Chaldean Numerology
Chaldean numerology is considered one of the oldest numerological traditions, tracing its roots to the astrological and mathematical practices of Babylon.
Origin of the name. In antiquity, "Chaldeans" referred to Babylonian priest-astrologers, and this name became attached to the system now promoted by authors such as Corinna Stevens and Simon Lykin.
Historical continuity. The continuity from actual Babylonian practices is disputed by scholars, yet the internal logic of the system holds independent interest.
The Key Difference — a 1-to-8 Number Range
The sacred number 9. The number 9 is considered sacred and is not assigned to any letter, standing apart as a symbol of wholeness and completion.
Not order, but vibration. Letters receive their numbers not in sequential order (as in the Pythagorean) but according to their "vibrational" correspondence to planetary archetypes.
Planetary Correspondences of Numbers
- 1 → Sun
- 2 → Moon
- 3 → Jupiter
- 4 → Uranus
- 5 → Mercury
- 6 → Venus
- 7 → Neptune
- 8 → Saturn
- 9 → Mars (not assigned to any letter)
Analysis Built on Two Numbers
- The Name Number — external character and destiny
- The Birth Date Number — inner nature and potential
Two-digit numbers as independent entities. Compound numbers are treated as especially significant and are interpreted as independent entities, not merely reduced to a single digit — unlike most Pythagorean practices.
Place in Errarium
The numerology family. In the Errarium atlas, Chaldean numerology (#29) stands alongside the Pythagorean (#5), Vedic (#30), and Arabic (#31) systems.
Key distinctions:
- Planetary, not abstractly numerical archetypes
- The special status of the number 9
- Emphasis on two-digit numbers as independently meaningful units
Closer to astrology. This makes the Chaldean system closer to astrology in its imagistic logic.
Method Info
#29Chaldean Numerology
Data D1
Causality C3+C1
Time T0+T2+T3
Result F1, F2, F3, F4
