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History of the Tarot

History of Tarot 1 More Tarot Cards

Then it seems the next to have a large influence on the cards mystical and spiritual meaning was Alphonse Louis Constant, a Rosicrucian and French Priest who lived from 1810 to 1875. He believed the Tarot was the key to the Bible, and to the Jewish Kabbalah, and all other ancient spiritual writings. He saw a link with the 22 cards of the Major Arcana to the letters of the Hebrew alphabet. He drew parallels between Tarot suits and the four letters of the Tetragrammaton (The mystic number four, which was often symbolized to represent God, whose name was too Holy to pronounce and so was expressed by four letters among some ancient nations; Hebrew, usually transliterated as YHWH (Yahweh) or JHVH (Jehovah), Greek qeo`s, Latin deus, etc.)

Late nineteenth-century Parisian author Jean Baptiste Pitois believed that the Major Arcana cards represent hieroglyphic paintings from ancient Egyptian galleries. He also made many parallels between the Tarot and Kabalistic astrology.

Gerard Encausse, a French doctor, philosopher, and Theosophist, was another believer in the Tarot's Egyptian sources. He lived from 1865-1916 and wrote the book The Tarot of the Bohemians.

The widely held belief that the Tarot represented ancient initiation rites, taken from ancient inscriptions in secret chambers below the Pyramids, is due mostly from his writings on the subject. He believed the priests put the designs on materials when the pyramids were at risk and later they became cards. He also furthered the link between Tarot and numerology (Pythagoras).

The greatest changes to the Tarot came from members of The Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. MacGregor (Samuel Liddell) Mathers was the leader of the Order founded in 1886. He studied Jewish, Egyptian, Christian, and alchemical mysticism. He wrote a great deal about the Tarot. A. E. Waite, a Christian mystic, also a member of The Order who broke away and founded his own mystery school had the most profound influence on the Tarot. He published his own revised deck in 1909. The deck was drawn by artist Pamela Coleman Smith.

The major change was that the minor arcana no longer resembled playing cards but were more like the trumps: each card of the minor arcana were now also rich with pictures and symbolism. Each card gives the viewer an immediate psychological impact as though it tells a story.

It grew enormously popular, and many consider it the standard deck to this day. It is often called the Rider-Waite deck, because Rider was the original publisher. Another member of the Golden Dawn, Aleister Crowley also developed his own deck called the Thoth Tarot (named for the Egyptian god of magic) and was painted by Lady Frieda Harris in the 1940s. The artwork is abstract and the deck itself is rather intense psychologically.

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Aleister Crowley's interpretations of the cards also differ somewhat from Waite's, but they are both based in the Hermetic Kabbalah and both are in use today, however the Rider-Waite deck is the most popular. The current revival began with the trend in the late 1960's and early 1970's when there was a turn to holistic health alternatives, and to alternative religion and alternatives to traditional counseling.

A new interest and popularity for the tarot began. Many now consult the tarot as it has become part of our culture of the folk counselors of our world today. Many new decks have been created as adaptations of the Waite-Smith or Crowley-Harris decks. Reinvented to reflect the artist's creativity and philosophy. One can find decks with many themes and meanings from Fairy Decks to Wicca decks, feminist decks, Native American decks, and so on. Some are more for those who collect games and decks of cards and not for the serious student or reader.

The history of the tarot is a reflection of the philosophical and religious currents that flow to us through the story of European culture. It reaches back in time to ancient Gnosticism, through the medieval practices of alchemy and astrology, through the fascination with the occult in recent centuries, and on into our modern "new age" movement.

The cards and their meanings have been sifted through many different subcultures and much of the symbolism has been changed by each culture and movement. The Hermit trump card was once Time, an old man with an hourglass. Strength used to depict a man swinging a club at a crouching lion. The Star once featured a woman near a precipice clutching with her left hand at an eight-pointed star. Most likely these early images evolved from still earlier ones.

We can study the Tarot's current symbolism and we have many clues about its original form, but the exact form itself is probably lost to us. We may never know what the first Tarot cards looked like. Nor do we know with certainty who created them or where they came from.

Frustrated Tarot experts have inspired countless origin theories. Perhaps this mystery is what makes them so interesting to us. Regardless of their original use, as a clever card game or a clever way to impart mystical teachings in the 1300's in Europe it is the wisdom and guidance we gleam from their images today that may be the most intriguing.

In the hands of an adept, they tell your story and portray your journey.

For further research read Stuart Kaplan, The Encyclopedia of Tarot which contains superb illustrations of the oldest decks that still survive.

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