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{{short description|Graphical symbols used in astrology and astronomy}}
{{short description|Graphical symbols used in astrology and astronomy}}
A '''planet symbol''' (or ''planetary symbol'') is a graphical symbol used in [[astrological symbol|astrology]] and [[astronomical symbol|astronomy]] to represent a [[classical planet]] (including the Sun and the Moon) or one of the eight modern planets. The symbols are also used in [[alchemy]] to represent the metals that are [[Classical planets in Western alchemy|associated]] with the planets. The use of these symbols is based in ancient [[Greco-Roman astronomy]], although their current shapes are a development of the 16th century.
A '''planet symbol''' or '''planetary symbol''' is a graphical symbol used in [[astrological symbol|astrology]] and [[astronomical symbol|astronomy]] to represent a [[classical planet]] (including the Sun and the Moon) or one of the modern planets. The symbols were also used in [[alchemy]] to represent the [[Classical planets in Western alchemy|metals associated with the planets]], and in calendars for their associated days. Most of the symbols originated in [[Greco-Roman astronomy]]; their modern forms developed in the 16th century.


The classical planets with their symbols and associated metals are:
The classical planets, their symbols, days and most commonly associated [[planetary metal]]s are:
{| class="wikitable" style="margin:1em auto; text-align:center;"
<center>
{| class=wikitable
|-
|-
!planet
|planet and moon || Moon || Mercury || Venus || Sun || Mars || Jupiter || Saturn
| [[Moon]]|| [[Mercury (planet)|Mercury]]|| [[Venus]]|| [[Sun]]|| [[Mars]]|| [[Jupiter]]|| [[Saturn]]
|-
|-
!symbol
|symbol || {{resize|150%|☾}} || {{resize|150%|☿}} || {{resize|150%|♀}} || {{resize|150%|☉}} || {{resize|150%|♂}} || {{resize|150%|♃}} || {{resize|150%|♄}}
| [[file:Moon decrescent symbol (fixed width).svg|24px|☾]] || [[file:Mercury symbol (fixed width).svg|24px|☿]] || [[file:Venus symbol (fixed width).svg|24px|♀]] || [[file:Sun symbol (fixed width).svg|24px|☉]] || [[file:Mars symbol (fixed width).svg|24px|♂]] || [[file:Jupiter symbol (fixed width).svg|24px|♃]] || [[file:Saturn symbol (fixed width).svg|24px|♄]]
|-
|-
!unicode
|metal || silver || mercury || copper || gold || iron || tin || lead
| ☾ || ☿ || ♀︎ || ☉ || ♂︎ || ♃ || ♄
|-
!day
| Monday || Wednesday || Friday || Sunday || Tuesday || Thursday || Saturday
|-
!metal
| silver || quicksilver || copper || gold || iron || tin || lead
|-
|-
|}
|}
</center>


The [[International Astronomical Union]] (IAU) discourages the use of these symbols in modern journal articles, and their style manual proposes one- and two-letter abbreviations for the names of the planets for cases where planetary symbols might be used, such as in the headings of tables.<ref name=iau-style-manual >{{cite book
The [[International Astronomical Union]] (IAU) discourages the use of these symbols in modern journal articles, and their style manual proposes one- and two-letter abbreviations for the names of the planets for cases where planetary symbols might be used, such as in the headings of tables.<ref name=iau-style-manual >{{cite book
Line 22: Line 29:
}}</ref>
}}</ref>
The modern planets with their traditional symbols and IAU abbreviations are:
The modern planets with their traditional symbols and IAU abbreviations are:
{| class="wikitable" style="margin:1em auto; text-align:center;"
<center>
{| class=wikitable
|-
|-
!planet
|planet || Mercury || Venus || Earth || Mars || Jupiter ||Saturn || Uranus || Neptune
| Mercury || Venus || [[Earth]]|| Mars || Jupiter ||Saturn || [[Uranus]]|| [[Neptune]]
|-
|-
!symbol
|symbol || {{resize|150%|☿}} || {{resize|150%|♀}} || {{resize|150%|♁}} || {{resize|150%|♂}} || {{resize|150%|♃}} || {{resize|150%|♄}} || {{resize|150%|⛢}} || {{resize|150%|♆}}
| [[file:Mercury symbol (fixed width).svg|24px|☿]] || [[file:Venus symbol (fixed width).svg|24px|♀]] || [[file:Earth symbol (fixed width).svg|24px|🜨]] || [[file:Mars symbol (fixed width).svg|24px|♂]] || [[file:Jupiter symbol (fixed width).svg|24px|♃]] || [[file:Saturn symbol (fixed width).svg|24px|♄]] || [[file:Uranus platinum symbol (fixed width).svg|24px|⛢]] || [[file:Neptune symbol (fixed width).svg|24px|♆]]
|-
|-
!initial (IAU)
|IAU || Me<ref>Or 'H', with 'M' for 'Mars'. In a provision for the unlikely event a satellite were ever discovered around Mercury, it would be abbreviated 'H1'.</ref> || V || E || Ma || J || S || U || N
| Me<br>H{{efn|name=H_vs_Me_note|In order to have one-letter abbreviations for every planet, the IAU recommends 'H' (''[[Hermes]]'') for Mercury and 'M' for Mars. In the unlikely event a satellite were ever discovered around Mercury, its official abbreviation would be '''H1'''.}} || V || E || Ma<br>M{{efn|name=H_vs_Me_note}} || J || S || U || N
|-
|-
|}
|}
</center>


The symbols of Venus and Mars are also used to represent [[female]] and [[male]] in biology following a convention introduced by [[Carl Linnaeus]] in the 1750s.
The symbols of Venus and Mars are also used to represent [[female]] and [[male]] in biology following a convention introduced by [[Carl Linnaeus]] in the 1750s.
Line 38: Line 46:
==History==
==History==
===Classical planets===
===Classical planets===
{{Main article|Classical planet}}
The written symbols for Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, and Saturn have been traced to forms found in late Greek papyri.<ref name=jones-1999>{{cite book
Antecedents of the planetary symbols are attested in the attributes given to classical deities. The Roman [[planisphere]] of Bianchini (2nd century, currently in the [[Louvre]], inv. Ma 540)<ref name=imss>{{cite web
| title = Astronomical papyri from Oxyrhynchus
| url = https://collections.louvre.fr/en/ark:/53355/cl010278829
| last = Jones
| title = plaque; planisphère de Bianchini
| first = Alexander
| date = 1999
| publisher = Louvre
| pages = 62–63
| location = Paris
| isbn = 0-87169-233-3
| access-date = 2022-07-23
}}</ref> shows the seven planets represented by portraits of the seven corresponding gods, each a bust with a [[halo (religious iconography)|halo]] and an iconic object or dress, as follows: Mercury has a [[caduceus]] and a winged cap; Venus has a necklace and a shining mirror; Mars has a war-helmet and a spear; Jupiter has a laurel crown and a staff; Saturn has a conical headdress and a scythe; the Sun has rays emanating from his head; and the Moon has a crescent atop her head.
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=8MokzymQ43IC

| quote = It is now possible to trace the medieval symbols for at least four of the five planets to forms that occur in some of the latest papyrus horoscopes ([ [[Oxyrhynchus Papyri|P.Oxy.]] ] 4272, 4274, 4275 [...]). Mercury's is a stylized caduceus. … The ideal form of Mars' symbol is uncertain, and perhaps not related to the later circle with an arrow through it.}}</ref> Early forms are also found in medieval Byzantine codices which preserve ancient horoscopes.<ref name=neugebauer-1975>{{cite book
<gallery>
| title = A history of ancient mathematical astronomy
Bianchini planisphere - Luna.png|[[Luna (goddess)|Luna]] with a crescent
| last = Neugebauer
Bianchini planisphere - Mercury.png|[[Mercury (mythology)|Mercury]] with a caduceus
| first = Otto
Bianchini planisphere - Venus.png|[[Venus (mythology)|Venus]] with a shining mirror
| date = 1975
Bianchini planisphere - Sol.png|[[Sol (Roman mythology)|Sol]] emanating rays
| pages = 788–789
Bianchini planisphere - Mars.png|[[Mars (mythology)|Mars]] with a spear
| isbn = 0-387-06995-X
Bianchini planisphere - Jupiter.png|[[Jupiter (mythology)|Jupiter]] with a staff
}}</ref>
Bianchini planisphere - Saturn.png|[[Saturn (mythology)|Saturn]] with a scythe
Antecedents of the planetary symbols are attested in the attributes given to classical deities, represented in simplified pictographic form in the Roman era. ''Bianchini's [[planisphere]]'' (2nd century, [[Louvre]] inv. Ma 540)<ref name=imss>{{cite web
</gallery>
| url = http://brunelleschi.imss.fi.it/galileopalazzostrozzi/object/BianchinisPlanisphere.html

| title = Bianchini's planisphere
The written symbols for Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, and Saturn have been traced to forms found in late Greek papyri.<ref name="jones-1999">
| publisher = Istituto e Museo di Storia della Scienza (Institute and Museum of the History of Science)
{{Cite book |last=Jones |first=Alexander |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8MokzymQ43IC |title=Astronomical Papyri from Oxyrhynchus: (P. Oxy. 4133-4300a) |date=1999 |publisher=American Philosophical Society |isbn=978-0-87169-233-7 |language=en}}
| location = Florence, Italy
</ref>{{efn|
| access-date = 2010-03-17
"It is now possible to trace the medieval symbols for at least four of the five planets to forms that occur in some of the latest papyrus horoscopes ([ [[Oxyrhynchus Papyri|P.Oxy.]] ] 4272, 4274, 4275 [...]). Mercury's is a stylized caduceus. ... The ideal form of Mars' symbol is uncertain, and perhaps not related to the later circle with an arrow {{nobr|through it." — Jones (1999)<ref name=jones-1999/>}}
}}</ref> shows the seven planets represented by portraits of the seven corresponding gods, each with a simple representation of an attribute, as follows: Mercury has a [[caduceus]]; Venus has a cord attached to her necklace which is connected to another necklace; Mars has a spear; Jupiter has a staff; Saturn has a scythe; the Sun has a circlet with rays emanating from it; and the Moon has a headdress with a crescent attached to it.<ref name=maunder>Maunder (1934)</ref>
}}

Early forms are also found in medieval Byzantine codices which preserve horoscopes.<ref name=neugebauer-1975>
{{cite book
| last = Neugebauer | first = Otto
| year = 1975
| title = A History of Ancient Mathematical Astronomy
| isbn = 0-387-06995-X
| pages = 788–789
}}
</ref>

<gallery>
Moon symbol (medieval ms).png|The symbol for the Moon in a medieval Byzantine (11th c.) ms. The appearance in late Classical times was similar.<ref name=jones-1999/>
Mercury symbol (late classical and medieval mss).png|The symbol for Mercury in late Classical (4th c.) and medieval Byzantine (11th c.) mss<ref name=jones-1999/>
Venus symbol (late classical and medieval mss).png|The symbol for Venus in late Classical (4th c.) and medieval Byzantine (11th c.) mss<ref name=jones-1999/>
Sun symbol (late classical and medieval mss).png|The disk with a ray as a symbol for the Sun in late Classical (4th c.) and medieval Byzantine (11th c.) mss<ref name=jones-1999/>
Mars symbol (late classical and medieval mss).png|The symbol for Mars in late Classical (6th c.) and medieval Byzantine (11th c.) mss.<ref name=jones-1999/>
Jupiter symbol (late classical and medieval mss).png|The symbol for Jupiter in late Classical (4th c.) and medieval Byzantine (11th c.) mss<ref name=jones-1999/>
Saturn symbol (late classical and medieval mss).png|The symbol for Saturn in late Classical (4th & 5th c.) and medieval Byzantine (11th c.) mss. Cf. kappa-rho, {{angbr|[[κ]][[ρ]]}}.<ref name=jones-1999/>
</gallery>


A diagram in the astronomical compendium by Johannes Kamateros (12th century) shows the Sun represented by the circle with a ray, Jupiter by the letter ''[[zeta]]'' (the initial of [[Zeus]], Jupiter's counterpart in Greek mythology), Mars by a shield crossed by a spear, and the remaining classical planets by symbols resembling the modern ones, without the cross-mark seen in modern versions of the symbols. These cross-marks first appear in the late 15th or early 16th century. According to Maunder, the addition of crosses appears to be "an attempt to give a savour of Christianity to the symbols of the old pagan gods."<ref name=maunder />
A diagram in the astronomical compendium by Johannes Kamateros (12th century) closely resembles the 11th-century forms shown above, with the Sun represented by a circle with a single ray, Jupiter by the letter ''[[zeta]]'' (the initial of [[Zeus]], Jupiter's counterpart in Greek mythology), Mars by a round shield in front of a diagonal spear, and the remaining classical planets by symbols resembling the modern ones, though without the crosshatch-marks seen in modern versions of Mercury, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn.{{citation needed|date=July 2023}} These cross-marks first appear in the late 15th or early 16th century. According to Maunder, the addition of crosses appears to be "an attempt to give a savour of Christianity to the symbols of the old pagan gods."<ref name=maunder>Maunder (1934)</ref>
The modern forms of the classical planetary symbols are found in a woodcut of the seven planets in a Latin translation of [[Abu Ma'shar al-Balkhi]]'s ''De Magnis Coniunctionibus'' printed at Venice in 1506, represented as the corresponding gods riding chariots.<ref name=maunder239>Maunder (1934:239)</ref>


