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Herstory of Women's Tarot

The history of Tarot cards that has been pieced together in recent decades
contradicts the mysterious tales of ancient Egyptians, scholarly conclaves in
Fez, or Gypsies, showing instead an Italian Renaissance development out of
the pack of ordinary playing cards that had been introduced to Europe several
decades earlier, and a probable origin date of 1420-1440. This makes Tarot's
historical origins not a surviving fragment of matriarchal wisdom, but an
expression of a patriarchal age. The earliest decks are fully consistent with the
themes present at the transition from the medieval to the renaissance
worldview.
There is a great deal of variation among the fragments of the earliest decks
that have survived. During the next century or so, the number, order and
design of the trumps in the Tarot coalesced into the "Marseilles" standard.
This period is not extremely well represented by surviving cards.
According to the documentary evidence, Tarot was not adopted by occultists
until the 18th century, 350 years after its first appearance. Where were women
at this point? In the late 18th century and early 19th century, there are many
records found in the police archives of women as well as men being arrested
for fortune-telling with cards. Mlle Le Normand, sibyl/pythonisse and the
supposed confidante of Empress Josephine, may be the most famous fortuneteller of all time. Le Normand used a wide variety of divination tools,
including different types of fortune-telling cards. Tarot cards were part of the
mix, but not the sole tool.
In the wake of the vogue for divination, a Frenchman named Etteilla launched
a new wave of "rectification". It was at this point that Tarot designs were
modified to reflect a new Egyptian origin myth, and to be used specifically for
divinatory purposes. The Etteilla deck begins the trend of Egyptianized
Tarots.
The next series of revisions corresponded with the "esoteric correspondence
filing cabinet" notion of Tarot. There were two dominant forms of this
understanding - an early French tradition, and a later Golden Dawn tradition.
The Golden Dawn tradition contributes the framework embedded in the RiderWaite-Smith (RWS), Crowley-Harris "Thoth", and Case-Burns-Parke
"BOTA" decks. In all three of these decks, the designer and writer was a man,
and the artist who executed the designs was a woman (Pamela Colman-Smith,
Lady Frieda Harris and Jessie Burns Parke respectively).
Now we get to the 1960's and 1970's when deck creation began to explode in a
multiplicity of forms. This is when the "Fool's Journey" idea began to take off,

thanks to the embrace of Joseph Campbell's The Hero with a Thousand


Faces (1949). Together with popular understandings of Jungian psychology,
the Fool's Journey and personal analysis through Tarot eventually overshadow
the "esoteric filing cabinet" concept in the quantity of books published about
the Tarot. Despite its relative youth, judging from those books, the RWS
comes to be seen as the "traditional" tarot, rather than the Marseilles.
Tarot as a keystone of the Women's Spirituality movement branches off in a
different direction from the mainstream in the mid-1970's.

1960's

1970's

1960 - Eden Gray, The Tarot Revealed - Her books were the
first texts found by most people who got into tarot during the
1960's and early 1970's, and featured the RWS. She published A
Complete Guide to the Tarot in 1970 and Mastering the Tarot in
1971.
1965 - Helen Diner, Mothers and Amazons (Julian Press Inc.)
1966 - Catherine Perry Hargrave, A History of Playing Cards
1966 - Moakley, Gertrude, The Tarot Cards Painted by
Bonifacio Bembo
1967 - James Mellaart, Catal Huyuk (Thames & Hudson)
1968 - WITCH founded
1969 - Judy Chicago, The Dinner Party - contained a timeline
that traced Goddess culture from its prehistoric roots to the
present [The Dinner Party: A Symbol of Our Heritage. Anchor
Press/Doubleday, 1979]
1970 - Carlos Castaneda, The Teachings of Don Juan: A Yaqui
Way of Knowledge (Penguin Books)
1971 - Elizabeth Gould Davis, The First Sex (G.P. Putnam &
Sons)
1971 - Susan B Anthony coven founded
1972 - Hyemeyhosts Storm, Seven Arrows (Ballantine Books)
1974 - Marija Gimbutas, The Gods and Goddesses of Old
Europe, 7000-30000 BC, Myths, Legends, and Cult
Images (Thames & Hudson)
1976 - Sally Gearhart and Susan Rennie, A Feminist
Tarot (Pandora's Box) - This book gave feminist interpretations
of the RWS deck.
1976 - Womanspirit Circle Lillith, The Matriarchal
Tarot conceived. This spawned at least three sister decks Daughters of the Moon, Book of Aradia and Shekhinah's Tarot.
1976 - Merlin Stone, When God Was A
Woman (Harvest/Harcourt Brace Jovanovich)
1976 - Anne Kent Rush, Moon, Moon (Moon Books/Random
House)
1977 - Frank Waters, Book of the Hopi (Penguin Books)
1978 - Stuart Kaplan, The Encyclopedia of Tarot, Volume I
1978 - Billie Potts, A New Woman's Tarot (Elf and Dragons

