Jen Deer

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When Cancer Was a Turtle

Illustration by John D Batten for Indian Fairy Tales edited by Joseph Jacobs, 1892

Did you know that the turtle was associated with the zodiac sign of Cancer in Ancient Egypt and Babylon? Upon reflection it is easy to see why. Like the crab, the turtle resides within his own home, and navigates the shoreline, the middle-way of an ever-changing edge between water and earth.

The person with a strong Cancer has this quality of navigating the ever changing liminal spaces in the world between land and water. The shore is a metaphor and Cancer encompasses deep intuition and feeling regarding when to stay away from the proverbial water when the tides are too high. This feeds into Cancer’s association with the Moon, its ruling planet, and the Moon’s influences on the ebbing and rising tides. 

It does make sense why turtle would be associated with Cancer, the sign of the universe’s birth in the medieval thema mundi, representing motherhood and the womb. In many traditions, the world itself was represented as a turtle. In Lenape Indian folklore, a creation story of The Great Turtle describes a great flood that was only survivable by those floating atop an old turtle shell. In this myth, all of life on Earth was rescued by a humble muskrat who shoveled land on top of the turtle shell, out of which the whole world re-grew.

Illustration from The Turtles of New England by Harold L. Babcock, 1919 

In many Native American traditions, the back of a turtle represents the lunar calendar, the thirteen segments of its shell standing for the thirteen moons. Many tribes teach this, including the Oneida Nation and the Ojibwe. This is perhaps the strongest collective unconscious link between the turtle and the Moon-ruled sign of Cancer. Regardless of disparities between time and space, many cultures around the world feel similar connections between the turtle and the Moon. In The Rulership Book by Rex Bills—a reference tome for astrologers—turtles are listed as Moon creatures. 

In many areas of Asia, as well as in some indigenous cultures of the Americas, the turtle’s significance is cosmic. It is referred to as The World Turtle, the Cosmic Turtle, or the World-bearing Turtle. This is a mytheme in which a giant turtle (or tortoise) supports or contains the whole world. The tortoise represents the universe in China and Tibet. Its rounded top represents heaven, and the square underneath signifies earth. The underside of the dome of the shell displays the astrological elements. The World Turtle in Vedic mythology is known as Akūpāra.

Hindu symbolical representation of the earth in Popular Science Monthly Magazine, conducted by Edward Livingston Youmans c. 1700s-1800s

Cancer and the Moon are associated with divination. The turtle fits in thematically here too. There was a longstanding tradition of turtle-shell divination throughout the Zhou dynasty of Ancient China. One method was to apply a piping hot brand to the turtle shell causing it to crack. Oracles would then interpret the symbols of the crack.

In Ancient Babylon, the turtle symbolized the season of winter, perhaps representing a retreat into one’s home for warmth and comfort. In Ancient Egypt, the constellation of Cancer was called the Stars of the Water and symbolized by two turtles. According to The Only Astrology Book You’ll Ever Need:

Many astrologers think that Cancer the Crab is a melding of the Egyptian turtles and a Babylonian water creature called Allul, which was apparently a kind of tortoise. All three water creatures---turtles, tortoise, and crab—are similar in important ways. They resemble each other in form, and all are hard-shelled and move slowly (like the Sun’s movement on entering Cancer.)

Illustration from The Turtles of New England by Harold L. Babcock, 1919 

It is always incredible how intuitive we can be regarding these symbols, especially if our birth charts are bursting with water. My mother is a Cancer Sun, Venus, and Mercury and she always loved turtles. When I was young, she decked out our house with turtle tchotchkes. When in doubt about a birthday gift, I got her a turtle.  

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Sources

  1. Annus, Amar, ed. Divination and Interpretation of Signs in the Ancient World.

  2. Bills, Rex. The Rulership Book.

  3. Circlot, J. E. A Dictionary of Symbols.

  4. Lewis, James R. The Astrology Book.

  5. McQuillar, Tayannah Lee. Astrology for Mystics.

  6. Woolfolk, Johanna Martine. The Only Astrology Book You’ll Ever Need

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