Search This Blog

Consultation charges.

Consultation charges.

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Sahams (Tājika), Sphuṭas (Parāśari), and Arabic Parts (Lot System) belong to the same conceptual family

 Sahams (Tājika), Sphuṭas (Parāśari), and Arabic Parts (Lot System) belong to the same conceptual family. They are all derived sensitive points created by combining the longitudes of planets, ascendant, or other factors through mathematical formulas.

The difference is mainly one of tradition and application:

  • Sphuṭa = Sanskrit/Jyotiṣa terminology.
  • Saham = Tājika terminology.
  • Arabic Part/Lot = Hellenistic-Arabic terminology.

All are mathematically generated points intended to represent a concentrated manifestation of a specific life theme.

 

Why do Sahams Matter?

A planet signifies a broad domain.

For example:

  • Jupiter = children, wisdom, expansion, blessings.
  • Venus = marriage, pleasure, reproduction.
  • Mars = energy, action, conflict.

But life events do not occur merely because a planet signifies something.

A horoscope contains thousands of possible promises.

A Saham acts like a focal point, concentrating a particular promise into a specific zodiacal degree.

For example:

  • Putra Saham → progeny.
  • Vivaha Saham → marriage.
  • Raja Saham → authority.
  • Punya Saham → merit.

The Saham becomes a "trigger location" in the zodiac.

When dashas, transits, and annual charts activate that location, the corresponding theme becomes capable of manifesting.

 

Why are Sahams Similar to Sphuṭas?

Consider:

Bīja Sphuṭa

Sun + Jupiter + Venus

This combines:

  • vitality,
  • life principle,
  • reproductive capacity.

The resulting degree becomes a fertility indicator.

Likewise:

Punya Saham

constructed from certain planetary combinations.

The final degree is not a planet.

Yet it represents a concentrated karmic signature.

Thus:

Saham = Thematic Sphuṭa.

Sphuṭa = Computed sensitive point.

The underlying logic is identical.

 

Why Does Jupiter's Transit Create an Event?

This is a question of activation.

A natal promise is dormant.

Jupiter's transit acts as a catalyst.

Classics repeatedly observe that Jupiter is:

  • Jīva (life principle),
  • growth,
  • manifestation,
  • fructification.

A seed may exist in the ground.

Yet without water it remains dormant.

Jupiter functions like water.

When Jupiter transits:

  • a natal house,
  • its lord,
  • a Saham,
  • a Sphuṭa,
  • an Arudha,

the promise gains the capacity to manifest.

Hence Jupiter often corresponds with:

  • marriage,
  • childbirth,
  • promotions,
  • education,
  • acquisition.

Not because he creates the promise.

Because he enables the promise to fructify.

 

Why Does Saturn Create Events?

Saturn represents:

  • karma,
  • materialization,
  • inevitability,
  • time.

Jupiter may indicate:

"Now the fruit is ripe."

Saturn indicates:

"Now the karma must be experienced."

This is why many major life events occur under Saturn's transit.

Examples:

  • Marriage.
  • Employment.
  • Relocation.
  • Death of relatives.
  • Chronic disease.
  • Spiritual discipline.

Saturn is the agent of karmic delivery.

Jupiter may bless.

Saturn compels.

 

Why Does Jupiter + Saturn Together Often Produce Events?

This is one of the most overlooked principles in predictive astrology.

Jupiter = expansion and permission.

Saturn = manifestation and karma.

When both simultaneously influence:

  • a house,
  • its lord,
  • a Saham,
  • a Sphuṭa,
  • a sensitive point,

two requirements are satisfied:

Jupiter says:

"The fruit is ready."

Saturn says:

"The time has arrived."

Therefore, actual manifestation becomes highly probable.

Many experienced astrologers notice:

  • Marriage often occurs when both influence the 7th house system.
  • Childbirth when both influence the 5th house system.
  • Career events when both influence the 10th house system.

One planet often indicates possibility.

Both together often indicate actuality.

 

Why Can Jupiter Alone Produce Events?

Because Jupiter is the great fructifier.

If:

  • Dasha is supportive,
  • Natal promise exists,
  • Transit strength is adequate,

Jupiter alone may activate the event.