The modern symbols for the seven classical planets are found in a woodcut of the seven planets in a Latin translation of [[Abu Ma'shar]]'s ''De Magnis Coniunctionibus'' printed at Venice in 1506, represented as the corresponding gods riding chariots.<ref name=maunder239>Maunder (1934:239)</ref>
<gallery>
<gallery>
File:Fotothek df tg 0007129 Theosophie ^ Alchemie.jpg|Early modern depiction of the planet symbols in an alchemical context (''[[Musaeum Hermeticum]]'', 1678)
File:Fotothek df tg 0007129 Theosophie ^ Alchemie.jpg|Early modern depiction of the planet symbols in an alchemical context (''[[Musaeum Hermeticum]]'', 1678)
File:Translation of Albumasar Venice 1515 De Magnis Coniunctionibus.jpg|Page spread (with the signs for Mars and Venus) from a 1515 illustrated edition of [[Abu Ma'shar]]'s ''De Magnis Coniunctionibus'' (in the by translation by [[Herman of Carinthia]], c. 1140, ''editio princeps'' by Erhard Ratdolt of Augsburg, 1489).
File:Translation of Albumasar Venice 1515 De Magnis Coniunctionibus.jpg|Page spread (with the signs for Mars and Venus) from a 1515 illustrated edition of [[Abu Ma'shar al-Balkhi]]'s ''De Magnis Coniunctionibus'' (in the by translation by [[Herman of Carinthia]], {{Circa|1140}}, ''editio princeps'' by Erhard Ratdolt of Augsburg, 1489).
Abu Ma'shar(Ibn Balkhi)-850AD.png|Depiction of the planets in a 15th-century Arabic manuscript of Abu Ma'shar's "Book of nativities"<ref>BNF Arabe 2583 fol. 15v. Saturn is shown as a black bearded man, kneeling and holding a scythe or axe; Mercury is shown as a scribe holding an open codex; Jupiter as a man of the law wearing a turban; Venus as a lute-player; Mars as a helmeted warrior holding a sword and the head of an enemy.</ref>
Abu Ma'shar(Ibn Balkhi)-850AD.png|Depiction of the planets in a 15th-century Arabic manuscript of Abu Ma'shar's "Book of nativities"{{efn|BNF Arabe 2583 folio 15v: Saturn is shown as a black bearded man, kneeling and holding a scythe or axe; Mercury is shown as a scribe holding an open codex; Jupiter as a man of the law wearing a turban; Venus as a lute-player; Mars as a helmeted warrior holding a sword and the head of an enemy.}}
File:F4.v. zodiac circle with planets - NLW MS 735C.png|Medieval [[planisphere]] showing the [[zodiac]] and the [[classical planets]]. The planets are represented by seven faces.
File:F4.v. zodiac circle with planets - NLW MS 735C.png|Medieval [[planisphere]] showing the [[zodiac]] and the [[classical planets]]. The planets are represented by seven faces.
File:Zug - Zytturm 2010-06-18 calendar crop.jpg|16th-century mechanical clock + calendar, using the symbols of the eponymous planets for the days of the week.
File:Royal Society of Chemistry - Robert Boyle Prize for Analytical Science - 2014 - Andy Mabbett - 06 (cropped - planetary symbols).jpg|Planetary-metal symbols at the center of the coat of arms of the [[Royal Society of Chemistry]]
</gallery>
</gallery>


===Earth symbol===
===Earth symbol===
{{main|Earth symbol}}
{{main|Earth symbol}}
[[File:Earth symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|150px]]
[[File:Earth symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|upright|Four-quarters-of-the-world symbol for Earth]]
[[File:Globus cruciger (fixed width).svg|thumb|150px]]
[[File:Globus cruciger (fixed width).svg|thumb|upright|''Globus cruciger'' symbol for Earth]]
{{commons category|Earth symbols}}
{{commons category|Earth symbols}}
[[Earth]] is not one of the classical planets (the word "planet" by definition describing "wandering stars" as seen from Earth's surface).
[[Earth]] is not one of the classical planets, as "planets" by definition were "wandering stars" as seen from Earth's surface.
Its status as planet is a consequence of the development of [[heliocentrism]].
Earth's status as planet is a consequence of [[heliocentrism]] in the 16th century.
Nevertheless, there is an ancient symbol for the world, now used as planetary symbols for the Earth. This is a circle divided by fours rivers into the [[four corners of the world]]: 🜨.
Nonetheless, there is a pre-heliocentric symbol for the world, now used as a planetary symbol for the Earth. This is a circle crossed by two lines, horizontal and vertical, representing the world divided by four rivers into the [[four quarters of the world]] (often translated as the four "corners" of the world): [[File:Earth symbol (fixed width).svg|16px|🜨]]. A variant, now obsolete, had only the horizontal line: [[file:Salt symbol (alchemical).svg|16px|🜔]].<ref name=Cyclopaedia>{{cite encyclopedia |title=Solar System |encyclopedia=The English Cyclopaedia of Arts and Sciences |volume=VII–VIII |year=1861}}</ref>
A medieval symbol for the world &ndash; the [[globus cruciger]], ♁ (the globe surmounted by a [[Christian cross]]) &ndash; is also used as a planetary symbol.


A medieval European symbol for the world &ndash; the [[globus cruciger]], [[File:Globus cruciger (fixed width).svg|16px|♁]] (the globe surmounted by a [[Christian cross]]) – is also used as a planetary symbol; it resembles an inverted symbol for Venus.
The planetary symbols for Earth are encoded in Unicode at {{unichar|1F728|Alchemical symbol for verdigris|nlink=Verdigris}} and {{unichar|2641|earth}}.

The planetary symbols for Earth are encoded in Unicode at {{unichar|1F728|Alchemical symbol for [[verdigris]]}} and {{unichar|2641|earth}}.


<gallery>
<gallery>
Marriage of Cupid and Psyche.jpg|The Olympian gods, atop a [[File:Earth symbol (fixed width).svg|16px|🜨]]-shaped world
Earth symbol (Jonathan Hull).svg|Modern abstract rendering of the Earth symbol
Amersfoort - Reliëf op de wand van Arubalaan 42-48.jpg|Stylized Earth symbol
</gallery>
<gallery>
DEU Oberwallmenach COA.svg|A simple ''globus cruciger''
File:Maschwanden-blazon.svg|Three ''globi crucigeri'' in the coat of arms of [[Maschwanden]] in Switzerland
Uppsala län vapenflagga.svg|In the flag of [[Uppland]], the globe of the ''globus cruciger'' is stylized as a [[T and O map|T-and-O map]], [[file:T-and-O map symbol (inverted).svg|16px]]
Mosaic in the Tunis Cathedral.jpg|In this ''globus cruciger'', the cross is surmounted on a [[celestial orb]] with stars
</gallery>
</gallery>

{{clear}}


==Classical planets==
==Classical planets==
{{see|Classical planets|Days of the week}}
{{further|Classical planets|Days of the week}}


===Moon===
===Moon===
{{see|Crescent|Astronomical symbols#Symbols for the Sun and Moon}}
{{further|Crescent|Astronomical symbols#Symbols for the Sun and Moon}}
[[File:Moon decrescent symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|150px]]
[[File:Moon decrescent symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|upright|Decrescent symbol for the Moon]]
[[File:Moon crescent symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|150px]]
[[File:Moon crescent symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|upright|Encrescent symbol for the Moon]]
{{commons category|Luna symbols}}
{{commons category|Luna symbols}}
{{commons category|Crescent moon symbols}}
{{commons category|Crescent moon symbols}}
The [[crescent]] shape has been used to represent the Moon since earliest times. In classical antiquity, it is worn by lunar deities ([[Selene|Selene/Luna]], [[Artemis|Artemis/Diana]], [[Men (deity)|Men]], etc.) either on the head or behind the shoulders, with its horns pointing upward.
The [[crescent]] shape has been used to represent the Moon since earliest times. In classical antiquity, it is worn by lunar deities ([[Selene|Selene/Luna]], [[Artemis|Artemis/Diana]], [[Men (deity)|Men]], etc.) either on the head or behind the shoulders, with its horns pointing upward.
Its representation with the horns pointing sideways (as a heraldic ''crescent increscent'' or ''crescent decrescent'') is early modern.
The representation of the moon as a simple crescent with the horns pointing to the side (as a heraldic ''crescent increscent'' or ''crescent decrescent'') is attested from late Classical times.


The same symbol can be used in a different context not for the Moon itself but for a [[lunar phase]], as part of a sequence of four symbols
The same symbol can be used in a different context not for the Moon itself but for a [[lunar phase]], as part of a sequence of four symbols
for "new moon" (U+1F311 🌑), "waxing" (U+263D ), "full moon" (U+1F315 🌕) and "waning" (U+263E ).
for "new moon" (U+1F311 🌑︎), "waxing" (U+263D ☽︎), "full moon" (U+1F315 🌕︎) and "waning" (U+263E ☾︎).


<gallery>
<gallery>
Sala_vapen.svg| The Moon symbol, representing [[silver mining]], in the municipal arms of [[Sala Municipality, Sweden|Sala]] in Sweden
Moon symbol (medieval ms).png|thumb|The symbol for the Moon in a medieval Byzantine (11th c.) ms. The appearance in late Classical was similar.<ref name=jones-1999/>
Sala_vapen.svg| The Moon symbol (representing [[silver mining]]) in the municipal coat of arms of [[Sala, Sweden|Sala]] in Sweden
Silvberg vapen.svg|The Moon symbol in the municipal arms of [[Silvberg]] ('Silver Mountain') in Sweden
Amersfoort - Reliëf op de wand van Arubalaan 74-80.jpg|Stylized Moon symbol
Moon symbol (Jonathan Hull).svg|Modern abstract rendering of the Moon symbol
Silver at Sterling Chemistry Laboratory of Yale.jpg|The Moon for silver
</gallery>
</gallery>
{{clear}}
{{clear}}


===Mercury===
===Mercury===
[[File:Mercury symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|150px]]
[[File:Mercury symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|upright|Crosshatched caduceus symbol for Mercury]]
{{commons category|Mercury symbols}}
{{commons category|Mercury symbols}}


The symbol ☿ for [[Mercury (planet)|Mercury]] is a [[caduceus]] (a staff intertwined with two serpents), a symbol [[Mercury (mythology)|Mercury/Hermes]] throughout antiquity.<ref name=cox>{{cite book
The symbol {{big|{{char|}}}} for [[Mercury (planet)|Mercury]] is a [[caduceus]] (a staff intertwined with two serpents), a symbol associated with [[Mercury (mythology)|Mercury / Hermes]] throughout antiquity. Some time after the 11th century, a crosshatch was added to the bottom of the staff to make it seem more Christian.<ref name=jones-1999/>
| last = Cox
| first = Arthur
| title = Allen's astrophysical quantities
| publisher = Springer
| date = 2001
| page = 2
| isbn = 0-387-95189-X
}}</ref> Some time after the 11th century, a cross was added to the bottom of the staff to make it seem more Christian.<ref name=jones-1999 />
Its Unicode [[codepoint]] is {{unichar|263F|Mercury|html=}}.


<gallery>
<gallery>
Early classical white ground lekythos ARV extra Hermes Psychopompos leading deceased woman to Charon (02).jpg|The god Hermes (Mercury) with his caduceus
File:Mercury symbol (late classical and medieval mss).png|The symbol for Mercury in late Classical (4th c.) and medieval Byzantine (11th c.) mss<ref name=jones-1999/>
File:Hermész.png|The caduceus, copied from pottery
File:DEU Stahlberg COA.svg|Mercury symbol, representing mercury (quicksilver) mining, in the municipal coat of arms of [[Stahlberg]], [[Rhineland-Palatinate]], Germany.
File:Hermes and caduceus, Loulan tapestry, 3rd century CE.jpg|The caduceus in a tapestry, 3rd century
Mercury symbol (Jonathan Hull).svg|Modern abstract rendering of the Mercury symbol
DEU Stahlberg COA.svg|Mercury symbol, representing quicksilver mining, in the municipal coat of arms of [[Stahlberg]], [[Rhineland-Palatinate]], Germany.
Amersfoort - Reliëf op de wand van Surinamelaan 52-58.jpg|Stylized Mercury symbol
Mercury at Sterling Chemistry Laboratory of Yale.jpg|Mercury for quicksilver
</gallery>
</gallery>
{{clear}}
{{clear}}

The {{big|{{char|☿}}}} symbol has also been used to indicate [[intersex]], [[transgender]], or [[non-binary gender]].<ref>
{{cite book
|last=van den Akker |first=Olga B.A.
|year=2012
|title=Reproductive Health Psychology
|publisher=Wiley-Blackwell
|isbn=978-1-119-96747-7
|page=40
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TjWIp25pOjcC&pg=PA40
|via=Google Books
}}
</ref>
A related usage is for the 'worker' or 'neuter' sex among [[social insects]] that is neither male nor (due to its lack of reproductive capacity) fully female, such as for example [[worker bee]]s.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Bingham|first1=C. T.|date=1903|title=The Fauna of British India, Including Ceylon and Burma. Hymenoptera, Vol. II. Ants and Cuckoo-Wasps|location=London|publisher=Taylor and Francis|page=v|url=https://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/10943626}}</ref> It was also once the designated symbol for hermaphroditic or [[Perfect flower|'perfect' flowers]],<ref name= Stearn/> but botanists now use {{big|{{char|⚥}}}} for these instead.<ref>
{{cite journal
|last=Simpson |first=Niki
|year=2010
|title=Botanical symbols: A new symbol set for new images
|journal=[[Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society]]
|volume=162 |issue=2 |pages=117–129
|doi=10.1111/j.1095-8339.2009.01021.x |doi-access=free
|url=https://academic.oup.com/botlinnean/article/162/2/117/2418432
}}
</ref>

Its Unicode [[codepoint]] is {{unichar|263F|Mercury|html=}}.