1980's

Press)
1978-9 - Vicki Noble and Karen Vogel, Motherpeace images
created
1979 - Billie Potts, River Lightwomoon, Susun Weed, and
many artists, The Amazon Tarot deck published (Elf and
Dragons Press)
1979-1980 - Zsuzsunna Budapest. The Holy Book of Women's
Mysteries, Vol. I and II. (Susan B. Anthony Coven No. 1)
1979 - Starhawk. The Spiral Dance: A Rebirth of the Ancient
Religion of he Great Goddess: Rituals, Innovations, Exercises,
Magic (Harper & Row Publishers)
1979 - Merlin Stone, Ancient Mirrors of Womanhood, Vol I and
II (New Sybilline Press)
1980 - Michael Dummett, The Game of Tarot
1980 - Rachel Pollack, Seventy-Eight Degrees of Freedom: A
Book of the Tarot (Aquarian Press)
1980 - Sun Bear and Wabun, The Medicine Wheel: Earth
Astrology (Prentice-Hall Inc.)
1980? - Lynn Andrews, Medicine Woman
1981 - Patricia Monaghan. The Book of Goddesses and
Heroines (E.P. Dutton)
1981 - Vicki Noble and Karen Vogel, The Motherpeace
Round Tarot Deck (first edition self-published, now published
by US Games)
1981 - Gail Fairfield, Choice Centered Tarot (Ramp Creek
Publishing Inc.)
1982 - Susun Weed, Transparent Tarot (self-published
pamphlet)
1983 - Susun Weed, Goddesses of the Tarot (self-published
pamphlet)
1983 - Marion Zimmer Bradley, The Mists of Avalon
1983 - Barbara G. Walker, The Woman's Encyclopedia of Myths
and Secrets (Harper & Row Publishers)
1983 - Vicki Noble, Motherpeace: A Way to the Goddess
Through Myth Art and Tarot (Harper & Row Publishers)
1984 - Ffiona Morgan and 14 other artists, Daughters of the
Moon deck and book published (Daughters of the Moon) Illustrating Artists: Kate Taylor, Ffiona Morgan, Lily Hill, Max
Dashu, Jean Chavez, Linden Berk, Ellen Fishburn, Merridy
Volz, Jean Van Slyke, Susan Stacey, Terra Candage, Jennifer
Weston, Rainbow, Diane Nelson. Original creation, "A
Matriarchal Tarot" by Ffiona Morgan and Shekhinah
Mountainwater
1984 - Billie Potts and River Lightwomoon and 20 other
artists, The New Amazon Tarot deck published (Hecuba's
Daughter, Inc.)
1984 - Djinni Van Slyke, Book of Aradia deck published
(Aradia Press) (Tarot Passages, Aisling Magazine)