This is especially true for:

  • childbirth,
  • marriage,
  • education,
  • spiritual initiation,
  • wealth gains.

Jupiter's transit often acts as the final activating factor.

 

Why Do Saturn, Rahu and Ketu Delay or Deny?

This requires careful distinction.

Saturn

Saturn does not always deny.

More often Saturn says:

"Not yet."

Saturn governs time.

The promise exists.

But maturity is required.

Thus:

  • delayed marriage,
  • delayed children,
  • delayed career.

The event eventually occurs.

 

Rahu

Rahu distorts desire.

Rahu often creates:

  • obsession,
  • unconventional pathways,
  • confusion,
  • excessive craving.

The event may occur, but not in the expected form.

Examples:

  • unusual marriage,
  • unconventional childbirth circumstances,
  • foreign settlement rather than local success.

Rahu often modifies rather than completely denies.

 

Ketu

Ketu separates.

Ketu removes attachment.

When strongly influencing a Saham or Sphuṭa:

  • interest may diminish,
  • circumstances may fragment,
  • results become irregular.

The native may receive less satisfaction even if the event occurs.

 

Why Are Transits to Sahams Important?

A Saham is essentially a concentrated karmic coordinate.

Suppose:

Marriage Saham = 18° Libra.

When:

  • Jupiter transits 18° Libra,
  • Saturn aspects 18° Libra,
  • Dasha activates the 7th house,

the marriage theme becomes highly energized.

The Saham behaves like a hidden house cusp dedicated to one specific subject.

This is why Tājika gives tremendous importance to Sahams.

A Deeper Predictive Principle

The most reliable event manifestation usually requires three layers:

1. Natal Promise

The chart must contain the potential.

2. Dasha Activation

The period must release that karma.

3. Transit Trigger

Transits must energize the relevant point.

The transit of Jupiter, Saturn, Rahu, Ketu, or even Mars to:

  • a house,
  • its lord,
  • a Saham,
  • a Sphuṭa,
  • an Arudha,

acts as the final trigger.

In this framework, Sahams are not mystical objects. They are mathematical focal points of karmic themes, exactly as Arabic Parts are in Hellenistic and Arabic astrology, and exactly as many Sphuṭas are in classical Jyotiṣa. They provide a precise zodiacal coordinate where a particular promise is concentrated, allowing transits and dashas to be judged with much greater specificity than by houses and planets alone.

In classical Santāna (progeny) astrology, Bīja Sphuṭa represents the male reproductive principle—the "seed." Merely calculating the Bīja Sphuṭa is not enough; its sign (rāśi), navāṁśa, lord, aspects, and afflictions must all be examined.

Barren Signs and Bīja Sphuṭa

The traditionally recognized barren or infertile signs are:

  • Aries (partially barren according to some authorities)
  • Gemini
  • Leo
  • Virgo

Among these, Virgo and Gemini are often regarded as the strongest barren signs in progeny matters.

If Bīja Sphuṭa Falls in a Barren Sign

This does not automatically deny children. Rather, it may indicate:

  1. Reduced reproductive potency or lower fertility.
  2. Delay in conception.
  3. Need for stronger support from other progeny factors.
  4. Difficulty in producing viable conception despite desire for children.
  5. Greater dependence on favorable daśās and transits for manifestation.

The Navāṁśa is Crucial

Many classical authorities place enormous importance on the navāṁśa position of the Bīja Sphuṭa.

For a male chart:

  • Bīja Sphuṭa in an odd sign and odd navāṁśa is preferred.
  • Bīja Sphuṭa in a barren sign but occupying a fertile navāṁśa may considerably mitigate the defect.
  • Conversely, a Bīja Sphuṭa in a fertile sign but barren navāṁśa may still create difficulties.

Role of Jupiter

If:

  • Jupiter aspects the Bīja Sphuṭa,
  • the Bīja Sphuṭa lord is strong,
  • the 5th house and 5th lord are strong,

then the barren-sign placement may merely produce delay rather than denial.

This is why experienced astrologers rarely judge fertility from the Bīja Sphuṭa alone.