===Venus===
===Venus===
[[File:Venus symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|150px]]
[[File:Venus symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|upright|Crosshatched copper symbol for Venus]]
{{commons category|Venus symbols}}
The '''Venus symbol''', ♀, consists of a circle with a small [[Cross (symbol)|cross]] below it.
The '''Venus symbol''', ♀, consists of a circle with a small [[Cross (symbol)|cross]] below it.
It has been interpreted as a depiction of the hand-mirror of the goddess, which may also explain Venus's association with the [[planetary metal]] copper, as mirrors in antiquity were made of polished copper (alloy),<ref name=Rehder>
It has been understood to stand for the mirror of the goddess, though that may not be its true origin; the [[planetary metal]] associated with Venus was copper, and polished copper has been used for mirrors from antiquity.<ref name="stearn">{{cite journal|last=Stearn|first=William T.|date=May 1968|title=The Origin of the Male and Female Symbols of Biology|url=https://semanticscholar.org/paper/e3c883a4194b2bffb07fd09706f7e50a3fb447bc|journal=[[Taxon (journal)|Taxon]]|volume=11|issue=4|pages=109–113|doi=10.2307/1217734|jstor=1217734|s2cid=87030547}}</ref> In the Greek [[Oxyrhynchus Papyri]], the symbols for Venus and Mercury didn't have the cross-bar on the bottom stroke.<ref name=jones-1999 />
{{cite book
|first=Dieter |last=Rehder
|year=2011
|title=Chemistry in Space: From interstellar matter to the origin of life
|publisher=Wiley-VCH
}}
</ref>{{efn|
"The symbol, the stylized hand mirror of the Goddess Venus, also represents femininity. It has also been used for the element copper: Mirrors had been manufactured {{nobr|from [[speculum metal|polished copper]]." — Rehder (2011)<ref name=Rehder/>}}
}}
though this is not certain.<ref name=jones-1999/> In the Greek [[Papyrus Oxyrhynchus 235|Oxyrhynchus Papyri 235]], the symbols for Venus and Mercury did not have the cross on the bottom stem,<ref name=jones-1999/> and Venus still appears without the cross (⚲) in Johannes Kamateros (12th century).{{citation needed|date=July 2023}}


In [[botany]] and [[biology]], the symbol for Venus is used to [[Gender symbol|represent the female sex]], alongside the symbol for [[Mars]] representing the [[male]] sex,<ref name=Schott2005>
In [[botany]] and [[biology]], it is used to [[Gender symbol|represent the female sex]] (alongside the equivalent symbol for [[Mars]] representing the [[male]] sex),<ref name=Schott2005>{{cite journal|last1=Schott|first1=GD|title=Sex symbols ancient and modern: their origins and iconography on the pedigree|url= |journal=[[The BMJ]]|date=December 2005|volume=331|issue=7531|pages=1509–10|doi=10.1136/bmj.331.7531.1509|pmid=16373733|pmc=1322246|issn=0959-8138}}</ref> following a convention introduced by [[Carl Linnaeus|Linnaeus]] in the 1750s.<ref name="Stearn">{{cite journal |last=Stearn |first=William T. |author-link=William T. Stearn |title=The Origin of the Male and Female Symbols of Biology |journal=[[Taxon (journal)|Taxon]] |date=May 1962 |volume=11 |issue=4 |pages=109–113 |url=https://iapt-taxon.org/historic/Congress/IBC_1964/male_fem.pdf |jstor=1217734 |doi=10.2307/1217734 |issn=0040-0262 }} "In his Systema Naturae (Leyden, 1735) he [[Carl Linnaeus|Linnaeus]] used them with their traditional associations for metals. Their first biological use is in the Linnaean dissertation {{lang|la|Plantae hybridae xxx sistit J. J. Haartman}} (1751) where in discussing hybrid plants Linnaeus denoted the supposed female parent species by the sign ♀, the male parent by the sign ♂, the hybrid by ☿ ("{{lang|la|matrem signo ♀, patrem ♂ & plantam hybridam ☿ designavero}}"). In subsequent publications he retained the signs ♀ and ♂ for male and female individuals but discarded ☿ for hybrids; the last are now indicated by the multiplication sign ×. Linnaeus's first general use of the signs of ♀ and ♂ was in his ''Species Plantarum'' (1753) written between 1746 and 1752 and surveying concisely the whole plant kingdom as then known." (p. 110)</ref> Arising from the biological convention, the symbol also came to be used in sociological contexts to represent [[women]] or [[femininity]].
{{cite journal
|last=Schott |first=G.D.
|date=December 2005
|title=Sex symbols ancient and modern: their origins and iconography on the pedigree
|journal=[[The British Medical Journal]]
|volume=331 |issue=7531 |pages=1509–1510
|doi=10.1136/bmj.331.7531.1509
|pmid=16373733 |issn=0959-8138
|pmc=1322246
}}
</ref>
following a convention introduced by [[Carl Linnaeus|Linnaeus]] in the 1750s.<ref name=Stearn>{{cite journal
|last=Stearn |first=William T. |author-link=William T. Stearn
|date=May 1962
|title=The origin of the male and female symbols of biology
|journal=[[Taxon (journal)|Taxon]]
|volume=11 |issue=4 |pages=109–113
|jstor=1217734 |issn=0040-0262
|doi=10.2307/1217734
|url=https://iapt-taxon.org/historic/Congress/IBC_1964/male_fem.pdf
}}
</ref>{{efn|
"In his ''Systema Naturae'' (Leyden, 1735) he [<nowiki/>[[Carl Linnaeus|Linnaeus]]<nowiki/>] used them with their traditional associations for metals. Their first biological use is in the Linnaean dissertation {{lang|la|Plantae hybridae xxx sistit J.J. Haartman}} (1751) where in discussing hybrid plants Linnaeus denoted the supposed female parent species by the sign ♀, the male parent by the sign ♂, the hybrid by ☿: '{{lang|la|matrem signo ♀, patrem ♂ & plantam hybridam ☿ designavero}}'. In subsequent publications he retained the signs ♀ and ♂ for male and female individuals but discarded ☿ for hybrids; the last are now indicated by the multiplication sign&nbsp;×."
:
"Linnaeus's first general use of the signs of ♀ and ♂ was in his ''Species Plantarum'' (1753) written between 1746 and 1752 and surveying concisely the whole plant kingdom as then known. ... In order to save space Linnaeus employed the astronomical symbols of Saturn, Jupiter, Mars and the Sun to denote woody, herbaceous perennial, biennial and annual plants respectively {{small|[ed.: the orbital periods of Saturn, Jupiter, Mars and Earth about the Sun are 29, 12, 2, and 1 year]}} ... and Mercury, Mars and Venus for the hermaphrodite, male and female conditions" ...
:
"Later, in his ''Mantissa Plantarum'' (1767) and ''Mantissa Plantarum altera'' (1771), Linnaeus regularly used ♂, ♀ and ☿ for male, female and hermaphrodite flowers respectively. Their aptness made them easy to remember and their convenience led to their general acceptance in zoology as well as botany. Koelreuter found them especially convenient when recording his experiments in hybridization; as late as 1778 he used the sign ☿ to denote a {{nobr|hybrid plant." — [[William T. Stearn|Stearn]] (1962)<ref name=Stearn/>}}
}}
Arising from the biological convention, the symbol also came to be used in sociological contexts to represent [[women]] or [[femininity]]. This gendered association of Venus and Mars has been used to pair them [[heteronormative]]ly, describing women and men stereotypically as being so different that they can be understood as coming from different planets, an understanding popularized in 1992 by the book titled ''[[Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus]]''.<ref name="Brammer 2020">
{{cite web
| last=Brammer | first=John Paul
| date=2020-02-10
| title=Love / hate reads: ''Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus'', revisited
| website=VICE
| url=https://www.vice.com/en/article/n7j3nm/lovehate-reads-men-are-from-mars-women-are-from-venus-revisited
| access-date=2023-04-17
}}
</ref><ref name="Morin 2016">
{{cite magazine
| last=Morin | first=Amy
| date=2016-08-19
| title=Why the Mars and Venus conversations must end: The truth about gender differences in the workplace
| magazine=[[Forbes]]
| url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/amymorin/2016/08/19/why-the-mars-and-venus-conversations-must-end-the-truth-about-gender-differences-in-the-workplace/
| access-date=2023-04-17
}}
</ref>


[[Unicode]] encodes the symbol as {{unichar|2640|Female sign}}, in the [[Miscellaneous Symbols]] block.{{efn|
The symbol appears without the cross-mark (⚲) in Johannes Kamateros (12th century). In the ''Bianchini's planisphere'' (2nd century), Venus is represented by a necklace.<ref name=imss/>
Glossed in the official Unicode code chart as " {{=}} Venus {{=}} alchemical symbol for copper → 1F469 [[👩]] woman → 1F6BA [[🚺]] women's symbol".
The (mistaken) idea that the symbol represents the goddess's [[hand mirror]] was introduced by [[Joseph Justus Scaliger]] in the late 16th century.<ref name="Stearn1961">{{cite journal|last1=Stearn |first1=William T. |title=The Male and Female Symbols of Biology |journal=[[New Scientist]] |date=17 August 1961 |volume=11 |issue=248 |pages=412–413 |lccn=59030638 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BJ5eFU5aRecC&pg=PA412}}</ref><ref>see
<ref name=U-2640>
Hiram Mattison, ''A high-school astronomy'' (1857), [https://books.google.com/books?id=HocEAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA32 p. 32].</ref> [[Claudius Salmasius]], in the early 17th century, established that it derived from the Greek abbreviation for ''Phosphoros'', the planet's name.<ref name="Stearn1961" />
{{cite report
|title=U+2640
|series=Unicode code chart
|volume=U+26××
|website=unicode.org
|publisher=[[The Unicode Consortium]]
|url=https://www.unicode.org/charts/PDF/U2600.pdf
}}
</ref>
}}


{{commons category|Venus symbols}}
[[Unicode]] encodes the symbol as {{unichar|2640|Female sign|html=}}, in the [[Miscellaneous Symbols]] block.<ref>In the official [https://www.unicode.org/charts/PDF/U2600.pdf code chart] glossed " = Venus = alchemical symbol for copper → 1F469 [[👩]] woman → 1F6BA [[🚺]] womens symbol".</ref>


<gallery>
<gallery>
Bronze mirror MET DP254654.jpg|A bronze mirror, of the type associated with Venus
File:Venus symbol (late classical and medieval mss).png|thumb|The symbol for Venus in late Classical (4th c.) and medieval Byzantine (11th c.) mss<ref name=jones-1999/>
File:Ostia antica-19.jpg|Cupid holding up a similar mirror to Venus
File:Falun vapen.svg| The Venus symbol in the municipal coat of arms of [[Falun Municipality]] in Sweden (1932), here representing copper mining.<ref>Falun was the site of a copper mine from at least the 13th century. A coat of arms including a copper sign is recorded for 1642; the current design dates to the early 20th century, and was given official recognition in 1932. It was slightly simplified upon the formation of the modern municipality in 1971 (registered with the [[Swedish Patent and Registration Office]]. in 1988).</ref>
Falun vapen.svg|The Venus symbol, representing copper mining, in the municipal coat of arms of [[Falun Municipality]] in Sweden (1932)
Image:Woman-power emblem.svg |[[Raised fist]] within Venus symbol, used as a symbol of [[second-wave feminism]] (1960s)<ref>Attributed to [[Robin Morgan]] in the 1960s. "Morgan designed the universal logo of the women's movement, the woman's symbol centered with a raised fist" ([http://www.robinmorgan.net/activism/ robinmorgan.net])</ref>
Feminism symbol.svg|[[Raised fist]] within Venus symbol, used as a symbol of [[second-wave feminism]] (1960s){{efn|The raised fist symbol is attributed to [[Robin Morgan]], in the 1960s: "Morgan designed the universal logo of the women's movement, the woman's symbol centered with a raised fist."<ref>[http://www.robinmorgan.net/activism/ "Activism"], ''robinmorgan.net'', September 8, 2023<!-- date from page source -->. Retrieved 2024-01-02.</ref>}}
Venus symbol (Jonathan Hull).svg|Modern abstract rendering of the Venus symbol

Amersfoort - Reliëf op de wand van Arubalaan 58-64.jpg|Stylized Venus symbol
Copper at Sterling Chemistry Laboratory of Yale.jpg|Venus for copper
</gallery>
</gallery>


===Sun===
===Sun===
{{see|Solar symbol|Astronomical_symbols#Symbols_for_the_Sun_and_Moon|label2=Symbols for the Sun and Moon}}
{{further|Solar symbol|Astronomical_symbols#Symbols_for_the_Sun_and_Moon|label2=Symbols for the Sun and Moon}}
[[File:Sun symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|150px|Modern astronomical symbol for the Sun (and alchemical symbol for gold)]]
[[File:Sun symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|upright|Modern astronomical symbol for the Sun]]

[[File:Old symbol for sun.svg|thumb|150px|Medieval (Johannes Kamateros, 12th century)<ref name=maunder245>{{cite magazine
| last = Maunder | first = A.S.D.
| date = 1934
| title = The origin of the symbols of the planets
| magazine = The Observatory
| volume = 57 | pages = 238–247
| bibcode = 1934Obs....57..238M
}}</ref> astronomical symbol for the Sun (and alchemical symbol for gold)]]
{{commons category|Sun symbols}}
{{commons category|Sun symbols}}
The modern astronomical symbol for the Sun ([[circled dot]], {{unichar|2609|Sun|html=}}), was first used in the [[Renaissance]].
The modern astronomical symbol for the Sun, the [[Solar symbol|circumpunct]] ({{unichar|2609|Sun|html=}}), was first used in the [[Renaissance]]. It possibly represents Apollo's golden shield with a [[Boss (engineering)|boss]]; it is unknown if it traces descent from the nearly identical [[Egyptian hieroglyph]] for the Sun.


''Bianchini's [[planisphere]]'', produced in the 2nd century, has a [[circlet]] with rays radiating from it.<ref name=maunder/><ref name=imss/>
''Bianchini's [[planisphere]]'', produced in the 2nd century, shows a [[circlet]] with rays radiating from it.<ref name=maunder/><ref name=imss/>
A diagram in Johannes Kamateros' 12th century ''Compendium of Astrology'' shows the Sun represented by a circle with a ray.<ref name=neugebauer-1987>{{cite book
In late Classical times, the Sun is attested as a circle with a single ray. A diagram in Johannes Kamateros' 12th century ''Compendium of Astrology'' shows the same symbol.<ref name=neugebauer-1987>
{{cite book
| title = Greek Horoscopes
| last1 = Neugebauer
| last1 = Neugebauer | first1 = Otto
| last2 = Van Hoesen | first2 = H.B.
| first1 = Otto
| last2 = Van Hoesen
| year = 1987
| first2 = H. B.
| title = Greek Horoscopes
| date = 1987
| pages = 1, 159, 163
}}
| pages = 1, 159, 163
</ref>
}}</ref> This older symbol is encoded by [[Unicode]] as {{unichar|1F71A|ALCHEMICAL SYMBOL FOR GOLD|html=}}. in the [[Alchemical Symbols (Unicode)|Alchemical Symbols]] block.
This older symbol is encoded by [[Unicode]] as {{unichar|1F71A|ALCHEMICAL SYMBOL FOR GOLD|html=}} in the [[Alchemical Symbols (Unicode)|Alchemical Symbols]] block. Both symbols have been used alchemically for gold, as have more elaborate symbols showing a disk with multiple rays or even a face.