1990's

1984 - Shekhinah Mountainwater, Instructions for Using the


Book of Aradia Tarot (Aradia Press)
1984 - Ruth West, Thea's Tarot deck published
(Reviewed: Mystic Eye, Tarot Passages, Tarot Passages)
1984 - Mary K. Greer, Tarot For Your Self: A Workbook for
Personal Transformation
1984 - Barbara G. Walker, The Secrets of the Tarot: Origins,
History and Symbolism (Harper & Row Publishers)
1986 - Jesse Cougar, A Poet's Tarot deck published (Tough
Dove Book) (Reviewed: Wicce, Tarot Passages, C. J. Rose)
1986 - Barbara Walker, Barbara Walker Tarot deck published
(US Games)
1986 - Robert O'Neill, Tarot Symbolism
1986 - Worlds Fair in Vancouver "Spirit Lodge" sponsored by
General Motors
1986 - Vicki Noble and Jonathon Tenney, The Motherpeace
Tarot Playbook, (Wingbow Press)
1987 - Carol Bridges, The Medicine Woman Tarot deck
published (Earth Nation, published in color by US Games since
1989).
1987 - Carol Bridges, The Medicine Woman Inner Guidebook:
A Woman's Guide to Her Unique Powers published (Earth
Nation, revised 1991 US Games)
1987 - Barbara Mor and Monica Sjoo, The Great Cosmic
Mother: Rediscovering the Religion of the Earth (Harper &
Row)
1990 - Stuart Kaplan, Encyclopedia of Tarot, volume III contained biography of Pamela Colman Smith
1990 - Amy Zerner and Monte Farber, The Enchanted
Tarot deck and book published (Thomas Dunne/St. Martins
Press)
1991 - Andy Smith, "For All Those Who Were Indian in a
Former Life", Woman of Power magazine, No. 19, Winter 1991
1992 - Shining Woman Tarot deck and book published
1993 - Declaration of War Against Exploiters of Lakota
Spirituality
1995 - Mary K. Greer, Women of the Golden Dawn: Rebels and
Priestesses
1995 - Karen Vogel, Motherpeace Tarot Guidebook (US Games
Systems, Inc.)
1995 - Julie Cuccia-Watts, Ancestral Path Tarot deck
published by (US Games Systems, Inc.)
1996 - Tracey Hoover, The Ancestral Path Tarot: Paths to
Wisdom Using the Ancestral Path Tarot (US Games Systems,
Inc.)
1997 - Melanie Gendron, Gendron Tarot deck published (US
Games Systems, Inc.)
1997 - Kay Steventon, Spiral Tarot deck published (US Games

2000's

Systems, Inc.)
1998 - Kay Steventon, Spiral Tarot: A Story of the Cycles of
Life (US Games Systems, Inc.)
1997 - Wheel of Change Tarot deck and book published
1998 - Goddess Tarot deck published by US Games
2000-2001 - The TarotL Tarot History Information Sheet,
Compiled and edited by Tom Tadfor Little based on input from
Mary K. Greer, Tom Tadfor Little, Nina Lee Braden, Linda
Dunn, Mark Filipas, Robert V. O'Neill, Christine Payne-Towler,
Robert Place, James Revak, and others.
2001 - World Spirit Tarot deck published by Llewellyn
2001 - Rachel Pollack, Shining Tribe Tarot deck reissued by
Llewellyn (revised version of Shining Woman)
2002 - Isha Lerner and Mara Friedman, The Triple Goddess
Tarot deck and book published (Bear & Company/Inner
Traditions)
2002 - Flash Silvermoon and Barbara Vogel, The Wise
Woman's Tarot deck and book published (MoonFox
Productions)
2003 - Oracle Tarot deck published

This is not an exhaustive list, but should still be helpful in seeing the context
of trend developments.
Key: purple text: Women's Spirituality milestones
green text: Playing Card and Tarot History milestones
brown text: New Age appropriation of Native American
Spirituality milestones (added to contextualize Medicine Woman)
black text: Women's Tarot milestones

A Timeline of the Occult and Divinatory Tarot


from 1750 to 1980
collected by Mary K. Greer
with assistance from Lola Lucas and K. Frank Jensen

c. 1735 The Square of Sevens by Robert Antrobus ( Genuine Gypsy


Card reading---claims to
be a reprint of a 1735 tome with a second edition in 1896.
(LL) 1735 date is apocryphal.
c. 1750 Manuscript (discovered by Franco Pratesi in the late 1980s),
that lists cartomantic interpretations for 35
Bolognese tarocchi cards along with a rudimentary
method of laying them out. A sheet of 35 Bolognese cards
(trumps and number cards) are labeled with simple
divinatory meanings such as journey, betrayal,

