In Sarvartha Chintamani, an important dictum states that if the lord of the 7th house is exalted, retrograde, or otherwise strongly fortified, and occupies either the 7th house or the ascendant, the native may have many spouses, relationships, or significant partnerships.
What is especially striking here is the explicit inclusion of retrogression alongside exaltation and conditions that strengthen. This is significant because many modern astrologers reduce retrogression merely to “delay,” “denial,” or psychological internalisation, whereas classical texts often treat retrograde planets as exceptionally powerful in delivering their significations.
The 7th house governs:
• marriage,
• sexual union,
• partnerships,
• attraction toward others,
• public interaction,
• and worldly engagement.
When its lord becomes extraordinarily strong, the sphere of life represented by the 7th house becomes highly active and pronounced. Strength does not automatically imply restraint or moral discipline; rather, it amplifies the domain governed by the house. Thus, a powerful 7th lord can increase:
• desire for companionship,
• opportunities for unions,
• attraction from others,
• social and romantic involvement,
• or repeated partnership experiences.
The dictum becomes even more interesting when retrogression is included among the empowering conditions. In many classical traditions of Jyotiṣa, a retrograde planet (vakri graha) is treated as possessing intensified cheṣṭā bala (motional strength). Such a planet behaves unusually, forcefully, and often beyond ordinary limits. It may magnify the agenda of the house it rules or occupies.
So, when the 7th lord is retrograde and strongly placed:
• relationship karma becomes intensified,
• the native may repeatedly revisit partnership experiences,
• desires connected to union and interaction may become excessive,
• or life may involve multiple alliances, unconventional relationships, remarriage, or continuous engagement with others.
This principle also demonstrates an often-overlooked classical idea:
A strong planet is not always a “good” planet in the simplistic modern sense.
Strength primarily means the capacity to produce results powerfully. Whether those results manifest as stability, excess, attachment, sensuality, prominence, or complication depends upon:
• the planet involved,
• house ownership,
• dignity,
• aspects,
• association,
• varga support,
• and the overall ethical/spiritual orientation of the chart.
For example:
• A powerful Venusian 7th lord may increase romance, sensuality, or attraction.
• A strong Mars as the 7th lord may produce passionate and forceful relationship experiences.
• A retrograde Jupiter connected with the 7th may expand marital or relational involvement rather than restrict it.
The placement in either the ascendant or the 7th further intensifies this because these are direct axes of self and partner:
• 1st house = self,
• 7th house = others.
When a potent 7th lord occupies these positions, relationships become central to the native’s life direction and identity.
The deeper lesson from this dictum is that classical Jyotiṣa did not automatically equate:
• exaltation with virtue,
• strength with purity,
• or retrogression with weakness.
Instead, the sages often viewed strong planets as agents capable of producing their significations in abundance, and abundance itself can manifest as prosperity, fame, sensuality, multiplicity, attachment, or excess depending on context.
In Sarvartha Chintamani, the dictum that the native may have many spouses or relationships when the 7th lord is exalted, retrograde, or otherwise strong becomes much clearer when we connect it to the doctrine of Cheṣṭā Bala.
A retrograde planet is not treated as weak in classical Jyotiṣa. On the contrary, retrogression grants the planet enhanced Cheṣṭā Bala — motional strength — making it unusually forceful, active, and capable of strongly manifesting its agenda.
{Vakra Graha} = (High Cheṣṭā Bala}
The dictum groups three conditions together:
• exaltation,
• retrogression,
• and other forms of strength.
This itself reveals the classical mindset. The text is not treating retrogression as debility or obstruction; it is categorising it among states that empower the planet.
Now consider the logic carefully.
The 7th house signifies:
• spouse,
• sexual union,
• attraction,
• social interaction,
• agreements,
• worldly engagement,
• and the impulse toward “the other.”
If the lord of such a house becomes exceptionally powerful through:
• exaltation,
• strong dignity,
• varga support,
• directional strength,
• or retrograde-induced Cheṣṭā Bala,
Then the significations of the 7th house become intensified and highly active in the native’s life.
A retrograde 7th lord, therefore, does not necessarily deny relationships. Rather, because of increased Cheṣṭā Bala, it may:
• amplify relational desire,
• multiply experiences connected to partnership,
• create repeated involvements,
• increase attraction toward others,
• or make relationships a dominant karmic theme.
This is precisely why the dictum says “many spouses/partners” instead of “denial of marriage.”
The classical authors understood that:
Strength increases manifestation.
A powerful 7th lord means the realm of the 7th house becomes difficult to suppress. If such a planet is placed:
• in the ascendant (self-absorbed in partnership karma),
• or in the 7th itself (direct reinforcement of relationship matters),
Its effects become even more visible and central to life.
Retrogression adds another layer. Retrograde planets often behave:
• excessively,
• repeatedly,
• unconventionally,
• or beyond ordinary boundaries.
Thus, the retrograde 7th lord may not merely give one stable union; it may produce:
• multiple alliances,
• renewed relationships,
• repeated attachments,
• unconventional marital patterns,
• or an intensified preoccupation with partnership.
The dictum, therefore, serves as an important reminder that in classical Jyotiṣa:
• Retrograde does not automatically mean weak,
• strength does not automatically mean morally “good,”
• and exaltation or Cheṣṭā Bala can magnify worldly desires just as much as noble qualities.
A strong planet produces strong results according to its domain.
When the domain is the 7th house, strong relational karma naturally follows.