<gallery>
<gallery>
Outlines from the figures and compositions upon the Greek, Roman, and Etruscan vases of the late Sir William Hamilton; with engraved borders (1804) (14779549222).jpg|A buckler with a sun symbol and dot at center
Sun symbol (late classical and medieval mss).png|thumb|The symbol for the Sun in late Classical (4th c.) and medieval Byzantine (11th c.) mss<ref name=jones-1999/>
Amersfoort - Reliëf op de wand van Arubalaan 10-16.jpg|Stylized circumpunct symbol for the Sun
Sun symbol (Jonathan Hull).svg|Modern abstract rendering of the Sun symbol
Gold at Sterling Chemistry Laboratory of Yale.jpg|The Sun for gold
Sun symbol (medieval).svg|🜚, the medieval astronomical symbol for the Sun
</gallery>
</gallery>


Line 188: Line 311:


===Mars===
===Mars===
[[Image:Mars symbol (fixed width).svg|150px|thumb]]
[[Image:Mars symbol (fixed width).svg|upright|thumb|Spear and shield symbol for Mars]]
{{commons category|Mars symbols}}
{{commons category|Mars symbols}}


The '''Mars symbol''', ♂, is a depiction of a circle with an arrow emerging from it, pointing at an angle to the upper right. As astrological symbol it represents the planet [[Mars]]. It is also the old and [[obsolete]] symbol for [[iron]] in alchemy. In zoology and botany, it is used to [[Gender symbol|represent the male sex]] (alongside the astrological symbol for Venus representing the female sex),<ref name=Schott2005 /> following a convention introduced by [[Carl Linnaeus|Linnaeus]] in the 1750s.<ref name="Stearn"/>
The '''Mars symbol''', ♂, is a depiction of a circle with an arrow emerging from it, pointing at an angle to the upper right in Europe and to the upper left in India.<ref>
{{cite magazine
|last=Maunder |first=A.S.D.
|date=August 1934
|title=The origin of the symbols of the planets
|magazine=[[The Observatory (journal)|The Observatory]]
|volume=57 |pages=238–247
|bibcode=1934Obs....57..238M
}}
</ref><ref>
{{cite book
|first=James |last=Evans
|year=1998
|title=The History & Practice of Ancient Astronomy
|publisher=Oxford University Press/U.S.
|isbn=0-19-509539-1
|page=350
}}
</ref>
It is also the old and [[obsolete]] symbol for [[iron]] in alchemy. In zoology and botany, it is used to [[Gender symbol|represent the male sex]] (alongside the astrological symbol for Venus representing the female sex),<ref name=Schott2005/> following a convention introduced by [[Carl Linnaeus|Linnaeus]] in the 1750s.<ref name=Stearn/>


The symbol dates from at latest the 11th century, at which time it was an arrow across or through a circle, thought to represent the shield and spear of the god Mars; in the medieval form, for example in the 12th-century ''Compendium of Astrology'' by Johannes Kamateros, the spear is drawn across the shield.<ref name=neugebauer-1987/> The Greek [[Oxyrhynchus Papyri]] appear to show a different symbol,<ref name=jones-1999 /> perhaps simply a spear.<ref name=imss/>
The symbol dates from at latest the 11th century, at which time it was an arrow across or through a circle, thought to represent the shield and spear of the god Mars; in the medieval form, for example in the 12th-century ''Compendium of Astrology'' by Johannes Kamateros, the spear is drawn across the shield.<ref name=neugebauer-1987/> The Greek [[Oxyrhynchus Papyri]] show a different symbol,<ref name=jones-1999 /> perhaps simply a spear.<ref name=imss/>


<gallery>
<gallery>
ALEXANDER SEVERUS-RIC IV 246-737118 MARS.jpg|3rd-century coin with Mars on the reverse, with lance and shield. The same symbols were used for Athena (Pallas).
File:Mars symbol (late classical and medieval ms).png|thumb|The symbol for Mars in late Classical (6th c.) and medieval Byzantine (11th c.) mss.<ref name=jones-1999/>
File:Fresco of a statue of Mars in the House of Venus, Pompeii (3824215212).jpg|Mars with spear and shield, Pompeii.
File:Karlskoga vapen.svg| The Mars symbol (representing [[Ironworks|iron mining]]) in the municipal coat of arms of [[Karlskoga Municipality|Karlskoga]] in Sweden
File:Loppi vaakuna.svg|The Mars symbol in the municipal coat of arms of [[Loppi]] in Finland
Karlskoga vapen.svg| The Mars symbol, representing [[Ironworks|iron mining]], in the municipal coat of arms of [[Karlskoga Municipality|Karlskoga]] in Sweden
Loppi vaakuna.svg|The Mars symbol in the municipal coat of arms of [[Loppi]] in Finland
Mars symbol (Jonathan Hull).svg|Modern abstract rendering of the Mars symbol
Project Viking Logo - Patch Style 1974-L-01916.jpg|Mars symbol in the patch for NASA's ''[[Viking program|Viking]]'' mission
Amersfoort - Reliëf op de wand van De Genestetlaan 20-28.jpg|Stylized Mars symbol. The spear partly crosses the shield.
Iron at Sterling Chemistry Laboratory of Yale.jpg|Mars for iron
</gallery>
</gallery>


Line 205: Line 350:


===Jupiter===
===Jupiter===
[[File:Jupiter symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|150px]]
[[File:Jupiter symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|upright|Zeus initial for Jupiter]]
{{commons category|Jupiter symbols}}
{{commons category|Jupiter symbols}}
The symbol for [[Jupiter]], ♃, is originally a Greek zeta, [[Ζ]], with a stroke indicating that it's an abbreviation (for [[Zeus]], the Greek equivalent of Roman Jupiter).
The symbol for [[Jupiter]], ♃, was originally a Greek zeta, [[Ζ]], with a stroke indicating that it is an abbreviation (for [[Zeus]], the Greek equivalent of Roman Jupiter).


Its Unicode [[codepoint]] is {{unichar|2643|Jupiter|html=}}.
Its Unicode [[codepoint]] is {{unichar|2643|Jupiter|html=}}.


<gallery>
<gallery>
Mariner Jupiter-Saturn logo.jpg|Jupiter and Saturn symbols in patch for NASA's [[Mariner program#Mariner Jupiter-Saturn|Mariner Jupiter-Saturn]] mission
File:Jupiter symbol (late classical and medieval mss).png|thumb|The symbol for Jupiter in late Classical (4th c.) and medieval Byzantine (11th c.) mss<ref name=jones-1999/>
Amersfoort - Reliëf op de wand van Surinamelaan 76-82.jpg|Stylized Jupiter symbol
Jupiter symbol (Jonathan Hull).svg|Modern abstract rendering of the Jupiter symbol
Tin at Sterling Chemistry Laboratory of Yale.jpg|Jupiter for tin
Jupiter Z symbol (modern).svg|A modern form of the symbol that reflects its origin in the letter 'Z'
</gallery>
</gallery>
{{clear}}
{{clear}}


===Saturn===
===Saturn===
[[File:Saturn symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|150px]]
[[File:Saturn symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|upright|Crosshatched kappa-rho ligature for Saturn]]
{{commons category|Saturn symbols}}
{{commons category|Saturn symbols}}
Salmasius and earlier attestations show that the symbol for Saturn, ♄, derives from the initial letters ([[Kappa]], [[rho]]) of its ancient Greek name {{lang|grc|Κρόνος}} ({{transl|grc|Kronos}}), with a stroke to indicate an abbreviation.<ref name=Stearn /> By the time of Kamateros (12th century), the symbol had been reduced to a shape similar to a lower-case letter ''[[eta]]'' η, with the abbreviation stroke surviving (if at all) in the curl on the bottom-right end. The horizontal stroke was added along with the "Christianization" of other symbols in the early 16th century.
[[Claudius Salmasius|Salmasius]] and earlier attestations show that the symbol for Saturn, ♄, derives from the initial letters ([[Kappa]], [[rho]]) of its ancient Greek name {{lang|grc|Κρόνος}} ({{transliteration|grc|Kronos}}), with a stroke to indicate an abbreviation.<ref name=Stearn/> By the time of Kamateros (12th century), the symbol had been reduced to a shape similar to a lower-case letter ''[[eta]]'' η, with the abbreviation stroke surviving (if at all) in the curl on the bottom-right end. The horizontal stroke was added along with the "Christianization" of other symbols in the early 16th century.


Its Unicode [[codepoint]] is {{unichar|2644|Saturn|html=}}.
Its Unicode [[codepoint]] is {{unichar|2644|Saturn|html=}}.


<gallery>
<gallery>
FraternitasSaturniSiegel.svg|Emblem of the ''[[Fraternitas Saturni]]'', a German [[magical order]] founded in 1926
File:Saturn symbol (late classical and medieval mss).png|thumb|The symbol for Saturn in late Classical (4th & 5th c.) and medieval Byzantine (11th c.) mss. Cf. kappa-rho, {{angbr|[[κ]][[ρ]]}}.<ref name=jones-1999/>
Wappen der Ortschaft Bleiwäsche.png|The Saturn symbol representing [[lead]] in the municipal coat of arms of ''Bleiwäsche'', since 1975 part of [[Bad Wünnenberg]], [[North Rhine-Westphalia]], Germany
File:FraternitasSaturniSiegel.svg|Emblem of the ''[[Fraternitas Saturni]]'', a German [[magical order]] founded in 1926.
Amersfoort - Reliëf op de wand van Surinamelaan 60-66.jpg|Stylized Saturn symbol
File:Wappen der Ortschaft Bleiwäsche.png|The Saturn symbol representing [[lead]] in the municipal coat of arms of ''Bleiwäsche'', since 1975 part of [[Bad Wünnenberg]], [[North Rhine-Westphalia]], Germany.
Lead at Sterling Chemistry Laboratory of Yale.jpg|Saturn for lead ([[Lead|Pb]])
Saturn symbol (Jonathan Hull).svg|Modern abstract rendering of the Saturn symbol
</gallery>
</gallery>


Line 236: Line 383:


===Uranus===
===Uranus===
[[File:Uranus platinum symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|150px|Uranus]]
[[File:Uranus symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|upright|Platinum symbol for Uranus]]
[[File:Uranus Herschel symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|150px|Uranus]]
[[File:Uranus monogram (fixed width).svg|thumb|upright|Herschel monogram for Uranus]]
The symbols for [[Uranus]] were created shortly after its discovery in 1781. One symbol, ⛢, invented by [[Johann Gottfried Koehler|J. G. Köhler]] and refined by [[Johann Elert Bode|Bode]], was intended to represent the newly discovered metal [[platinum]]; since platinum, commonly called white gold, was found by chemists mixed with iron, the symbol for platinum combines the alchemical symbols for [[iron]], ♂, and [[gold]], ☉.<ref name=bode-uranus>{{cite book
The symbols for [[Uranus]] were created shortly after its discovery in 1781. One symbol, ⛢, invented by [[Johann Gottfried Koehler|J. G. Köhler]] and refined by [[Johann Elert Bode|Bode]], was intended to represent the newly discovered metal [[platinum]]; since platinum, commonly called white gold, was found by chemists mixed with iron, the symbol for platinum combines the alchemical symbols for [[iron]], ♂, and [[gold]], ☉.<ref name=bode-uranus>
{{cite book
| last = Bode | first = J.E. |author-link=Johann Elert Bode
| title = Von dem neu entdeckten Planeten
| year = 1784
| publisher = Beim Verfaszer
| title = Von dem neu entdeckten Planeten |language=de
| url = https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_ZqA5AAAAcAAJ
| trans-title = On the newly discovered planets
| last = Bode | first = J.E.
| bibcode = 1784vdne.book.....B
| date = 1784
| publisher = Beim Verfaszer
| pages = [https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_ZqA5AAAAcAAJ/page/n98 95]–96
| pages = [https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_ZqA5AAAAcAAJ/page/n98 95]–96
| bibcode = 1784vdne.book.....B
| url = https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_ZqA5AAAAcAAJ |via=Internet Archive
}}
}}
</ref><ref name=gould-uranus>
</ref><ref name=gould-uranus>
{{cite book
{{cite book
| last = Gould | first = B.A.
| title = Report on the history of the discovery of Neptune
| year = 1850
| url = https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_uyANAQAAIAAJ
| title = Report on the history of the discovery of Neptune
| last = Gould | first = B.A.
| publisher = Smithsonian Institution
| publisher = [[Smithsonian Institution]]
| page = [https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_uyANAQAAIAAJ/page/n8 5]
| date = 1850
| page = [https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_uyANAQAAIAAJ/page/n8 5]
| url = https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_uyANAQAAIAAJ |via=Archive.org
}}
}}
</ref>
</ref> Gold and iron are the planetary metals for the Sun and Mars, and so share their symbols. Several orientations were suggested, but an upright arrow is now universal.
Gold and iron are the planetary metals for the Sun and Mars, and so share their symbols. Several orientations were suggested, but an upright arrow is now universal.