Severe Affliction

Concern becomes greater when:

  • Bīja Sphuṭa is in a barren sign,
  • its lord is weak, debilitated, combust, or afflicted,
  • Saturn, Rahu, or Ketu heavily afflict it,
  • the 5th house and 5th lord are similarly damaged,
  • Jupiter is weak.

Then classical texts may infer:

  • repeated conception difficulties,
  • miscarriages,
  • low sperm vitality,
  • or significant delay in obtaining progeny.

Traditional Rule of Synthesis

For progeny judgment, classical astrologers generally examine together:

  1. Bīja Sphuṭa (male factor)
  2. Kṣetra Sphuṭa (female factor)
  3. 5th house
  4. 5th lord
  5. Jupiter
  6. Saptāṁśa (D7)
  7. Relevant daśās and transits

A barren-sign Bīja Sphuṭa by itself is therefore best interpreted as a weakness or obstacle in the seed principle, not as an independent verdict of childlessness. Only when supported by multiple corroborating factors does it become a strong indication of serious fertility challenges.

 

In classical Jyotiṣa, Bīja Sphuṭa (Seed Point), Kṣetra Sphuṭa (Field Point), and Tithi Sphuṭa are important computed sensitive points used particularly in Santāna (progeny) analysis, conception studies, and Garbha-vicāra.

The exact formulas vary slightly among traditions, but the most commonly accepted Parāśari/Tājika-derived formulas are:

1. Bīja Sphuṭa (बीज स्फुट)

Represents the male reproductive potential (the "seed").

Formula


Bīja Sphuṭa =  Longitude of Sun + Longitude of Jupiter + Longitude of Venus

After addition:

  • If total exceeds 360°, subtract 360° repeatedly until the result falls within 0°–360°.

Symbolism

  • Sun → Vital force
  • Jupiter → Jīva (life principle)
  • Venus → Seminal power

Example

Sun = 120°

Jupiter = 80°

Venus = 150°

Total: 120 + 80 + 150 = 350°
Bīja Sphuṭa = 350°

 

2. Kṣetra Sphuṭa (क्षेत्र स्फुट)

Represents female reproductive capacity (the "field").

Formula


Kṣetra Sphuṭa = Longitude of Moon} + Longitude of Mars + Longitude of Jupiter

Normalize within 360°.

Symbolism

  • Moon → Fertility
  • Mars → Menstrual/reproductive function
  • Jupiter → Life principle

Example

Moon = 210°

Mars = 140°

Jupiter = 80°

Total: 
210+140+80=430°
430-360=70°
Kṣetra Sphuṭa = 70°

 

3. Tithi Sphuṭa (तिथि स्फुट)

Used in conception and pregnancy-related calculations.

Formula


{Tithi Sphuṭa}

Longitude of Moon-{ongitude of Sun

If negative, add 360°.

This gives the lunar elongation.

Alternative Computational Form

Example

Moon = 250°

Sun = 200°


250-200=50°

Tithi Sphuṭa = 50°

Tithi Number: 50 ÷12 = 4.16

Thus, the native is in the 5th tithi (fractional progression through the tithi).

 

Classical Judgement

For male fertility:

  • Bīja Sphuṭa should preferably fall in:
    • Odd signs
    • Odd Navāṁśas
    • Benefic influence

For female fertility:

  • Kṣetra Sphuṭa should preferably fall in:
    • Even signs
    • Even Navāṁśas
    • Benefic influence

If afflicted by:

  • Saturn,
  • Rahu,
  • Ketu,
  • debilitated malefics,

or placed in difficult houses, problems regarding conception or progeny may arise.

Important Variant

Many authorities, especially in South Indian traditions, also examine:

Bīja Sphuṭa Navāṁśa

and

Kṣetra Sphuṭa Navāṁśa

rather than relying only on the rāśi position. A strong rāśi placement but damaged Navāṁśa is considered insufficient for healthy progeny indications.

Thus, the most widely used formulas are:

Sphuṭa

Formula

Bīja Sphuṭa

Sun + Jupiter + Venus

Kṣetra Sphuṭa

Moon + Mars + Jupiter

Tithi Sphuṭa

Moon − Sun

(All planetary longitudes are taken in absolute zodiacal degrees from 0° Aries and normalized to 360°.)