The story goes that during the height of the war, Ebertin worked feverishly on a manuscript that would strip astrology of its mystical fluff and turn it into a biological, psychological science. This manuscript became The Combination of Stellar Influences
In the winter of 1940, in a cramped, candle-lit study in Aalen, Germany, Reinhold Ebertin The story goes that during the height of
For decades, the book was like an underground manual. In the 1970s, it gained a legendary "black market" status among Western astrologers. Since it was difficult to find in English, students would pass around blurred, photocopied PDFs in a cramped
and handwritten translations like forbidden blueprints. They called it the "Astrologer’s Bible." candle-lit study in Aalen