Another symbol, ♅, was suggested by Lalande in 1784. In a letter to Herschel, Lalande described it as "un globe surmonté par la première lettre de votre nom" ("a globe surmounted by the first letter of your name").<ref name=Francisca>{{Cite journal |title=The meaning of the symbol H+o for the planet Uranus |author=Francisca Herschel|date=August 1917|journal=The Observatory |volume=40 |pages=306 |bibcode=1917Obs....40..306H}}</ref>
Another symbol, [[File:Uranus monogram (serif).svg|16px|]], was suggested by Lalande in 1784. In a letter to [[William Herschel|Herschel]], Lalande described it as "{{Lang|fr|un globe surmonté par la première lettre de votre nom}}" ("a globe surmounted by the first letter of your name").<ref name=Francisca>
{{cite magazine
|first=Francisca |last=Herschel
|date=August 1917
|title=The meaning of the symbol H+o for the planet Uranus
|magazine=[[The Observatory (journal)|The Observatory]]
|volume=40 |page=306
|bibcode=1917Obs....40..306H
}}
</ref>
The platinum symbol tends to be used by astronomers and the monogram by astrologers.<ref>
{{cite report
|last=Iancu |first=Laurentiu
|date=14 August 2009
|title=Proposal to encode the astronomical symbol for Uranus
|id=L2009/09300
|website=unicode.org
|publisher=[[The Unicode Consortium]]
|url=https://www.unicode.org/L2/L2009/09300-uranus.pdf
}}
</ref>


For use in computer systems, the symbols are encoded {{unichar|26E2|Astronomical symbol for Uranus}} and {{unichar|2645|Uranus}}.
For use in computer systems, the symbols are encoded {{unichar|26E2|Astronomical symbol for Uranus}} and {{unichar|2645|Uranus}}.
Line 264: Line 434:
<gallery>
<gallery>
Planetary symbols (1784).png|The planetary symbols as rendered in 1784, including the newly discovered Uranus (left)<ref name=bode-uranus/>
Planetary symbols (1784).png|The planetary symbols as rendered in 1784, including the newly discovered Uranus (left)<ref name=bode-uranus/>
William Herschel heraldry cropped.jpg|The Uranus platinum symbol on [[William Herschel]]'s coat of arms (center, blue background)
Uranus symbol (Jonathan Hull).svg|Modern abstract rendering of the platinum symbol
Amersfoort - Reliëf op de wand van Arubalaan 26-32.jpg|Stylized Uranus monogram
Uranus H symbol (Jonathan Hull).svg|Modern abstract rendering of the Herschel monogram
</gallery>
</gallery>


===Neptune===
===Neptune===
[[File:Neptune symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|150px|Neptune]]
[[File:Neptune symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|upright|Trident symbol for Neptune]]
Several symbols were proposed for [[Neptune]] to accompany the suggested names for the planet. Claiming the right to name his discovery, [[Urbain Le Verrier]] originally proposed the name the planet for the [[Greek God]] ''[[Neptune (mythology)|Neptune]]''<ref name="littmann-standish">
Several symbols were proposed for [[Neptune]] to accompany the suggested names for the planet. Claiming the right to name his discovery, [[Urbain Le Verrier]] originally proposed to name the planet for the [[Roman God]] ''[[Neptune (mythology)|Neptune]]''<ref name=littmann-standish>
{{cite book
{{cite book
| first=Mark |last=Littmann
| first1=Mark |last1=Littmann
| first2=E.M. |last2=Standish
|author2=Standish, E. M.
| year=2004
| title=Planets Beyond: Discovering the Outer Solar System
| title=Planets Beyond: Discovering the outer Solar System
| date=2004 |page=50
| page=50
| publisher=Courier Dover Publications |isbn=0-486-43602-0
| publisher=Courier Dover Publications
}}</ref> and the symbol of a [[trident]],<ref name="pillans">{{cite journal
|isbn=0-486-43602-0
| last = Pillans
}}
| first = James
</ref>
| title = Ueber den Namen des neuen Planeten
and the symbol of a [[trident]],<ref name="pillans">
| journal = Astronomische Nachrichten
{{cite journal
| volume = 25
| last = Pillans | first = James
| issue = 26
| pages = 389–392
| year = 1847
| title = Ueber den Namen des neuen Planeten |language=de
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=yOAzAQAAIAAJ&pg=RA1-PA39-IA11
| trans-title = Regarding the names of the new planets
| date= 1847
| journal = [[Astronomische Nachrichten]]
| doi = 10.1002/asna.18470252602
| volume = 25 | issue = 26 | pages = 389–392
| bibcode=1847AN.....25..389.
| doi = 10.1002/asna.18470252602 | bibcode=1847AN.....25..389.
}}</ref> while falsely stating that this had been officially approved by the French [[Bureau des Longitudes]].<ref name="littmann-standish" /> In October, he sought to name the planet ''Leverrier'', after himself, and he had loyal support in this from the observatory director, [[François Arago]],<ref name="baum-sheehan">
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=yOAzAQAAIAAJ&pg=RA1-PA39-IA11
| via = Google Books
}}
</ref>
while falsely stating that this had been officially approved by the French [[Bureau des Longitudes]].<ref name=littmann-standish/> In October, he sought to name the planet ''Leverrier'', after himself, and he had loyal support in this from the observatory director, [[François Arago]],<ref name=baum-sheehan>
{{cite book
{{cite book
| last1=Baum|first1=Richard|last2=Sheehan|first2=William
| last1=Baum |first1=Richard
| last2=Sheehan |first2=William
| date=2003|pages=109–110
| date=2003|pages=109–110
| title=In Search of Planet Vulcan: The Ghost in Newton's Clockwork Universe
| title=In Search of Planet Vulcan: The ghost in Newton's clockwork universe
| publisher=Basic Books |isbn=0-7382-0889-2
| publisher=Basic Books
|isbn=0-7382-0889-2
}}
}}</ref> who in turn proposed a new symbol for the planet, ⯉ ([[File:Neptune monogram (fixed width).svg|25px|proposed symbol for planet Leverrier]]).<ref name=an-25>{{cite journal
</ref>
| last = Schumacher
who in turn proposed a new symbol for the planet, [[File:Neptune monogram (serif).svg|16px|⯉]].<ref name=an-25>
| first = H. C.
{{cite journal
| date = 1846
| last = Schumacher | first = H.C.
| title = Name des Neuen Planeten
| date = 1846
| journal = Astronomische Nachrichten
| title = Name des Neuen Planeten |language=de
| volume = 25
| trans-title = Names of the new planets
| pages = 81–82
| journal = [[Astronomische Nachrichten]]
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=wlc_AAAAcAAJ&pg=PA89
| volume = 25 | pages = 81–82
| bibcode = 1846AN.....25...81L |doi = 10.1002/asna.18470250603 }}</ref> However, this suggestion met with stiff resistance outside France.<ref name="baum-sheehan" /> French almanacs quickly reintroduced the name ''Herschel'' for ''Uranus'', after that planet's discoverer Sir [[William Herschel]], and ''Leverrier'' for the new planet.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Gingerich|first=Owen|date=October 1958|title=The Naming of Uranus and Neptune|journal=Astronomical Society of the Pacific Leaflets|volume=8|issue=352|pages=9–15|bibcode=1958ASPL....8....9G}}</ref> Professor [[James Pillans]] of the [[University of Edinburgh]] defended the name ''[[Janus]]'' for the new planet, and proposed a key for its symbol.<ref name="pillans" /> Meanwhile, [[Friedrich Georg Wilhelm von Struve|Struve]]<!--- (1793–1864), or maybe his son Otto Wilhelm von Struve (1819–1905) ---> presented the name ''Neptune'' on December 29, 1846, to the [[Russian Academy of Sciences|Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences]].<ref>{{cite journal
| bibcode = 1846AN.....25...81L |doi = 10.1002/asna.18470250603
|title=Second report of proceedings in the Cambridge Observatory relating to the new Planet (Neptune)
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=wlc_AAAAcAAJ&pg=PA89
|date=1847
}}
|journal=Astronomische Nachrichten
</ref>
|volume=25 |issue=21 |pages=309–314
However, this suggestion met with resistance outside France,<ref name="baum-sheehan" /> and French almanacs quickly reintroduced the name ''Herschel'' for ''Uranus'', after that planet's discoverer Sir [[William Herschel]], and ''Leverrier'' for the new planet,<ref>
|last=Hind|first=J. R.
{{cite report
|last=Gingerich |first=Owen
|date=October 1958
|title=The naming of Uranus and Neptune
|series=ASP Leaflets
|volume=8 |issue=352 |pages=9–15
|publisher=[[Astronomical Society of the Pacific]]
|bibcode=1958ASPL....8....9G
}}
</ref>
though it was used by anglophone institutions.<ref>
{{cite journal
|title={{grey|[title not cited]}}
|year=1848
|journal=[[Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences]]
|volume=1 |pages=287&nbsp;ff, 334&nbsp;ff
}}
</ref>
Professor [[James Pillans]] of the [[University of Edinburgh]] defended the name ''[[Janus]]'' for the new planet, and proposed a key for its symbol.<ref name=pillans/> Meanwhile, [[Friedrich Georg Wilhelm von Struve|Struve]]<!--- (1793–1864), or maybe his son Otto Wilhelm von Struve (1819–1905) ---> presented the name ''Neptune'' on December 29, 1846, to the [[Russian Academy of Sciences|Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences]].<ref>
{{cite journal
|last=Hind |first=J.R.
|year=1847
|title=Second report of proceedings in the Cambridge Observatory relating to the new planet (Neptune)
|journal=[[Astronomische Nachrichten]]
|volume=25 |issue=21 |pages=309–314
|doi=10.1002/asna.18470252102
|doi=10.1002/asna.18470252102
|bibcode = 1847AN.....25..309. |url=https://zenodo.org/record/1424623
|bibcode = 1847AN.....25..309.
|url=https://zenodo.org/record/1424623 |via=zenodo.org
}}
}}</ref> In August 1847, the Bureau des Longitudes announced its decision to follow prevailing astronomical practice and adopt the choice of ''Neptune'', with Arago refraining from participating in this decision.<ref name="connaissance-des-temps">{{cite book
</ref>
| title = Connaissance des temps: ou des mouvementes célestes, à l'usage des astronomes
In August 1847, the Bureau des Longitudes announced its decision to follow prevailing astronomical practice and adopt the choice of ''Neptune'', with Arago refraining from participating in this decision.<ref name=connaissance-des-temps>
| date = 1847
{{cite book
| page = unnumbered front matter
| title = Connaissance des Temps: ou des mouvementes célestes, à l'usage des astronomes
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=5q03AAAAMAAJ&pg=PP9
| language = fr
| author1 = Bureau Des Longitudes, France
| trans-title = Information on timing: or celestial movements, for the use of astronomers
}}</ref>
| year = 1847
| series = [[Connaissance des Temps]] |volume=1847
| page = [unnumbered front matter]
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=5q03AAAAMAAJ&pg=PP9
| publisher = [[Bureau des Longitudes]]
| place = Paris, France
}}
</ref>
The planetary symbol was [[Neptune's trident]], with the handle stylized either as a crosshatch [[File:Neptune symbol (fixed width).svg|16px]], following Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, Saturn, and the asteroids, or as an orb [[File:Neptune orb symbol (fixed width).svg|16px]], following the symbols for Uranus, Earth, and Mars.<ref name=Cyclopaedia/> The crosshatch variant is the more common today.


For use in computer systems, the symbols are encoded as {{unichar|2646|Neptune}} and {{unichar|2bc9|Neptune form two}}.
For use in computer systems, the symbols are encoded as {{unichar|2646|Neptune}} and {{unichar|2bc9|Neptune form two}}.


<gallery>
<gallery>
Athena Poseidon Cdm Paris DeRidder222.jpg|Athena (Pallas) with her lance and Poseidon (Neptune) with his trident. These weapons became the symbols of the planets Pallas and Neptune, respectively.
Neptune symbol (Jonathan Hull).svg|Modern abstract rendering of the Neptune symbol
File:Poseidon Penteskouphia Louvre CA452.jpg|Poseidon with a trident, 6th century BCE
File:Poseidon with fish Nationalmuseet 13407.jpg|Poseidon with a trident, 6th century CE
Amersfoort - Reliëf op de wand van Surinamelaan 68-74.jpg|Stylized Neptune symbol (orb base)
Amersfoort - Reliëf op de wand van Surinamelaan 84-90.jpg|Stylized Neptune symbol (cross base)
Neptune monogram (fixed width).svg|⯉, the obsolete Le Verrier monogram for Neptune
</gallery>
</gallery>


===Pluto===
===Pluto===
[[File:Pluto symbol (large orb, fixed width).svg|thumb|upright|Bident symbol for Pluto]]
[[Pluto]] was almost universally considered a planet from its discovery in 1930 until its re-classification as a "[[dwarf planet]]" by the IAU in 2006. Planetary geologists and astrologers continue to treat it as a planet. The planetary symbol used for Pluto was a ligature of the letters P and L. NASA has used a different symbol – a [[bident]] with an orb, ⯓, since Pluto's reclassification. For use with computer systems, these symbols are encoded as {{unichar|2647|Pluto}} and {{unichar|2BD3|Pluto form two}}.
[[File:Pluto monogram (fixed width).svg|thumb|upright|Percival Lowell monogram for Pluto]]
[[Pluto]] was almost universally considered a planet from its discovery in 1930 until its re-classification as a [[dwarf planet]] (planetoid) by the IAU in 2006. Planetary geologists<ref>
{{cite journal
|first1=Philip T. |last1=Metzger |first2=W.M. |last2=Grundy
|first3=Mark V. |last3=Sykes |first4=Alan |last4=Stern
|first5=James F. III |last5=Bell |first6=Charlene E. |last6=Detelich
|first7=Kirby |last7=Runyon |first8=Michael |last8=Summers
|author-link1=Philip T. Metzger
|display-authors=6
|date=March 2022
|title= Moons are planets: Scientific usefulness versus cultural teleology in the taxonomy of planetary science
|journal=[[Icarus (journal)|Icarus]]
|volume=374 |page=114768
|doi= 10.1016/j.icarus.2021.114768 |doi-access= free
|s2cid= 240071005 |issn=0019-1035
|arxiv=2110.15285}}
</ref>
and astrologers continue to treat it as a planet. The original planetary symbol for Pluto was [[File:Pluto monogram (serif).svg|16px|♇]], a [[monogram]] of the letters P and L. Astrologers generally use a [[bident]] with an orb. NASA has used the bident symbol since Pluto's reclassification. These symbols are encoded as {{unichar|2647|Pluto}} and {{unichar|2BD3|Pluto form two}}.
{{commons category|Pluto symbols}}
{{commons category|Pluto symbols}}


