Life Path Number (Mūlāṅka)मूलाङ्क(Life Path Number (Moolanka))
The Indian Vedic mūlāṅka (and Western Life Path Number); the root single-digit number 1–9 derived from the native's day or full date of birth.
Life Path Number (Mūlāṅka)
The Life Path Number — Mūlāṅka (मूलाङ्क) in Indian Vedic numerology — is the foundational single-digit number in numerological reading. Indian Vedic numerology and Western Pythagorean numerology both recognise the concept but compute it differently: Indian tradition derives the mūlāṅka from the native's date of birth (day portion) reduced to a single digit 1–9; Western tradition derives the Life Path Number from the full date-month-year reduced to a single digit (1–9) or retained as a master number (11, 22, 33) where applicable. The number maps, in Indian Vedic numerology, to a presiding graha whose classical significations the tradition reads into the native's life-orientation register.
Tradition and grounding
Indian Vedic numerology (aṅka-śāstra / aṅka-jyotiṣa) treats the mūlāṅka as the root-number register through which the native's life-orientation is read. Modern Indian numerology practitioners including Bhojraj Dwivedi, Sanjay B. Jumaani, and others active in the contemporary tradition have published extensively on the mūlāṅka framework; the tradition itself is a modern-synthetic development that draws on classical jyotiṣa graha-registers without being rooted in a single classical Sanskrit primary source equivalent to Brihat Parāśara Horā Śāstra. Western Life Path numerology traces to the Pythagorean tradition as modernly systematised and to 20th-century writers including Cheiro (Count Louis Hamon) and his successors.
Computation method
Indian Vedic mūlāṅka computation: take the native's day-of- birth (1–31), reduce to a single digit by summing its digits and repeating until one digit remains. Example: 23rd day → 2+3 = 5; 28th day → 2+8 = 10 → 1+0 = 1. Single-digit days (1–9) are the mūlāṅka directly. Birth days 10–31 always reduce to 1–9 in one or two reduction steps.
Western Pythagorean Life Path computation: take the full date (DD + MM + YYYY), sum all digits, reduce to a single digit — except when the intermediate sum reaches 11, 22, or 33, which are classically retained as master numbers without further reduction. Example: 23 October 1985 → 2+3 + 1+0 + 1+9+8+5 = 29 → 2+9 = 11 (master retained) or 1+1 = 2 (reduced) depending on the school.
Tradition-specific interpretation register
In Indian Vedic numerology, each mūlāṅka 1–9 maps to a presiding graha: 1 = Sūrya, 2 = Chandra, 3 = Bṛhaspati, 4 = Rāhu, 5 = Budha, 6 = Śukra, 7 = Ketu, 8 = Śani, 9 = Mangala. The tradition reads the graha's classical significations into the native's life-orientation register: mūlāṅka 1 natives carry the Sūrya-register (authority, identity-register); mūlāṅka 8 natives carry the Śani-register (endurance, long-duration responsibility); and so on. In Western Pythagorean tradition, the nine numbers carry distinct archetypal registers (1: leadership; 2: partnership; 3: creative expression; 4: structure; 5: freedom; 6: nurture; 7: introspection; 8: material mastery; 9: completion) that developed from late-19th and 20th- century Western-tradition synthesis. The tradition reports these registers; the reader's life-circumstances and decisions are the reader's.
Related Concepts
- Sūrya — graha mapped to mūlāṅka 1 in Indian Vedic numerology
- Chandra — graha mapped to mūlāṅka 2
- Brihaspati — graha mapped to mūlāṅka 3
- Rahu — graha mapped to mūlāṅka 4
- Budha — graha mapped to mūlāṅka 5
- Shukra — graha mapped to mūlāṅka 6
- Ketu — graha mapped to mūlāṅka 7
- Shani — graha mapped to mūlāṅka 8
- Mangala — graha mapped to mūlāṅka 9
- Destiny Number — bhāgyāṅka, the full-date register distinct from mūlāṅka
- Birthday Number — the day-of-birth register overlapping with mūlāṅka in Indian tradition
- Master Numbers — Western-tradition 11/22/33 retention rule
- Pythagorean Numerology — the Western tradition's foundational system
Tradition-reported practices
Indian Vedic numerology practitioners often name specific days of the week, colours, and gemstones the tradition classically associates with each mūlāṅka (via the graha-correspondence). Name-spelling adjustments are sometimes suggested by practitioners to align the nāmāṅka (name number) with the mūlāṅka or bhāgyāṅka registers — the tradition names these practices without this page prescribing them. The reader's decisions about name-spelling, date-selection, or gemstone-use are the reader's.
