Uttara Ashadha straddles Sagittarius and Capricorn, ruled by the Sun and presided over by the Vishvedevas — the "universal gods," the assembly of deities that together represent dharma in its largest sense. Where Purva Ashadha is the early invincible, Uttara Ashadha is the latter invincible — the victory that does not need to be argued for because it has, slowly, become undeniable.
Classical texts give this mansion an unusually noble tone. It is associated with leaders whose authority is moral rather than imposed, with reforms that take a generation but stick, with projects whose worth becomes visible only in retrospect. The Sun-Capricorn portion lends discipline and patience; the Sagittarius portion lends vision.
People with strong Uttara Ashadha placements often play the long game in ways that confuse contemporaries. They turn down faster ladders. They take roles whose importance only becomes clear later. There is integrity here that is sometimes mistaken for rigidity, but Uttara Ashadha rarely bends because it has thought carefully about why it stands.
The shadow is the same energy as self-importance: the belief that one's vision is the universal good when it is in fact a personal preference, the slow drift into being unable to be wrong.
Classical remedies honour the Vishvedevas through service to broad communities — not the affinity group, but the larger civic body. The Sun is honoured through morning practice and right action.
One mansion in one chart. Integrity is the gift; humility is the work.