<gallery>
<gallery>
Plate 7- Pluto in a niche, holding a bident, with Cerberus next to him, from a series of mythological gods and goddesses MET DP830883.jpg|Pluto holding a bident
Pluto monogram symbol (Jonathan Hull).svg|Modern abstract rendering of the Pluto monogram
File:SerapisHellenistic.jpg|Pluto with a bident
Pluto symbol (Jonathan Hull).svg|Modern abstract rendering of the Pluto bident symbol
Amersfoort - Reliëf op de wand van Arubalaan 90-96.jpg|Pluto symbol stylized as an inverted Mercury
File:Pluto - NASA 2015 What is a dwarf planet?.jpg|Pluto compared in size to Earth's moon in a NASA publication
</gallery>

<gallery>
Pluto symbol (northern Europe, variant).svg|⯖, an astrological symbol used for Pluto in Germany and Denmark, representing Pluto's orbit crossing Neptune's
Pluto_symbol_(southern_Europe).svg|⯔, an astrological symbol used in the Mediterranean and Germany. The globe at bottom may be larger or omitted altogether.
</gallery>
</gallery>


==Minor planets==
==Minor planets==
[[File:Bezeichnung der Himmelskörper Encke 1850.png|thumb|upright=0.75|"Designation of celestial bodies" in a German almanac printed 1850<ref name=Encke>[[Johann Franz Encke]], ''Berliner Astronomisches Jahrbuch für 1853'', Berlin 1850, p. VIII</ref>]]
[[File:Bezeichnung der Himmelskörper Encke 1850.png|thumb|upright=0.75|"Designation of celestial bodies" in a German almanac printed 1850<ref name=Encke-BAJ-1853>
{{cite book
In the 19th century, planetary symbols for the major [[asteroid]]s were also in use, including [[1 Ceres]] (a reaper's scythe,<ref name=penny-cyclopaedia /> encoded {{unichar|26B3|Ceres|nlink=Ceres (mythology)}}), [[2 Pallas]] ({{unichar|26B4|Pallas|nlink=Pallas (mythology)}}) and [[3 Juno]] (a sceptre, encoded {{unichar|26B5|Juno|nlink=Juno (mythology)}}).
|editor-first=J.F. |editor-last=Encke |editor-link=Johann Franz Encke
Encke (1850) proposed symbols for [[5 Astraea]], [[6 Hebe]], [[7 Iris]], [[8 Flora]] and [[9 Metis]].<ref name=Encke/>
|publication-date=1850
|title=Berliner Astronomisches Jahrbuch für 1853
|place=Berlin, DE
|page={{mvar|viii}}
}}
</ref>]]
In the 19th century, planetary symbols for the major [[asteroid]]s were also in use, including [[1 Ceres]] (a reaper's [[sickle]], encoded {{unichar|26B3|Ceres|nlink=Ceres (mythology)}}), [[2 Pallas]] (a lance, {{unichar|26B4|Pallas|nlink=Pallas (mythology)}}) and [[3 Juno]] (a sceptre, encoded {{unichar|26B5|Juno|nlink=Juno (mythology)}}).
Encke (1850) used symbols for [[5 Astraea]], [[6 Hebe]], [[7 Iris]], [[8 Flora]] and [[9 Metis]] in the ''Berliner Astronomisches Jahrbuch''.<ref name=Encke-BAJ-1853/>


In the late 20th century, astrologers introduced replacement symbols for [[4 Vesta]] (the [[sacred fire of Vesta]], encoded {{unichar|26B6|Vesta|nlink=Vesta (mythology)}}), [[10 Hygiea]] (a [[caduceus]] &ndash; a common error in the USA for a [[staff of Asclepius]] &ndash; encoded {{unichar|2BDA|Hygiea}}), [[Pluto]] (a [[bident]], encoded {{unichar|2BD3|Pluto form two}}), and [[2060 Chiron]] (discovered 1977, {{unichar|26B7|Chiron|nlink=Chiron (mythology)}}). The astrological symbol for Vesta is now universal, and that for Pluto has been used astronomically for Pluto as a dwarf planet.
In the late 20th century, astrologers abbreviated the symbol for [[4 Vesta]] (the [[sacred fire of Vesta]], encoded {{unichar|26B6|Vesta|nlink=Vesta (mythology)}}),<ref name=faulks>
{{cite report
| last = Faulks | first = David
| date = 9 May 2006
| title = Proposal to add some western astrology symbols to the UCS
| page = 4
| website = unicode.org
|id=L2006/06171
| publisher = [[The Unicode Consortium]]
| url = https://www.unicode.org/L2/L2006/06171-astroprop.pdf
| access-date = 20 November 2017 | url-status=live
| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180615214658/https://www.unicode.org/L2/L2006/06171-astroprop.pdf
| archive-date=June 15, 2018
}}
</ref>
and introduced new symbols for [[5 Astraea]] ([[File:Astraea symbol (astrology, fixed width).svg|16px]], a stylised % sign, shift-5 on the keyboard for asteroid 5), [[10 Hygiea]] encoded {{unichar|2BDA|Hygiea}})<ref name=addastro/> and for [[2060 Chiron]], discovered in 1977 (a key, {{unichar|26B7|Chiron|nlink=Chiron (mythology)}}).<ref name=faulks/> Chiron's symbol was adapted as additional centaurs were discovered; symbols for [[5145 Pholus]] and [[7066 Nessus]] have been encoded in Unicode.<ref name=addastro>
{{cite report
|last=Faulks |first=David
|date=15 April 2016
|title=Additional symbols for astrology
|website=unicode.org
|id=L2016/16080
|publisher=[[The Unicode Consortium]]
|url=https://www.unicode.org/L2/L2016/16080-add-astrology.pdf
}}
</ref>
The abbreviated Vesta symbol is now universal, and the astrological symbol for Pluto has been used astronomically for Pluto as a dwarf planet.<ref name=DPU/>


In the early 21st century, symbols for the [[trans-Neptunian objects|trans-Neptunian]] dwarf planets have come into use, particularly [[Eris]] (the [[hand of Eris]], encoded= , [[Sedna]], [[Haumea]], [[Makemake]], [[Gonggong]], [[Quaoar]] and [[Orcus]].
In the early 21st century, symbols for the [[trans-Neptunian objects|trans-Neptunian]] dwarf planets have come into use, particularly [[Eris (dwarf planet)|Eris]] (the [[hand of Eris]], ⯰, but also), [[90377 Sedna|Sedna]], [[Haumea]], [[Makemake]], {{dp|Gonggong}}, {{dp|Quaoar}} and {{dp|Orcus}} which are in Unicode. All (except Eris, for which the hand of Eris is a traditional [[Discordian]] symbol) were devised by Denis Moskowitz, a software engineer in Massachusetts.<ref name=DPU>
{{cite report
|last=Miller |first=Kirk
|date=26 October 2021
|title=Unicode request for dwarf-planet symbols
|website=unicode.org
|id=L2021/21224
|url=https://www.unicode.org/L2/L2021/21224-dwarf-planet-syms.pdf
}}
</ref><ref name=anderson>
{{cite press release |last=Anderson |first=Deborah |date=4 May 2022 |title=Out of this world: New astronomy symbols approved for the Unicode standard |website=unicode.org |publisher=[[The Unicode Consortium]] |url=http://blog.unicode.org/2022/05/out-of-this-world-new-astronomy-symbols.html |access-date=6 August 2022}}</ref>


{|class="wikitable"
{|class="wikitable"
|+ Unicode characters for minor planets
! !! !! !!Unicode symbol
! !! !! !!Code point
|- id="Ceres"
|- id="Ceres"
![[Ceres (dwarf planet)|Ceres]]
![[Ceres (dwarf planet)|Ceres]]
|[[File:Ceres symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|50px]]
|[[File:Ceres symbol (fixed width).svg|frameless|upright=0.3]]
|{{commons category|Ceres symbols}}
|{{commons category|Ceres symbols}}
|(⚳) CERES at U+26B3.<ref name = officialchart />
|(⚳) CERES at U+26B3.<ref name = officialchart>In the official [https://www.unicode.org/charts/PDF/U2600.pdf code chart].</ref>
|-
|-
![[2 Pallas|Pallas]]
![[2 Pallas|Pallas]]
|[[File:Pallas symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|50px]]
|[[File:Pallas symbol (fixed width).svg|frameless|upright=0.3]]
|{{commons category|(2) Pallas symbols}}
|{{commons category|(2) Pallas symbols}}
|(⚴) PALLAS at U+26B4.<ref name = officialchart />
|(⚴) PALLAS at U+26B4.<ref name = officialchart/>
|-
|-
![[3 Juno|Juno]]
![[3 Juno|Juno]]
|[[File:Juno symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|50px]]
|[[File:Juno symbol (fixed width).svg|frameless|upright=0.3]]
|{{commons category|(3) Juno symbols}}
|{{commons category|(3) Juno symbols}}
|(⚵) JUNO at U+26B5.<ref name = officialchart />
|(⚵) JUNO at U+26B5.<ref name = officialchart/>
|-
|-
![[4 Vesta|Vesta]]
![[4 Vesta|Vesta]]
|[[File:Vesta symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|50px]]
|[[File:Vesta symbol (fixed width).svg|frameless|upright=0.3]]
|{{commons category|Vesta (asteroid) symbol}}
|{{commons category|(4) Vesta symbols}}
|(⚶) VESTA at U+26B6.<ref name = officialchart />
|(⚶) VESTA at U+26B6.<ref name = officialchart/>
|-
![[10 Hygiea|Hygiea]]
|[[File:Hygiea symbol (fixed width).svg|frameless|upright=0.3]]
|{{commons category|(10) Hygiea symbols}}
|(⯚) HYGIEA at U+2BDA.<ref name = officialchart/>
|-
|-
![[2060 Chiron|Chiron]]
![[2060 Chiron|Chiron]]
|[[File:Chiron symbol.svg|thumb|50px]]
|[[File:Chiron symbol (fixed width).svg|frameless|upright=0.3]]
|{{commons category|(2060) Chiron symbols}}
|{{commons category|Chiron symbols}}
|(⚷) CHIRON at U+26B7.<ref name = officialchart />
|(⚷) CHIRON at U+26B7.<ref name = officialchart/>
|-
|-
![[5145 Pholus|Pholus]]
!rowspan=2|{{dp|Eris}}
|[[File:Eris symbol (Moskowitz, fixed width).svg|thumb|50px]]
|[[File:Pholus symbol.svg|frameless|upright=0.3]]
|{{commons category|Five-fingered hand of Eris}}
|{{commons category|Pholus symbols}}
|() ERIS FORM ONE at U+2BF0
|() PHOLUS at U+2BDB
|-
|-
![[7066 Nessus|Nessus]]
|[[File:Eris arrow symbol (fixed width).svg|thumb|50px]]
|[[File:Nessus symbol.svg|frameless|upright=0.3]]
|{{commons category|Eris astrological symbol}}
|{{commons category|Nessus symbols}}
|(⯱) ERIS FORM TWO at U+2BF1
|(⯜) NESSUS at U+2BDC
|-
|-
!{{dp|Sedna}}
!{{dp|Orcus}}
|[[File:Sedna symbol (Moskowitz, fixed width).svg|thumb|50px]]
|[[File:Orcus symbol (fixed width).svg|frameless|upright=0.3]]
|{{commons category|Sedna symbols}}
|{{commons category|Orcus symbols}}
|() SEDNA at U+2BF2
|(🝿) ORCUS at U+1F77F
|-
|-
!{{dp|Haumea}}
!{{dp|Haumea}}
|[[File:Haumea symbol (Moskowitz, fixed width).svg|thumb|50px]]
|[[File:Haumea symbol (fixed width).svg|frameless|upright=0.3]]
|{{commons category|Haumea symbols}}
|{{commons category|Haumea symbols}}
|(🝻) HAUMEA scheduled for U+1F77B
|(🝻) HAUMEA at U+1F77B
|-
!{{dp|Quaoar}}
|[[File:Quaoar symbol (fixed width).svg|frameless|upright=0.3]]
|{{commons category|Quaoar symbols}}
|(🝾) QUAOAR at U+1F77E
|-
|-
!{{dp|Makemake}}
!{{dp|Makemake}}
|[[File:Makemake symbol (Moskowitz, fixed width).svg|thumb|50px]]
|[[File:Makemake symbol (fixed width).svg|frameless|upright=0.3]]
|{{commons category|Makemake symbols}}
|{{commons category|Makemake symbols}}
|(🝼) MAKEMAKE scheduled for U+1F77C
|(🝼) MAKEMAKE at U+1F77C
|-
|-
!{{dp|Gonggong}}
!{{dp|Gonggong}}
|[[File:Gonggong symbol (Moskowitz, fixed width).svg|thumb|50px]]
|[[File:Gonggong symbol (fixed width).svg|frameless|upright=0.3]]
|{{commons category|Gonggong symbols}}
|{{commons category|Gonggong symbols}}
|(🝽) GONGGONG scheduled for U+1F77D
|(🝽) GONGGONG at U+1F77D
|-
|-
!{{dp|Quaoar}}
!rowspan=2|{{dp|Eris}}
|[[File:Quaoar symbol (Moskowitz, fixed width).svg|thumb|50px]]
|[[File:Eris symbol (fixed width).svg|frameless|upright=0.3]]
|{{commons category|Quaoar symbols}}
|{{commons category|Five-fingered hand of Eris}}
|(🝾) QUAOAR scheduled for U+1F77E
|() ERIS FORM ONE at U+2BF0
|-
|-
|[[File:Eris arrow symbol (fixed width).svg|frameless|upright=0.3]]
!{{dp|Orcus}}
|{{commons category|Eris astrological symbol}}
|[[File:Orcus symbol (Moskowitz, fixed width).svg|thumb|50px]]
|(⯱) ERIS FORM TWO at U+2BF1, used by astrologer Henry Seltzer
|{{commons category|Orcus symbols}}
|-
|(🝿) ORCUS scheduled for U+1F77F
!{{dp|Sedna}}
|[[File:Sedna symbol (fixed width).svg|frameless|upright=0.3]]
|{{commons category|Sedna symbols}}
|(⯲) SEDNA at U+2BF2
|}
|}