married man, love. A later deck of double-headed


Bolognese cards from the 1820s are labeled both top
and bottom with divinatory meanings, showing a
continuity of use.
c. 1750 Etteilla stated that he learned the art of telling fortunes with
playing cards from three cartomancers, one of whom
hailed from Piedmont in northern Italy. In 1757 his
Piedmontese teacher led him to the tarot, declaring that
these cards contained the secrets of all the wisdom of the
ancients. [Huson, The True Tarot, recently republished
as Mystical Origins of the Tarot].
1751-1753 Three persons in Paris were publicly known as offering their
services for divination by playing cards. The practice
spread until a cry of sacrilege was raised and was
stopped by officialdom. [p 160 W. H. Willshire. 1876. A
descriptive catalogue of playing and other cards in the
British Museum. (reprinted 1975 by Emmering,
Amsterdam)]
1757 Etteilla claimed that his Piedmontese (Italian) teacher first
taught him the Tarot in this year.
1760 Nicolas Convers Tarot de Marseille-style cards engraved and
printed. (Reproduced by House of Camoin in the 1968.)
1765 According to Casanova, his Russian peasant mistress would
read the cards every daylaying them out in a square of
twenty-five cards.
1770 Jean-Baptiste Alliette (1738-1791 publishes the first treatise
on fortune-telling with playing cards: Etteilla, ou maniere
de se r cr r avec un jeu de cartes part M*** (Etteilla, or
a Way to Entertain Oneself with a Pack of Cards by Mr***)
which includes reversed meanings for the 32 cards. He
mentions les Taraux in a list of methods of fortune-telling
[Wicked Pack, p. 83].
According to Etteilla the Book of Thoth had been
engraved for posterity by seventeen Hermetic adepts,
priests of Thoth, on plates of gold 171 years after the
Great Flood, and that these plates had been the
prototypes for tarot cards. [Huson, The True Tarot
(recently republished as Mystical Origins of the Tarot.]
1770 Krata Repoa or "Initiations into the ancient society of Egyptian
priests," published in German (by Von Kppen) as a
revelation of a new branch of Freemasonry. Its rituals
were clearly based on translations of Graeco-Egyptian
texts. (See MP Hall Freemasonry of the Ancient
Egyptians.) A later edition appeared in French in 1778.
Dr. John Yarker published the first English edition in a
Masonic Journal, The Kneph. Blavatsky claimed it was

based on The Ritual of Initiations by Humberto


Malhandrini, published in Venice in 1657.
1770 In the spring of 1770, the young Goethe, at this time 20 years
of age, went to Strasburg in the Alsace to continue his
studies at the university. There he witnessed and himself
had a reading of the playing cards by an old woman.
1771 Count Cagliostro (1743-95) appears in London and Paris with
his Egyptian Masonic Rite.
1776 American Declaration of Independence and beginning of the
American Revolution.
1776 Founding of the Illuminati (?)
1777 Cagliostro is said to have invented his scheme" of Egyptian
Masonry, which would become known as the Egyptian
Rite of Freemasonry (see 1782). He claims to have
discovered a mysterious document in a London bookstall,
written by a "George Cofton."
1778 Volume 5 of Antoine Court de Gbelins Le Monde
Primitif contains an Etymological Dictionary of the French
Language in which the old-fashioned form of the
word, Tarraux, is listed as a Game of cards well known in
Germany, Italy and Switzerland. It is an Egyptian game,
as we shall demonstrate one day; its name is composed
of two Oriental words, Tar and Rha, Rho, which mean
royal road.
1781 The American Revolution ends October 19th. Uranus, first
planet to be discovered since Babylonian prehistory,
identified March 31 by William Herschel. Russias
Catherine the Great and Holy Roman Emperor Josef II
spilt the Balkans. Los Angeles is founded in California by
Spanish settlers. Kants Critique of Pure Reason and
Gibbons Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. Mozart
is composing.
1781 8th volume of Le Monde Primitif by Court de Gbelin, claiming
Egyptian origin of Tarot, as a book of wisdom. Includes an
essay by le Comte de M*** [Mellet] which explains how to
use the cards for divination. De Gbelin says there are 22
Trumps just as there are 22 Hebrew letters. Le Comte de
Mellet gives only the following correspondences (based
on the cards running in a descending order): The Sun =
Gimel (signifying "recompense or happiness"); The Devil
= Zain ("inconstancy, error or crime"); Death = Teth ("the
action of sweeping"); Fortune = Lamed ("law or science");
The Fool = Tau . We can assume that The World = Aleph,
Judgment = Beth, etc. De Mellet also uses these
significances for divinatory purposes. It is de Mellet also
who first changes coins to "talismans" (pantacles) which
is later developed by liphas Lvi.

