Tarot Cards: Powerful Tools, or Just a Game

Tarot Cards: Powerful Tools, or Just a Game

Tarot cards evoke strange reactions in some people.

Tarot: Is it a tool of the devil, or just a pack of cards? WHAT IS TAROT ANYWAY?

Tarot originated around the year 1440 in Italy. The original cards were hand- painted and used in the courts of the nobility. They were a rare and exclusive passtime of the rich, and nothing more than a game.

There are many legends about the origins of these cards and they have been linked to India, the Jewish Kabbala, Egypt, or even ancient China. Historically there is no evidence for these stories.

Around the year 1500 these cards became known as tarocchi in order to differentiate them from ordinary trumps, or what we know as playing cards. The French form of this word is ‘Tarot’.

Folklore says that the gypsies, specifically Romanies, brought Tarot to Europe. This idea was actually started by writers from the mid 19th Century. Gypsies only started using tarot cards during the twentieth century. Prior to this they told fortunes by reading palms and interpreting ordinary playing cards.

Ordinary playing cards came to Europe from Muslim Spain around 50 years before Tarot cards arrived. These cards had four suits with kings and pages and the Tarot added The Fool and the Queens to this. These cards were originally used to play a game similar to bridge.

Around 1781 occult writers like Comte de Mellet started to mention Tarot as a divinatory tool. Interest in the cards as a system grew rapidly and they became an integral part of occult philosophy. They do infact tell a story which goes from the ‘Fool’ to enlightenment.

In the 21st century these cards are still used for prediction and interpretation of events and situations. There are some who consider the whole idea of prediction to be ridiculous and others who fear the power of the Tarot and it’s advocates. They have been called ‘tools of the devil’ and are said by some to be banned by the Christian churches. This is not true. The ban imposed by the church was solely on the ‘Pope’ and ‘Popess’ cards of the old decks. These were replaced by more acceptable images.

The cards themselves hold no power as they are merely cards which originated as part of a game. The real power comes from the reader’s ability to interpret the cards and relate them to situations. Those individuals who have a gift for this could do equally well using baseball cards!

In the hands of a sensitive, receptive reader, Tarot cards can work. They operate like a very basic map of a person’s mind and seem to work as a tool that facilitates access to whatever is really going on inside. It’s a little like looking at a rather distorted mirror. Images come and go and are far from clear. A little imagination can soon fill the gaps and make perfect sense.

Swiss psychologist Carl Jung studied the symbols within the Tarot and came up with the idea of universal symbols that can be used to map the human mind. He developed the idea that the unconscious mind of an individual is made up of the personal unconscious and a collective unconscious. This, he reasoned, partly explained the success of symbollic systems like the Tarot.

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Glynis Smy, posted this comment on Nov 20th, 2009

I find the subject fascinating, thanks for sharing your knowledge on the subject.
I think your previous commenter read the old version of this article, I like that you have updated and revamped it. It is always wise to recheck our articles and add new up to date info.

shanthu, posted this comment on Nov 21st, 2009

excellant

Will, posted this comment on Dec 1st, 2009

i think tarot is a kind of esoteric map as well as a foretelling-tool. because of the mentioned various influences, tarot gives a wide view over a eclectic world.

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