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Tarot is a system of cartomancy? popular in Western cultures. It takes the form of a fixed deck of 78 cards with symbolic meanings, and divination is performed by laying out the cards into a predetermined formation with its own positional meanings. Tarot cards are also used as a philosophical structure, as an aid to meditation, and as a card game. It is likely that the origins of the Tarot deck are in the card game Tarocchi?, a 14th century game originally from Italy.

The Tarot Deck

The 78-card deck is structured into two distinct sets, called the Minor Arcana and Major Arcana (arcana is the plural of the Latin word arcanum?, meaning "hidden truth" or "secret knowledge"). Alternate names are the Minor Trumps and Major Trumps, or simply the Minors and Trumps.

The Minor Arcana

The Minor Arcana consists of 56 cards, which are strongly related to the 52-card deck used in most modern card games. It is comprised of four suits, being Wands, Cups, Swords, and Pentacles, though there is a wide variety of different names used in different decks.

Each suit has 14 cards, being Ace (One), 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, Page, Knight, Queen, King. These last four are called the court cards, and often have different names in different decks.

Modern decks often have the card named and numbered, though many resemble early decks in that there are no titles or numbers on the cards. The numbered cards usually have the appropriate number of symbols for the suit depicted, and the court cards usually have the corresponding person depicted holding the symbol of their suit.

Modern decks will often have a symbolic scene depicted on the Minors, though this was never the case before the early 20th century when the Rider-Waite-Smith deck was published. Before this, the numbered cards of the Minors showed merely a geometric arrangement of the appropriate number of suit symbols.

The Major Arcana

The Major Arcana consists of 22 cards. Each bears a picture laden with symbolism, and each has a number (usually in Roman numerals) and a name, though not all decks have both, and some have only the picture. The earliest decks bore pictures only on the Majors (probably because a great many of the people using them were illiterate), and the order of cards is not standardised. However, one of the most common set of names and numbers is as follows:

The images on the Major Arcana are often very heavy with symbolism; in more occult decks, there is far more to the illustration than a mere depiction of the card title. The Major Arcana are usually regarded as relating to matters of higher purpose or deep significance, as opposed to the Minor Arcana which relate to the everyday world and matters of immediate significance.

Differences between decks

Symbolism

Divination

Origin and History

Additional Resources


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Edited November 26, 2001 1:02 pm by Bignose (diff)
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