According to Court de Gbelin the cards were:


0 - Le Fou
I - Le Joueur de Gobelets (Thimble-rigger), ou Bateleur
(Juggler, Montebank)
Chefs Temporels & Spirituels de la Socit
II - Roi
III - Reine
IV - Grand Prtre (Chef des Hirophantes)
V - Grande Prtresse
VI - Le Mariage
VII - Osiris Triomphant
Planche V. No. VIII, XI, XII, XIIII: Les quatre VERTUS
Cardinales
XI - La Force [coming to the aid of Prudence. Moakley]
XIIII - La Temprance.
VIII - La Justice
XII - La Prudence
IX - Le Sage ou le Chercheur de la Vrit & du Juste. [Seeking
Justice. Moakley]
XIX - Le Soleil
XVIII - La Lune (Tears of Isis). Creation of the Moon &
Terrestrial Animals
XVII - La Canicule (Dog-star) Sirius (Sothis). Creation of the
Stars & Fishes
XIII - La Mort
XV - Typhon
XVI - Maison-Dieu, ou Chteau de Plutus. [House of God
overturned, with man and woman precipitated from the
earthly Paradise. Moakley]
X - La Roue de Fortune
Planche VIII:
XX - Le Jugement Dernier (Last Judgment) ou La Cration
X - Le Tems ou le Monde, reprsenreroit le Globe de la Terre
& ses rvolutions. [Moakley says The Word]
1782 Etteilla applies to the Royal censor to publish Cartonomanie
Egiptienne, ou interpr taton de 78 hieroglipes qui sont
sur les cartes nomm es Tarots (Egyptian Cartonomania,
or Interpretation of the 78 hieroglyphs which are on the
cards called Tarots). He is refused.
1782 Cagliostro founds his Egyptian Rite Lodge combined with a
private temple of Isis at which Cagliostro is High Priest.
His researches consist of a body of knowledge known as
the Arcana Arcanorum, or A. A., and basing his "internal
alchemy on Tantrik techniques from German Rosicrucian
lodges.
1783-86 Publication of Etteillas Manire de se r crer avec le Jeu de
Cartes nommes Tarots (A way to entertain onesel with
the pack of cards called Tarots) in four parts. He claims it
was devised by a committee of seventeen magi, presided

over by Hermes Trismegistus nearly 4,000 years before.


The first copy was inscribed on leaves of gold which were
disposed about a fire temple at Memphis. [3Ds, pp. 83-85]
His recreation of the deck has the first 12 cards based on
the creation myths in the Divine Pymander, and on
astrology, as he felt Tarot could be consulted in an
astrological manner.
1789 Publication of the first Etteilla deck. Available as the Grand
Etteilla deck from Grimaud since 1982. The Trumps and
all astrological correspondences are as follows:
1 - Etteilla - Le Consultant (Male). Aries. (Papus says
this is "special to the Tarot of Etteilla" - I'd make it the
Bateleur (as does Edmond))
2 - Eclaircissement (Enlightenment/Fire). Taurus.
(Papus: Sun)
3 - Propos (Discussion/Water). Gemini. (Papus: Moon)
4 - Dpouillement (Loss/Air). Cancer. (Papus: Star)
5 - Voyage (Travel/Earth). Leo. (Papus: World)
6 - Nuit (Night/Day). Virgo. (Papus: Empress - I'd make
it the Popess)
7 - Appui (Support/Protection). Libra. (Papus: Emperor)
8 - Etteilla - Le Consultante (Female). Scorpio. (Papus:
Popess - I'd make it the Empress)
9 - La Justice (Justice/Jurist). Sagittarius. (Papus:
Justice)
10 - La Temprance (Temperance/Priest). Capricorn.
(Papus: Temperance)
11 - La Force (Strength/Monarch). Aquarius. (Papus:
Force, i.e., Strength)
12 - La Prudence (Prudence/The Masses). Pisces.
(Papus: Hanged Man)
13 - Mariage (Marriage/Union). (Papus: Lovers)
14 - Force Majeure (Absolute Necessity/Absolute
Necessity). (Papus: Devil)
15 - Maladie (Illness/Illness). (Papus: Bateleur - I'd
make it the Pope - it shows the same person as
performed the Marriage (in bishop's fish-hat) holding a
wand over an altar table with ram's heads on the corners;
one of the reversed meanings is "Mage".
16 - Jugement (Judgment/Judgment). (Papus:
Judgment)
17 - Mortalit (Death/Nothingness). (Papus: Death)
18 - Tratre (Traitor/Traitor). (Papus: Hermit)
19 - Dtresse or Misere (Poverty/Prison). (Papus:
Tower)
20 - Fortune (Fortune/Raise). (Papus: Wheel of
Fortune)
21 - Dissension (Disagreement/Disagreement). (Papus:
Chariot)

