♃ Jupiter ⚼ Sesquiquadrate ♅ Uranus
135° · minor aspect · tense · default orb ±2°
The sesquiquadrate between Jupiter and Uranus reads the classical planet of increase, law, and faith against the modern planet of rupture at 135 degrees. Twentieth-century practitioners, the pairing's only literature, describe the tense minor contact as expansion destabilized: opportunity arriving as disruption, principle strained by novelty, fortunes turned on abrupt developments. Cited domains include speculation and markets, technology and aviation from the modern correspondence lists, reform movements, and publishing overtaken by events. The angle's minor rank keeps the signature episodic, a periodic gust through Jovian affairs rather than a standing wind.
Traditional reading
Neither element is ancient, the aspect dating from the early modern minors and the planet from 1781, so no sect or dignity doctrine was framed for the pair. Jupiter applies, moving roughly seven times Uranus's speed. Their fourteen-year synodic cycle schedules the sesquiquadrate at predictable intervals, and mundane practitioners have tracked Jupiter-Uranus angles against episodes of speculative excitement since the nineteenth century. Where the same planets' quintile is credited with inventive gift, the eighth-harmonic contact is filed by cosmobiological indexes under sudden reversals of fortune and strained expectation.
Classical reading
One and a half squares (135°). Classified as inharmonious. Adds friction similar to the semisquare.
Modern reading
Modern reading: agitating tension late in a developmental cycle. Pressure to express or resolve.
The two bodies
Other Jupiter–Uranus aspects
More on the Sesquiquadrate aspect in general.
Reference, not advice
This is cultural and astronomical reference, not personal prediction or advice.
Last reviewed .