ramstedt’s body.

Annual calendars also note special days, such as the Day of the Beginning of Seasonal Breathing, the Day of Wheat Ripening, and the Day of Animals Awakening from Hibernation. For example, the Day of the Beginning of Winter Breathing or Spring Breathing occurs slightly before the actual start of the autumn, winter, spring, and summer months.

Mongolia, Khövsgöl Province, Mörön, Khatgal Darhat Herders Community, Ice Festival On The Frozen Lake Khövsgöl At The Full Moon Of February, During Tsagaan Sar, Or White Moon, The Mongolian New Year, Harnessed Sledge Horse With Crampons/Alamy

Mongolia, Khövsgöl Province, Mörön, Khatgal Darhat Herders Community, Ice Festival On The Frozen Lake Khövsgöl At The Full Moon Of February, During Tsagaan Sar, Or White Moon, The Mongolian New Year, Harnessed Sledge Horse With Crampons/Alamy

In modern Mongolia, people consult the calendar only for significant events, such as laying the foundation of a new house, weddings, and moving. In everyday life, Mongolians have long stopped paying attention to the calendar, although a hundred years ago, many wouldn’t even trim their nails or hair without choosing a suitable day for it. Today, many people consider astrology to be superstitious, with skepticism shared by educated and urbanized residents.

Despite this, Mongolians remain particularly cautious about activities that may disturb nature, the earth, trees, and water. For example, laying a house’s foundation, digging a ditch, or cutting down a tree are still considered sacred acts with significant implications of karma, and these are still done according to the calendar. Even skeptics, 'just in case', tend to check astrological indicators or listen to the words of a Lama.

Mongolian People Visit Their Family And Friends In Their Yurts During Tsagaan Tsar, The Mongolian New Year. Khatgal, Mongolia. February 25, 2020/Pierre-Jean Durieu/Alamy

Mongolian People Visit Their Family And Friends In Their Yurts During Tsagaan Tsar, The Mongolian New Year. Khatgal, Mongolia. February 25, 2020/Pierre-Jean Durieu/Alamy

Mongolians are also mindful of the twelve-year animal cycle concerning birth years. Many know which zodiac signs are compatible or incompatible with their own and try to form close and business relationships only with partners whose signs are compatible with theirs.

Suggested Readings:

1. Я.Ганбаатар. Хубилай хааны тэнгэр шинжих ордон (мон. Дворец анализа неба Хубилай хаана). dorgio.mn
2. Как мусульманские ученые повлияли на представление китайцев о звездах. islamosfera.ru
3. Го Шоу-цзин. synologia.ru
4. Цогт цагийн хүрдний Дүйнхор бурхан (Бог Колеса времени Дүйнхор), газета «Глаз разума» («Билгийн мэлмий»), 2011, ноябрь (109).
5. Александр Берзин. Монголын Бурханы шашны түүх (История буддизма в Монголии). studybuddhism.com/mn
6. Александр Берзин. Особенности тибетской астрологии, часть 1: философский контекст и гороскопы. studybuddhism.com
7. Лувсан’минжүүр’дорж «Расчеты движения Солнца и Луны» («Нар сарны хөдөлгөөн байршлыг хөөн бодох»), перевод с тибетского А. Баясгалан, редактор Л. Тэрбиш. Серия «Монгольская астрология», Улаанбаатар.
8. Александр Берзин. Обзор Калачакры – Распространение Калачакры. studybuddhism.com
9. Александр Берзин. Что такое Калачакра? studybuddhism.com/mn
10. С. Нинжбадгар. Расчеты-«лит» монгольской астрологии (Монгол зурхайн лит). — Улаанбаатар, 2006.

Bayarmaa Lhagwaa

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