<gallery>
<gallery>
Ceres, Bacchus and Amor Dutch School Rijksdienst voor het Cultureel Erfgoed B618.jpg|Ceres with her sickle
Ceres symbol (Jonathan Hull).svg|Modern abstract rendering of the Ceres symbol
Athena Poseidon Cdm Paris DeRidder222.jpg|Athena (Pallas) with her lance (left)
Haumea symbol (Jonathan Hull).svg|Modern abstract rendering of the Haumea symbol
Abraham Bloemaert, Juno, c.1610, NGA 152769.jpg|Juno with her scepter
Makemake symbol (Jonathan Hull).svg|Modern abstract rendering of the Makemake symbol
D'Antoine - Consécration d'une jeune vestale en présence des déesses Minerve et Vesta.jpg|Vesta's sacred fire
Eris symbol (Jonathan Hull).svg|Modern abstract rendering of the Eris symbol
Hygeia-Hermitage.jpg|Hygiea with her snake (old astr. symbol [[File:Hygiea symbol (original, fixed width).svg]])
Makemake.jpg|Petroglyph of Makemake
Bomarzo parco mostri orco.jpg|Orcus's gape
File:Shan hai jing Zhuyin.jpg|A [[Zhulong (mythology)|human-headed serpent]] similar to depictions of Gonggong
Hand of Eris.svg|The Hand of Eris from the ''[[Principia Discordia]]''
</gallery>

=== Additional symbols ===
From 1845 to 1855, many symbols were created for newly discovered asteroids. But by 1851, the spate of discoveries had led to a general abandonment of these symbols in favour of numbering all asteroids instead.<ref name=hilton>
{{cite report
| last = Hilton | first=James L. | author-link = James L. Hilton
| date = 14 June 2011
| title = When did the asteroids become minor planets?
| place = Washington, DC
| publisher = [[United States Naval Observatory]]
| series = Astronomical Almanac Division
| url = http://aa.usno.navy.mil/faq/docs/minorplanets.php
| access-date = April 24, 2013 | url-status=live
| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180810175312/http://aa.usno.navy.mil/faq/docs/minorplanets.php
| archive-date=August 10, 2018
}}
</ref>
<gallery>
AstraeaVSH.JPG|Astraea with her scales (astronomical symbol {{nowrap|[[File:Astraea symbol (fixed width).svg]] or [[File:Astraea symbol (scales, fixed width).svg]])}}
Canova-Hebe 30 degree view.jpg|Hebe bearing a cup (astr. symbol [[File:Hebe symbol (fixed width).svg]])
Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien 2016 Kunstkammer Gaetano Matteo Monti Iris als Regenbogengöttin KK 5503 b.jpg|Iris as the rainbow (astr. symbol [[File:Iris symbol (simple, fixed width).svg]])
File:Wall painting - Flora - Stabiae (villa di Arianna) - Napoli MAN 8834.jpg|Flora dispensing flowers (astr. symbol [[File:Flora symbol (fixed width).svg]])
File:Winged goddess Louvre F32.jpg|Metis (astr. symbol [[File:Metis symbol (fixed width).svg]])
File:Hygea, copia romana da originale greco del III sec. ac.JPG|Hygiea with her snake (astr. symbol [[File:Hygiea symbol (original, fixed width).svg]])
File:Sirena Napoli2.JPG|Parthenope (astr. symbol [[File:Parthenope symbol (fixed width).svg]])
NAMA Sirène.jpg|Parthenope with her lyre (astr. symbol [[File:Lyra symbol (fixed width).svg]])
Victory Column or Siegessäule in Berlin Tiergarten 0962.jpg|Victory (Victoria) with a laurel wreath (astr. symbol [[File:Victoria symbol (fixed width).svg]] or [[File:Victoria symbol (simple, fixed width).svg]])
File:La ninfa Egeria dictando a Numa.jpg|Egeria (astr. symbol [[File:Egeria symbol (fixed width).svg]]) dictating the laws of Rome to [[Numa Pompilius]]
Alegorie míru, náměstí Míru, Vinohrady, Praha.jpg|Peace (Irene) as a freed dove (astr. symbol [[File:Irene symbol (fixed width).svg]])
Germania frieden.jpg|Peace with wings and an olive branch
File:Jacob Jordaens- Al·legoria de la Pau.jpg|Eunomia (astr. symbol [[File:Eunomia symbol (fixed width).svg]]) at left, as allegory of law and good order; Irene in centre
Psyche on a camel.jpg|Psyche with butterfly wings (astr. symbol [[File:Psyche symbol (elaborate, fixed width).svg]])
Hermes-Psyche-Palais-Garnier (cropped).jpg|Psyche accompanied by a butterfly, and Hermes with a multiply twisted caduceus
Library of the world's best literature, ancient and modern (1902) (14759296956).jpg|Psyche with butterfly wings, and Charon standing in his lunate boat
File:Psyche insignia.svg|Insignia of the NASA ''[[Psyche (spacecraft)|Psyche]]'' mission, possibly influenced by the Psyche symbol<ref name=astunicode>{{cite web |url=https://www.unicode.org/L2/L2023/23207-historical-asteroids.pdf |title=Unicode request for historical asteroid symbols |last1=Bala |first1=Gavin Jared |last2=Miller |first2=Kirk |date=18 September 2023 |website=unicode.org |publisher=Unicode |access-date=26 September 2023 |quote=}}</ref>
Museo Arqueológico Nacional - 2001-89-2 - Dinos de Tetis y Peleo 03.jpg|Thetis with a dolphin (astro. symbol [[file:Thetis symbol (fixed width).svg]])
Melpomene Pio-Clementino Inv299.jpg|Melpomene with a dagger (astr. symbol [[file:Melpomene symbol (fixed width).svg]])
Fortune et sa roue détail.png|Fortuna with her wheel (astro. symbol [[file:Fortuna symbol (fixed width).svg]])
Hymen is kneeling before Fortune, who is balancing blindfold Wellcome V0047969.jpg|blindfolded Fortuna balanced on a wheel
Dante Gabriel Rossetti - Proserpine - Google Art Project.jpg|Proserpina with a pomegranate (astr. symbol [[file:Proserpina symbol (fixed width).svg]])
Jan Muller after Bartholomaeus Spranger, Bellona Leading the Imperial Armies Against the Turks, 1600, NGA 153994.jpg|Bellona with a lance and flail (astro. symbol [[file:Bellona symbol (fixed width).svg]])
Amphitrite LACMA M.88.91.381b.jpg|Amphitrite on a shell (astr. symbol [[file:Amphitrite symbol (fixed width).svg]])
File:Leukothea, Goddess of Sailors, from the Goddesses of the Greeks and Romans series (N188) issued by Wm. S. Kimball & Co. MET DPB871036.jpg|Leukothea (astr. symbol [[File:Leukothea symbol (fixed width).svg]]) as goddess of sailors
File:Triumph of Faith over Idolatry Theodon.jpg|Faith (Fides, astr. symbol [[File:Fides symbol (fixed width).svg]]) triumphs over idolatry
</gallery>

Moskowitz, who designed symbols for the trans-Neptunian dwarf planets, also designed symbols for the smaller trans-Neptunian objects [[20000 Varuna|Varuna]], [[28978 Ixion|Ixion]], and [[120347 Salacia|Salacia]]. Others have proposed symbols for even more trans-Neptunian objects, e.g. Zane Stein for [[174567 Varda|Varda]]. Although mentioned in the [[Unicode]] proposal for the other dwarf planets, they lack broader adoption.<ref name=DPU/>

<gallery>
File:Amphitrite Terme di Nettuno Ostia Antica 2006-09-08.jpg|Salacia riding her [[hippocamp]] (symbol [[File:Salacia symbol (fixed width).svg]])
File:Ixion in sky campanian amphora.jpg|Ixion bound to his wheel (symbol [[File:Ixion symbol (Latin, fixed width).svg]] or [[File:Ixion symbol (Moskowitz, fixed width).svg]])
File:Varuna makara.jpg|Varuna with his snake-lasso (symbol [[File:Varuna symbol (fixed width).svg]])
File:Varda Elentári.jpg|Varda kindling the stars (symbol [[File:Varda symbol (fixed width).svg]])
</gallery>
</gallery>


==See also==
==See also==
{{Portal|Astronomy|Stars|Spaceflight|Outer space|Solar System}}
{{commons category|Planet symbols}}
{{commons category|Alchemical symbols}}
*[[Astrological symbol]]
*[[Astrological symbol]]
*[[Astronomical symbol]]
*[[Astronomical symbol]]
*[[Gender symbol]]
*[[Gender symbol]]
*[[Classical planets in Western alchemy]]
*[[Classical planets in Western alchemy]]

==Footnotes==
{{notelist}}


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist|25em}}

===Sources===
{{refbegin}}
*{{cite journal
| last = Maunder
| first = A. S. D.
| date = 1934
| title = The origin of the symbols of the planets
| journal = The Observatory
| volume = 57
| pages = 238–247
| bibcode = 1934Obs....57..238M
}}
{{refend}}


{{commons category|Planet symbols}}
{{commons category|Alchemical symbols}}
{{Zodiac}}
{{Zodiac}}
{{Portal bar|Astronomy|Stars|Spaceflight|Outer space|Solar System}}


[[Category:Alchemical symbols]]
[[Category:Alchemical symbols]]

Latest revision as of 05:45, 21 May 2024

A planet symbol or planetary symbol is a graphical symbol used in astrology and astronomy to represent a classical planet (including the Sun and the Moon) or one of the modern planets. The symbols were also used in alchemy to represent the metals associated with the planets, and in calendars for their associated days. Most of the symbols originated in Greco-Roman astronomy; their modern forms developed in the 16th century.

The classical planets, their symbols, days and most commonly associated planetary metals are:

planet Moon Mercury Venus Sun Mars Jupiter Saturn
symbol ☾ ☿ ♀ ☉ ♂ ♃ ♄
unicode ♀︎ ♂︎
day Monday Wednesday Friday Sunday Tuesday Thursday Saturday
metal silver quicksilver copper gold iron tin lead

The International Astronomical Union (IAU) discourages the use of these symbols in modern journal articles, and their style manual proposes one- and two-letter abbreviations for the names of the planets for cases where planetary symbols might be used, such as in the headings of tables.[1] The modern planets with their traditional symbols and IAU abbreviations are:

planet Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune
symbol ☿ ♀ 🜨 ♂ ♃ ♄ ⛢ ♆
initial (IAU) Me
H[a]
V E Ma
M[a]
J S U N

The symbols of Venus and Mars are also used to represent female and male in biology following a convention introduced by Carl Linnaeus in the 1750s.

History[edit]

Classical planets[edit]

Antecedents of the planetary symbols are attested in the attributes given to classical deities. The Roman planisphere of Bianchini (2nd century, currently in the Louvre, inv. Ma 540)[2] shows the seven planets represented by portraits of the seven corresponding gods, each a bust with a halo and an iconic object or dress, as follows: Mercury has a caduceus and a winged cap; Venus has a necklace and a shining mirror; Mars has a war-helmet and a spear; Jupiter has a laurel crown and a staff; Saturn has a conical headdress and a scythe; the Sun has rays emanating from his head; and the Moon has a crescent atop her head.

The written symbols for Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, and Saturn have been traced to forms found in late Greek papyri.[3][b]

Early forms are also found in medieval Byzantine codices which preserve horoscopes.[4]

A diagram in the astronomical compendium by Johannes Kamateros (12th century) closely resembles the 11th-century forms shown above, with the Sun represented by a circle with a single ray, Jupiter by the letter zeta (the initial of Zeus, Jupiter's counterpart in Greek mythology), Mars by a round shield in front of a diagonal spear, and the remaining classical planets by symbols resembling the modern ones, though without the crosshatch-marks seen in modern versions of Mercury, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn.[citation needed] These cross-marks first appear in the late 15th or early 16th century. According to Maunder, the addition of crosses appears to be "an attempt to give a savour of Christianity to the symbols of the old pagan gods."[5] The modern forms of the classical planetary symbols are found in a woodcut of the seven planets in a Latin translation of Abu Ma'shar al-Balkhi's De Magnis Coniunctionibus printed at Venice in 1506, represented as the corresponding gods riding chariots.[6]

Earth symbol[edit]

Four-quarters-of-the-world symbol for Earth
Globus cruciger symbol for Earth

Earth is not one of the classical planets, as "planets" by definition were "wandering stars" as seen from Earth's surface. Earth's status as planet is a consequence of heliocentrism in the 16th century. Nonetheless, there is a pre-heliocentric symbol for the world, now used as a planetary symbol for the Earth. This is a circle crossed by two lines, horizontal and vertical, representing the world divided by four rivers into the four quarters of the world (often translated as the four "corners" of the world): 🜨. A variant, now obsolete, had only the horizontal line: 🜔.[7]

A medieval European symbol for the world – the globus cruciger, ♁ (the globe surmounted by a Christian cross) – is also used as a planetary symbol; it resembles an inverted symbol for Venus.

The planetary symbols for Earth are encoded in Unicode at U+1F728 🜨 ALCHEMICAL SYMBOL FOR VERDIGRIS and U+2641 EARTH.

Classical planets[edit]

Moon[edit]

Decrescent symbol for the Moon
Encrescent symbol for the Moon

The crescent shape has been used to represent the Moon since earliest times. In classical antiquity, it is worn by lunar deities (Selene/Luna, Artemis/Diana, Men, etc.) either on the head or behind the shoulders, with its horns pointing upward. The representation of the moon as a simple crescent with the horns pointing to the side (as a heraldic crescent increscent or crescent decrescent) is attested from late Classical times.

