The Constitution
The throne and the vault in one seat. 紫微, the Emperor, and 天府, the storehouse, sit together — a conjunction that happens only in 寅 or 申. The sovereign star and the storehouse star joined make authority that also accumulates, leadership that also keeps and consolidates: a classical image of standing and wealth held together. The chart-owner tends to carry both command and a steady reserve.
Most charts confer one or the other — the authority that leads but does not hold, or the storehouse that accumulates but does not command. Here the two are fused. The emperor governs; the treasury keeps; and the chart-owner holds both the seat of decision and the vault of reserves at once.
The configuration wants the support stars — 左辅, 右弼, 天魁, 天钺 — to reach it, completing a real court around a real vault. Its weakness is 地空 or 地劫 in the palace, which hollows both the throne and the storehouse at once. The reading is the palace it occupies, its support, and whether the void hollows it.
What You See That Others Don't
You see that command and consolidation belong together. Where others lead without keeping or keep without leading, you sense that real authority should also accumulate — that a sovereign worth the name governs and holds a reserve both. The reading is constitutional. Throne and vault are fused in you, so you think in terms of authority that is also backed by substance.
You also carry a steadiness uncommon in leaders. The storehouse beneath the throne gives your command a reserve, so you do not lead from precarity but from a held position. That combination of authority and accumulation is the configuration's signature — power with a vault behind it.
What Most People Get Wrong About You
They read your command as wanting control, your reserve as guardedness, the combination as a person who hoards both power and wealth. The reading meets the throne and the vault and assumes acquisitiveness.
紫府同宫 is not someone simply gathering power and money. It is someone whose chart fuses authority with reserve — command that is steadied by accumulation, leadership that also keeps and consolidates. The acquisitiveness the world reads is the natural shape of throne-and-vault together: a sovereign who holds substance. You are not hoarding; you are leading from a held position, which is what makes the command stable. The weakness is only the void in the seat, which hollows both at once — a throne and a treasury that look full and are empty.
The Pattern You Carry
The configuration runs when 紫微 and 天府 sit together in 寅 or 申 with the support stars reaching them — a real court around a real vault, authority and reserve both backed. Then the chart reads toward command that consolidates: leadership steadied by accumulation, standing and wealth held together.
The trap is 地空 or 地劫 in the palace, which hollows the throne and the storehouse at once — the authority and the reserve both emptied, command and substance that look present and are not. Without the support stars, the conjunction also runs thinner, a sovereign-and-vault without the court to make it operative. The work is to gather the support and guard against the void, so the throne and the treasury are both genuinely full.
Where This Shows Up
In work, you belong in leadership that also builds and keeps — roles where you both command and consolidate, where authority is backed by real reserves and your steadiness comes from a held position. You do well where leading and accumulating go together, and the configuration tends to mark people who hold both standing and substance, command and a vault.
In relationships, you bring authority and provision together — a steadying presence that both leads and sustains, command backed by the capacity to keep and provide. The same fusion can read as controlling or guarded. The configuration's work is to let the throne serve and the vault give — to use the command in care of others and the reserve in generosity, so the authority-and-accumulation becomes a sheltering strength rather than a guarded one.