68 - Ten of Coins = Part of Fortune


69 - Nine of Coins = South Node
70 - Eight of Coins = North Node
71 - Seven of Coins = Saturn
72 - Six of Coins = Jupiter
73 - Five of Coins = Mars
74 - Four of Coins = Moon
75 - Three of Coins = Venus
76 - Two of Coins = Mercury
77 - Ace of Coins = Sun
1789 Cagliostro arrested in Rome and condemned to death as a
heretic (the sentence is commuted and he dies in prison
in 1795).
1789 Beginning of the French Revolution. Storming of the Bastille 14 July.
1791 Etteilla dies. Publication of Dictionnaire Synonimique du Livre
de Thot (Thesaurus of the Book of Thoth) by Anonymous,
but possibly a pupil of Etteillas, retired army officer le
Chevalier Pierre-Joseph Joubert de la Salette. (Decker, et
al, and Huson, The True Tarot, recently republished
as The Mystical Origins of the Tarot].
late 18th c? French copperplate deck with 21 extant cards, called by
Kaplan, the Grandprtre Tarot. It appears to be the first
deck using the titles High Priest and High Priestess: Le
grandprtre and La grandprtresse. La
prudence replaces the Hanged Man and shows him
upright. Card XV is untitled but depicts the Fool instead of
the Devil (or could be a combination). [Kaplan, ii, p.194].
c. 1800

Le Grand Etteilla ou LArt de Tirer les Cartes by Julia Orsini


(Paris).

1804-1807 Melchior Montmignon DOdoucet issues the three


volume Science des Signes, ou mdecine de lesprit,
connue sous le nom de tirer les cartes, (The Science of
Signs, or medicine for the mind, known under the name of
card drawing), based on the work of Etteilla. This lays the
ground work for Minor Arcana interpretations today.
[Huson, The True Tarot, recently republished as The
Mystical Origins of the Tarot]
1810 Eliphas Levi born: revolutionary, ex-priest, magician, scholar.
Dies 1875.
1811 Paul Christian born. Real name: Jean-Baptiste Pitois. Dies
1877.
1814 Les Souvenirs Prophtiques dUne Sibylle, Sur les Causes
Scrtes de son Arrestation, Le 11 Dcembre 1809 by
Mlle. M.A. Le Normand (Paris).

1826 Parisian publisher Pierre Mongie republishes Etteillas original


deck but with Freemasonic sounding titles on the cards.
(now Grimauds Grand Etteilla Tarot).
1831 Helena Blavatsky born 12 August just after midnight in the
Ukraine. Dies 1891.
1833 Kenneth Mackenzie born 31 October at Deptford.
1838 Grand livre de Thot deck published by Simon Blocquel -- a
variation on the Etteilla deck with a book by Julia Orsini
called Le Grand Etteilla ou LArt de Tirer les Cartes. (see
1800).
1843 Jeu de la Princesse Tarot first published as book illustrations.
Reprinted as Cartomanzia Italiana by Edizioni del
Solleone in 1983. (There is a much better reprint of Jeu