The same symbol can be used in a different context not for the Moon itself but for a lunar phase, as part of a sequence of four symbols for "new moon" (U+1F311 🌑︎), "waxing" (U+263D ☽︎), "full moon" (U+1F315 🌕︎) and "waning" (U+263E ☾︎).

Mercury[edit]

Crosshatched caduceus symbol for Mercury

The symbol for Mercury is a caduceus (a staff intertwined with two serpents), a symbol associated with Mercury / Hermes throughout antiquity. Some time after the 11th century, a crosshatch was added to the bottom of the staff to make it seem more Christian.[3]

The symbol has also been used to indicate intersex, transgender, or non-binary gender.[8] A related usage is for the 'worker' or 'neuter' sex among social insects that is neither male nor (due to its lack of reproductive capacity) fully female, such as for example worker bees.[9] It was also once the designated symbol for hermaphroditic or 'perfect' flowers,[10] but botanists now use for these instead.[11]

Its Unicode codepoint is U+263F MERCURY.

Venus[edit]

Crosshatched copper symbol for Venus

The Venus symbol, ♀, consists of a circle with a small cross below it. It has been interpreted as a depiction of the hand-mirror of the goddess, which may also explain Venus's association with the planetary metal copper, as mirrors in antiquity were made of polished copper (alloy),[12][d] though this is not certain.[3] In the Greek Oxyrhynchus Papyri 235, the symbols for Venus and Mercury did not have the cross on the bottom stem,[3] and Venus still appears without the cross (⚲) in Johannes Kamateros (12th century).[citation needed]

In botany and biology, the symbol for Venus is used to represent the female sex, alongside the symbol for Mars representing the male sex,[13] following a convention introduced by Linnaeus in the 1750s.[10][e] Arising from the biological convention, the symbol also came to be used in sociological contexts to represent women or femininity. This gendered association of Venus and Mars has been used to pair them heteronormatively, describing women and men stereotypically as being so different that they can be understood as coming from different planets, an understanding popularized in 1992 by the book titled Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus.[14][15]

Unicode encodes the symbol as U+2640 FEMALE SIGN, in the Miscellaneous Symbols block.[f]

Sun[edit]

Modern astronomical symbol for the Sun

The modern astronomical symbol for the Sun, the circumpunct (U+2609 SUN), was first used in the Renaissance. It possibly represents Apollo's golden shield with a boss; it is unknown if it traces descent from the nearly identical Egyptian hieroglyph for the Sun.

Bianchini's planisphere, produced in the 2nd century, shows a circlet with rays radiating from it.[5][2] In late Classical times, the Sun is attested as a circle with a single ray. A diagram in Johannes Kamateros' 12th century Compendium of Astrology shows the same symbol.[18] This older symbol is encoded by Unicode as U+1F71A 🜚 ALCHEMICAL SYMBOL FOR GOLD in the Alchemical Symbols block. Both symbols have been used alchemically for gold, as have more elaborate symbols showing a disk with multiple rays or even a face.

Mars[edit]

Spear and shield symbol for Mars

The Mars symbol, ♂, is a depiction of a circle with an arrow emerging from it, pointing at an angle to the upper right in Europe and to the upper left in India.[19][20] It is also the old and obsolete symbol for iron in alchemy. In zoology and botany, it is used to represent the male sex (alongside the astrological symbol for Venus representing the female sex),[13] following a convention introduced by Linnaeus in the 1750s.[10]

The symbol dates from at latest the 11th century, at which time it was an arrow across or through a circle, thought to represent the shield and spear of the god Mars; in the medieval form, for example in the 12th-century Compendium of Astrology by Johannes Kamateros, the spear is drawn across the shield.[18] The Greek Oxyrhynchus Papyri show a different symbol,[3] perhaps simply a spear.[2]

Its Unicode codepoint is U+2642 MALE SIGN (&male;).

Jupiter[edit]

Zeus initial for Jupiter

The symbol for Jupiter, ♃, was originally a Greek zeta, Ζ, with a stroke indicating that it is an abbreviation (for Zeus, the Greek equivalent of Roman Jupiter).

Its Unicode codepoint is U+2643 JUPITER.

Saturn[edit]

Crosshatched kappa-rho ligature for Saturn

Salmasius and earlier attestations show that the symbol for Saturn, ♄, derives from the initial letters (Kappa, rho) of its ancient Greek name Κρόνος (Kronos), with a stroke to indicate an abbreviation.[10] By the time of Kamateros (12th century), the symbol had been reduced to a shape similar to a lower-case letter eta η, with the abbreviation stroke surviving (if at all) in the curl on the bottom-right end. The horizontal stroke was added along with the "Christianization" of other symbols in the early 16th century.

Its Unicode codepoint is U+2644 SATURN.

Modern discoveries[edit]

Uranus[edit]

Platinum symbol for Uranus
Herschel monogram for Uranus

The symbols for Uranus were created shortly after its discovery in 1781. One symbol, ⛢, invented by J. G. Köhler and refined by Bode, was intended to represent the newly discovered metal platinum; since platinum, commonly called white gold, was found by chemists mixed with iron, the symbol for platinum combines the alchemical symbols for iron, ♂, and gold, ☉.[21][22] Gold and iron are the planetary metals for the Sun and Mars, and so share their symbols. Several orientations were suggested, but an upright arrow is now universal.

Another symbol, ♅, was suggested by Lalande in 1784. In a letter to Herschel, Lalande described it as "un globe surmonté par la première lettre de votre nom" ("a globe surmounted by the first letter of your name").[23] The platinum symbol tends to be used by astronomers and the monogram by astrologers.[24]

For use in computer systems, the symbols are encoded U+26E2 ASTRONOMICAL SYMBOL FOR URANUS and U+2645 URANUS.

Neptune[edit]

Trident symbol for Neptune

Several symbols were proposed for Neptune to accompany the suggested names for the planet. Claiming the right to name his discovery, Urbain Le Verrier originally proposed to name the planet for the Roman God Neptune[25] and the symbol of a trident,[26] while falsely stating that this had been officially approved by the French Bureau des Longitudes.[25] In October, he sought to name the planet Leverrier, after himself, and he had loyal support in this from the observatory director, François Arago,[27] who in turn proposed a new symbol for the planet, ⯉.[28] However, this suggestion met with resistance outside France,[27] and French almanacs quickly reintroduced the name Herschel for Uranus, after that planet's discoverer Sir William Herschel, and Leverrier for the new planet,[29] though it was used by anglophone institutions.[30] Professor James Pillans of the University of Edinburgh defended the name Janus for the new planet, and proposed a key for its symbol.[26] Meanwhile, Struve presented the name Neptune on December 29, 1846, to the Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences.[31] In August 1847, the Bureau des Longitudes announced its decision to follow prevailing astronomical practice and adopt the choice of Neptune, with Arago refraining from participating in this decision.[32] The planetary symbol was Neptune's trident, with the handle stylized either as a crosshatch , following Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, Saturn, and the asteroids, or as an orb , following the symbols for Uranus, Earth, and Mars.[7] The crosshatch variant is the more common today.

For use in computer systems, the symbols are encoded as U+2646 NEPTUNE and U+2BC9 NEPTUNE FORM TWO.

Pluto[edit]

Bident symbol for Pluto
Percival Lowell monogram for Pluto

Pluto was almost universally considered a planet from its discovery in 1930 until its re-classification as a dwarf planet (planetoid) by the IAU in 2006. Planetary geologists[33] and astrologers continue to treat it as a planet. The original planetary symbol for Pluto was ♇, a monogram of the letters P and L. Astrologers generally use a bident with an orb. NASA has used the bident symbol since Pluto's reclassification. These symbols are encoded as U+2647 PLUTO and U+2BD3 PLUTO FORM TWO.

Minor planets[edit]

"Designation of celestial bodies" in a German almanac printed 1850[34]

In the 19th century, planetary symbols for the major asteroids were also in use, including 1 Ceres (a reaper's sickle, encoded U+26B3 CERES), 2 Pallas (a lance, U+26B4 PALLAS) and 3 Juno (a sceptre, encoded U+26B5 JUNO). Encke (1850) used symbols for 5 Astraea, 6 Hebe, 7 Iris, 8 Flora and 9 Metis in the Berliner Astronomisches Jahrbuch.[34]

In the late 20th century, astrologers abbreviated the symbol for 4 Vesta (the sacred fire of Vesta, encoded U+26B6 VESTA),[35] and introduced new symbols for 5 Astraea (, a stylised % sign, shift-5 on the keyboard for asteroid 5), 10 Hygiea encoded U+2BDA HYGIEA)[36] and for 2060 Chiron, discovered in 1977 (a key, U+26B7 CHIRON).[35] Chiron's symbol was adapted as additional centaurs were discovered; symbols for 5145 Pholus and 7066 Nessus have been encoded in Unicode.[36] The abbreviated Vesta symbol is now universal, and the astrological symbol for Pluto has been used astronomically for Pluto as a dwarf planet.[37]

In the early 21st century, symbols for the trans-Neptunian dwarf planets have come into use, particularly Eris (the hand of Eris, ⯰, but also ⯱), Sedna, Haumea, Makemake, Gonggong, Quaoar and Orcus which are in Unicode. All (except Eris, for which the hand of Eris is a traditional Discordian symbol) were devised by Denis Moskowitz, a software engineer in Massachusetts.[37][38]

Unicode characters for minor planets
Code point
Ceres (⚳) CERES at U+26B3.[39]
Pallas (⚴) PALLAS at U+26B4.[39]
Juno (⚵) JUNO at U+26B5.[39]
Vesta (⚶) VESTA at U+26B6.[39]
Hygiea (⯚) HYGIEA at U+2BDA.[39]
Chiron (⚷) CHIRON at U+26B7.[39]
Pholus (⯛) PHOLUS at U+2BDB
Nessus (⯜) NESSUS at U+2BDC
Orcus (🝿) ORCUS at U+1F77F
Haumea (🝻) HAUMEA at U+1F77B
Quaoar (🝾) QUAOAR at U+1F77E
Makemake (🝼) MAKEMAKE at U+1F77C
Gonggong (🝽) GONGGONG at U+1F77D
Eris (⯰) ERIS FORM ONE at U+2BF0
(⯱) ERIS FORM TWO at U+2BF1, used by astrologer Henry Seltzer
Sedna (⯲) SEDNA at U+2BF2

Additional symbols[edit]

From 1845 to 1855, many symbols were created for newly discovered asteroids. But by 1851, the spate of discoveries had led to a general abandonment of these symbols in favour of numbering all asteroids instead.[40]

Moskowitz, who designed symbols for the trans-Neptunian dwarf planets, also designed symbols for the smaller trans-Neptunian objects Varuna, Ixion, and Salacia. Others have proposed symbols for even more trans-Neptunian objects, e.g. Zane Stein for Varda. Although mentioned in the Unicode proposal for the other dwarf planets, they lack broader adoption.[37]

See also[edit]

Footnotes[edit]

  1. ^ a b In order to have one-letter abbreviations for every planet, the IAU recommends 'H' (Hermes) for Mercury and 'M' for Mars. In the unlikely event a satellite were ever discovered around Mercury, its official abbreviation would be H1.
  2. ^ "It is now possible to trace the medieval symbols for at least four of the five planets to forms that occur in some of the latest papyrus horoscopes ([ P.Oxy. ] 4272, 4274, 4275 [...]). Mercury's is a stylized caduceus. ... The ideal form of Mars' symbol is uncertain, and perhaps not related to the later circle with an arrow through it." — Jones (1999)[3]
  3. ^ BNF Arabe 2583 folio 15v: Saturn is shown as a black bearded man, kneeling and holding a scythe or axe; Mercury is shown as a scribe holding an open codex; Jupiter as a man of the law wearing a turban; Venus as a lute-player; Mars as a helmeted warrior holding a sword and the head of an enemy.
  4. ^ "The symbol, the stylized hand mirror of the Goddess Venus, also represents femininity. It has also been used for the element copper: Mirrors had been manufactured from polished copper." — Rehder (2011)[12]
  5. ^ "In his Systema Naturae (Leyden, 1735) he [Linnaeus] used them with their traditional associations for metals. Their first biological use is in the Linnaean dissertation Plantae hybridae xxx sistit J.J. Haartman (1751) where in discussing hybrid plants Linnaeus denoted the supposed female parent species by the sign ♀, the male parent by the sign ♂, the hybrid by ☿: 'matrem signo ♀, patrem ♂ & plantam hybridam ☿ designavero'. In subsequent publications he retained the signs ♀ and ♂ for male and female individuals but discarded ☿ for hybrids; the last are now indicated by the multiplication sign ×."
    "Linnaeus's first general use of the signs of ♀ and ♂ was in his Species Plantarum (1753) written between 1746 and 1752 and surveying concisely the whole plant kingdom as then known. ... In order to save space Linnaeus employed the astronomical symbols of Saturn, Jupiter, Mars and the Sun to denote woody, herbaceous perennial, biennial and annual plants respectively [ed.: the orbital periods of Saturn, Jupiter, Mars and Earth about the Sun are 29, 12, 2, and 1 year] ... and Mercury, Mars and Venus for the hermaphrodite, male and female conditions" ...
    "Later, in his Mantissa Plantarum (1767) and Mantissa Plantarum altera (1771), Linnaeus regularly used ♂, ♀ and ☿ for male, female and hermaphrodite flowers respectively. Their aptness made them easy to remember and their convenience led to their general acceptance in zoology as well as botany. Koelreuter found them especially convenient when recording his experiments in hybridization; as late as 1778 he used the sign ☿ to denote a hybrid plant." — Stearn (1962)[10]
  6. ^ Glossed in the official Unicode code chart as " = Venus = alchemical symbol for copper → 1F469 👩 woman → 1F6BA 🚺 women's symbol". [16]
  7. ^ The raised fist symbol is attributed to Robin Morgan, in the 1960s: "Morgan designed the universal logo of the women's movement, the woman's symbol centered with a raised fist."[17]

References[edit]

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  5. ^ a b Maunder (1934)
  6. ^ Maunder (1934:239)
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