Tarot
Tarot
Tarot
divinatory and esoteric/occult purposes. For other uses, see Tarot (disambiguation).
Not to be confused with taro.
Kabbalah but there is no documented evidence of such origins or of the usage of tarot
for divination before the 18th century.[1]
Contents
[hide]
1 Etymology
2 History
o 2.1 Early decks
3 Tarot, tarock and tarocchi games
4 Divinatory, esoteric, and occult tarot
5 Varieties
o 5.1 French suited tarots
o 5.2 Non-occult Italian-suited tarot decks
o 5.3 Occult tarot decks
5.3.1 Deck-specific symbolism
5.3.1.1 Rider-Waite-Smith deck
5.3.1.2 Crowley-Harris Thoth deck
5.3.1.3 Hermetic Tarot
6 See also
7 References
8 External links
9 Further reading
Etymology[edit]
The English and French word tarot derives from the Italian tarocchi, which has no
known origin or etymology[citation needed]. The singular term is tarocco, commonly known
today as a term for a orange in Italian. When it spread, the word was changed to tarot in
French and Tarock in German. There are many theories to the origin of the word, many
with no connection to the occult.[3] One theory relates the name "tarot" to the Taro River
in northern Italy, near Parma; the game seems to have originated in northern Italy, in
Milan or Bologna.[4] Other writers believe it comes from the Arabic word turuq,
which means 'ways'.[5] Alternatively, it may be from the Arabic taraka, 'to leave,
abandon, omit, leave behind'[6]
History[edit]
Playing cards first entered Europe in the late 14th century, probably from Mamluk
Egypt, with suits very similar to the tarot suits of Swords, Staves, Cups and Coins (also
known as disks, and pentacles) and those still used in traditional Italian, Spanish and
Portuguese decks.[7]
The first known documented tarot cards were created between 1430 and 1450 in Milan,
Ferrara and Bologna in northern Italy when additional trump cards with allegorical
illustrations were added to the common four-suit pack. These new decks were originally
called carte da trionfi, triumph cards, and the additional cards known simply as trionfi,
which became "trumps" in English. The first literary evidence of the existence of carte
da trionfi is a written statement in the court records in Florence, in 1440. The oldest
surviving tarot cards are from fifteen fragmented decks painted in the mid 15th century
for the Visconti-Sforza family, the rulers of Milan.[8]
Early decks[edit]
Le Bateleur: The Juggler from the Jean Dodal Tarot of Marseilles. This card is often
named The Magician in modern English language tarots
Picture-card packs are first mentioned by Martiano da Tortona probably between 1418
and 1425, since the painter he mentions, Michelino da Besozzo, returned to Milan in
1418, while Martiano himself died in 1425. He describes a deck with 16 picture cards
with images of the Greek gods and suits depicting four kinds of birds, not the common
suits. However the 16 cards were obviously regarded as "trumps" as, about 25 years
later, Jacopo Antonio Marcello called them a ludus triumphorum, or "game of
trumps".[9]
Special motifs on cards added to regular packs show philosophical, social, poetical,
astronomical, and heraldic ideas, Roman/Greek/Babylonian heroes, as in the case of the
Sola-Busca-Tarocchi (1491)[1] and the Boiardo Tarocchi poem, written at an unknown
date between 1461 and 1494.[10]
Two playing card decks from Milan (the Brera-Brambilla and Cary-Yale-Tarocchi)
extant, but fragmentarywere made circa 1440. Three documents dating from 1
January 1441 to July 1442, use the term trionfi. The document from January 1441 is
regarded as an unreliable reference; however, the same painter, Sagramoro, was
commissioned by the same patron, Leonello d'Este, as in the February 1442 document.
The game seemed to gain in importance in the year 1450, a Jubilee year in Italy, which
saw many festivities and the movement of many pilgrims.
Three mid-15th century sets were made for members of the Visconti family.[11] The first
deck, and probably the prototype, is called the Cary-Yale Tarot (or Visconti-Modrone
Tarot) and was created between 1442 and 1447 by an anonymous painter for Filippo
Maria Visconti.[11] The cards (only 67) are today in the Cary collection of the Beinecke
Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University, in the U.S. state of
Connecticut.[12] The most famous was painted in the mid-15th century, to celebrate
Francesco Sforza and his wife Bianca Maria Visconti, daughter of the duke Filippo
Maria. Probably, these cards were painted by Bonifacio Bembo or Francesco Zavattari
between 1451 and 1453.[11] Of the original cards, 35 are in The Morgan Library &
Museum, 26 are at the Accademia Carrara, thirteen are at the Casa Colleoni,[11] and four:
The Devil, The Tower, Money's Horse (The Chariot), and the 3 of Spades, are lost or
were never made. This "Visconti-Sforza" deck, which has been widely reproduced,
reflects conventional iconography of the time to a significant degree.[13]
Hand-painted tarot cards remained a privilege of the upper classes and, although a
single sermon by a Dominican preacher inveighing against the evil inherent in cards
(mostly centered around their use in gambling) can be traced to the 14th century,[14] no
routine condemnations of tarot were found during its early history.[1]
Because the earliest tarot cards were hand-painted, the number of the decks produced is
thought to have been rather small, and it was only after the invention of the printing
press that mass production of cards became possible. Decks survive from this era from
various cities in France, and the most popular pattern of these early printed decks is
called the Tarot de Marseille[15] such as the Jean Dodal Tarot (Lyon) and the Jean Noblet
Tarot (Paris) for example.
higher. The French tarot game is the most popular in its native country and regional
tarot gamesoften known as tarock, tarok, or tarokkare widely played in central
Europe.