de la Princesse by ditions Dusserre, Paris, circa 19982001. Reprinted after the first edition issued by Charles
Wattiliaux in 1860. Lo Scarabeo has a reprint too.--K.
Frank Jensen)
1848 Fox sisters claim spirit communication.
1854 MacGregor Mathers born January 8 at West Hackney.
Possibly 10:56 am. GMT.
1854 The Dogmas & Ritual of High Magic (Doctrine and Literature
of Transcendental Magic) by Eliphas Lvi. First identifies
Yod/Fire/Batons; H/Water/Cups; V/Air/Swords;
H/Earth/Coins as per Agrippa (above).
1857 Arthur Edward Waite born. Dies 1942.
1857 Les Rmes, histoire vraie des vrais Bohmiens by J.A.
Vaillant (Paris). Study of gypsies as descendents and
carries of Hindustani wisdom, reinforcing their role in
Tarot origin theories.
1860 Oswald Wirth born. Dies 1943.
1860 Histoire de la Magie by Eliphas Lvi (Paris).
1861 Le Clef des Grands Mystres by Eliphas Lvi (Paris).
1861 December 3rd. Kenneth Mackenzie visits liphas Lvi in
Paris. Tells him of his work with Tarot. Lvi shows
Mackenzie a manuscript set of 21 cards + Fool according
to the earliest authorities and drawn by his own hand. He
wrote about his impressions of the occasion as An
Account of What Passed between Eliphas Levi Zahed
(Abb Constant), Occult Philosopher, and
BAPHOMETUS (Kenneth R. H. Mackenzie), Astrologer
and Spiritualist, in the City of Paris, December,
1861 for The Rosicrucian.
1861 An Etteilla III-style Tarot deck is published in Russia with
complete illustrated Pips (the first ever?). THE

MYSTERIOUS BOOK THOTH OR AN ART OF


FORTUNE-TELLING WITH 78 ANCIENT EGYPTIAN
CARDS, WHICH SURVIVED THE FIRE OF THE
FAMOUS ALEXANDRIA LIBRARY. MOSCOW,
Bahmetev's Printing House, 1861. Photocopies provided
and scanned by Sergey Davydov. Present whereabouts
of deck is unknown. See James Revak's website.
1863 L'homme rouge des Tuileries by Paul Christian (J-P. Pitois).
This novel tells of an encounter between Napoleon and a
Benedictine monk who possesses an occult manuscript.
Seems to be the first use of the word Arcana in relation to
the cards (from Iamblichus). Describes seventy-eight
symbolic houses or pictorial keys, corresponding to the
Tarot deck using Egyptian names and imagery. Virtually
the same descriptions of the Arcana reappear in
Christians later work Histoire de la magie (1870). See
Mark Filipas' website.
c. 1863+ Edmond Billaudot (1829-81), who Mlle Le Normand declared
in her autobiography as her successor, created his own
hand-drawn deck in which he attempted to integrate the
Etteilla I correspondences with the Tarot de Marseille and
the descriptions and attributes given by Paul Christian
in L'homme rouge des Tuileries (1863). These include the
now standard continental correspondences to the
Hebrew letters. The deck itself (c. 1865) was published in
1966 by Grimaud as the Grand Tarot Belline.
See Kostenko website.
1864 Robert Chambers' Book of Days (Vol. 1, p. 281ff), gives the
folklore of playing cards based on fortune-telling
techniques used by soldiers wives in the early 19th
century British Empire. This seems to be the source of
Waites interpretations as Grand Orient.
1865-1870 The 78 Tarots Egyptiens Grand jeu de lOracle des
Dames deck appears as a completely redrawn, Etteillastyle deck with many alterations. Sometimes called
Etteilla III, it was designed in 1865 by G. Regamey,
reprinted as Tarot Egyptien by ditions Dusserre in 1985.
1865 The History of Playing Cards with Anecdotes of their Use in
Conjuring, Fortune-Telling, and Card-Sharping by Rev.
Ed. S. Taylor (London). (See 1973 reprint).
1867 Manuel Illustre de Cartomancie. LArt de Tirer Les Cartes
Francais suivi du Livre de Thot ou Jeu de la Princesse
Tarot by J. Trismgiste (Paris).
1870 Histoire de la Magie by Paul Christian (J-P. Pitois).
Development of the ideas he popularized in his 1863
novel. Presented the Tarot as a mystery school teaching
experienced as an extension of theKrata Repoa Egyptian

