History
The
Centre for Psychological Astrology began unofficially in
1980 as a sporadic series of classes and seminars offered
by Liz Greene and Howard Sasportas, covering all aspects
of astrology from beginners' courses to more advanced one-day
seminars. In 1981 additional evening courses and seminars
by other tutors were interspersed with those of Liz and
Howard to increase the variety of material offered to students,
and Juliet Sharman-Burke and Warren Kenton began contributing
their expertise in Tarot and Kabbalah. It then seemed appropriate
to take what was previously simply a random collection
of astrology classes and put them under a single umbrella
so in 1982 the "prototype"
of the CPA - the Centre for Transpersonal Astrology - was
born, with the administrative work handled by Richard Aisbitt,
himself a practising astrologer.
In 1983 the name was changed to the Centre for Psychological
Astrology, because a wide variety of psychological approaches
was incorporated into the seminars, ranging from transpersonal
psychology to the work of Jung, Freud and Klein. The Diploma
Course was eventually created, with additional tutors joining
the staff. The Centre continued to develop and consolidate
its programme despite the tragic death of Howard in 1992,
when Charles Harvey became co-director with Liz Greene. Richard
Aisbitt continued to manage the administration until 1994,
when the burden of increasing ill health forced him to restrict
his contribution to beginners' and intermediate classes. At
this time Juliet Sharman-Burke took over the administration
for the Centre. Richard himself sadly died in 1996.
At the beginning of 2000, Charles Harvey tragically died of
cancer, leaving Liz Greene as sole director. In the new Millennium,
the CPA continues to develop along both familiar and innovative
lines, always maintaining the high standards reflected in
the fine work of its former co-directors.