Varieties[edit]
The Tarocco Piemontese consists of the four suits of swords, batons, cups and
coins, each headed by a king, queen, cavalier and jack, followed by numerals 10
down to 1. The trumps rank as follows: The Angel (20although it only bears
the second-highest number, it is nonetheless the highest), the World (21), the
Sun (19), the Moon (18), the Star (17), the Tower (16), the Devil (15),
Temperance (14), Death (13), the Hanged Man (12), Justice (11), the Wheel of
Fortune (10), the Hermit (9), Strength (8), the Chariot (7), the Lovers (6), the
Pope (5), the Emperor (4), the Empress (3), the Popess (2) and the Bagatto (1).
There is also the Fool (Matto).
The Tarot de Besanon (extinct) and the Swiss 1JJ Tarot are similar, but are
of a different graphical design, and replaces the Pope with Jupiter, the Popess
with Juno, and the Angel with the Judgement. The trumps rank in numerical
order and the Tower is known as the House of God.
The Tarocco Bolognese omits numeral cards two to five in plain suits, leaving it
with 62 cards, and has somewhat different trumps, not all of which are
numbered and four of which are equal in rank. It has a different graphical
design.
The Tarocco Siciliano changes some of the trumps, and replaces the 21 with a
card labeled Miseria (destitution). It omits the Two and Three of coins, and
numerals one to four in batons, swords and cups: it thus has 64 cards. The cards
are quite small and, again, of a different graphical design.[9]
The terms "major arcana" and "minor arcana" were first used by Jean-Baptiste Pitois
(also known as Paul Christian) and are never used in relation to Tarot card games.
Tarot is often used in conjunction with the study of the Hermetic Qabalah.[22] In these
decks all the cards are illustrated in accordance with Kabbalistic principles, most being
under the influence of the Rider-Waite-Smith deck and bearing illustrated scenes on all
the suit cards. The images on the "Rider-Waite" deck were drawn by artist Pamela
Colman Smith, to the instructions of mystic and occultist Arthur Edward Waite, and
were originally published by the Rider Company in 1910. This deck is considered a
simple, user friendly one but nevertheless its imagery, especially in the Major Arcana, is
complex and replete with esoteric symbolism. The subjects of the Major Arcana are
based on those of the earliest decks, but have been significantly modified to reflect
Waite and Smith's view of tarot. An important difference from Marseilles style decks is
that Smith drew scenes with esoteric meanings on the suit cards. However the RiderWaite wasn't the first deck to include completely illustrated suit cards. The first to do so
was the 15th century Sola-Busca deck.[23]
Older decks such as the Visconti-Sforza and Marseilles are less detailed than modern
esoteric decks. A Marseilles type deck is usually distinguished by having repetitive
motifs on the pip cards, similar to Italian or Spanish playing cards, as opposed to the
full scenes found on "Rider-Waite" style decks. These more simply illustrated
"Marseilles" style decks are also used esoterically, for divination, and for game play,
though the French card game of tarot is now generally played using a relatively modern
19th century design of German origin. Such playing tarot decks generally have twenty
one trump cards with genre scenes from 19th century life, a Fool, and have court and
pip cards that closely resemble today's French playing cards.
The Marseilles style tarot decks generally feature numbered minor arcana cards that
look very much like the pip cards of modern playing card decks. The Marseilles'
numbered minor arcana cards do not have scenes depicted on them; rather, they sport a
geometric arrangement of the number of suit symbols (e.g., swords, rods/wands, cups,
coins/pentacles) corresponding to the number of the card (accompanied by botanical
and other non-scenic flourishes), while the court cards are often illustrated with flat,
two-dimensional drawings.
A widely used modernist esoteric tarot deck is Aleister Crowley's Thoth Tarot (Thoth
pronounced /tot/ or //). Crowley, at the height of a lifetime's work dedicated to
occultism, engaged the artist Lady Frieda Harris to paint the cards for the deck
according to his specifications. His system of tarot correspondences, published in The
Book of Thoth and Liber 777, are an evolution and expansion upon that which he
learned in the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.[24] Crowley's interpretation has been
criticised by some other students of the Golden Dawn system for following the 'lefthand path', identified with Satanism.
In contrast to the Thoth deck's colorfulness, the illustrations on Paul Foster Case's
B.O.T.A. Tarot deck are black line drawings on white cards; this is an unlaminated deck
intended to be colored by its owner.
Other esoteric decks include the hermetic Golden Dawn Tarot, which claims to be based
on a deck by S.L. MacGregor Mathers.
The variety of decks presently available is almost endless, and grows yearly. For
instance, cat-lovers may have the Tarot of the Cat People, a deck replete with cats in
every picture. The Tarot of the Witches and the Aquarian Tarot retain the conventional
cards with varying designs. The Tree of Life Tarot's cards are stark symbolic catalogs;
and The Alchemical Tarot, created by Robert M. Place, combines traditional alchemical
symbols with tarot images.
These contemporary divination decks change the cards to varying degrees. For example,
the Motherpeace Tarot is notable for its circular cards and feminist angle where the
male characters have been replaced by females. The Tarot of Baseball has suits of bats,
mitts, balls, and bases; "coaches" and "MVPs" instead of Queens and Kings; and major
arcana cards such as "The Catcher", "The Rule Book", and "Batting a Thousand". In the
Silicon Valley Tarot, major arcana cards include The Hacker, Flame War, The Layoff
and The Garage; the suits are Networks, Cubicles, Disks and Hosts; the court cards
CEO, Salesman, Marketeer and New Hire. Another tarot in recent years has been the
Robin Wood Tarot. This deck retains the Rider-Waite theme while adding some very
soft and colorful Pagan symbolism. As with other decks, the cards are available with a
companion book written