Sphinx ritual (see 1657; 1770). First used decans in


relation to 36 Number Cards. His work was plagiarized
freely by other writers: see Burgoyne and the Hermetic
Brotherhood of Luxor (1883); and Saint Germain (1901).
It became the basis for the Church of Light Tarot
materials (1918).
1870 William Carpenter's article in The Rosicrucian (January)
mentions that "Levi's books were very little known even
among the members of our mystic and secret orders."
Carpenter may be the source for the first printed
reference in the English language to the alleged occult
significance of the Tarot cards.
1873 Max Theon made Grand Master of the Hermetic Brotherhood
of Luxor, Peter Davidson was the Order's frontal Chief.
Blavatsky, Olcott, Barlet, Burgoyne and others of the time
were numbered on its rolls and probably used their
Egyptianized version of the Tarot (see 1883). Blavatsky
soon severed ties with the H B of L.
1875 Founding of the Theosophical Society by Madam Blavatsky.
1875 Aleister Crowley born. Dies 1947.
1876 A Descriptive Catalogue of Playing and Other Cards in the
British Museum accompanied by a Concise General
History of the Subject and Remarks on Cards of
Divination and of a Politico-Historical Character by
William Hughes Willshire (London).
1877 Isis Unveiled by Helena Blavatsky (who used a lot of Lvi)
1878 Frieda Harris (ne Marguerete Frieda Bloxam) born in
London, England.
1883 The Taro by T. H. Burgoyne. This article appeared in a
number of succeeding volumes of The Platonist, a
monthly periodical devoted chiefly to the dissemination of
the Platonic Philosophy in all its phases. This is
essentially a ripoff of Paul Christians description of the
Tarot cards (see 1870) and the basis of the Hermetic
Brotherhood of Luxors Tarot teachings.
1884 Founding of the London Theosophical Society.
1884 Paul Foster Case born on October 3, 5:28 PM, in Perendor
NY (now called Fairport). Dies in 1954.
1885 Founding of the Hermetic Society by Anna Kingsford, and of
the Dublin Hermetic Society, W. B. Yeats presiding.
1886 Kenneth Mackenzie dies 3 July.
1887 Kabbalah Unveiled translated by MacGregor Mathers.
1887 Tabula Bembina by William Wynn Westcott (Bath).

1887 Westcott obtains papers from Mrs. Mackenzie and soon after
asks Mathers to help him write up rituals based on a
cypher manuscript. Mackenzies wife was known as
Sister Cryptonyma to Mackenzies Cryptonymus.
Mackenzie crafted many of the core rituals for the Sat
Bhai.
1888 The Tarot: Its Occult Signification, Use in Fortune Telling, and
Method of Play, Etc. by MacGregor Mathers.
1888 Founding of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn on March
1. (Anna Kingsford dies one month earlier.)
1888 Founding of the Kabbalistic Rose+Croix by Stanislas de
Guaita in Paris. Members include Pladan, Papus,
Oswald Wirth. Wirths Tarot deck is based on the
teachings of de Guaita.
1888 The Secret Doctrine by Madam Blavatsky.
1889 Guaita/Wirth deck. Oswald Wirths first deck, Les 22 Arcanes
du Tarot Kabbalistique , published in an edition of 350
copies. Subtitled Designed for the use of initiates by
Oswald Wirth in accordance with the indications of
Stanislas de Guaita. This was the first published set of
occult Tarot cards other than those deriving from Etteilla.
He revised the design in 1926. This first version is
distinguished by its art nouveau borders.
1889 Papus publishes The Tarot of the Bohemians. Contains essay
by Oswald Wirth and illustrated with Wirths majors.
1890 William Butler Yeats initiated into GD on March 7.
1891 Helena Blavatsky dies.
1893 The Devils Picture Books: A History of Playing Cards by Mrs.
John King Van Rensselaer (NY: Dodd, Mead, and Co.).
1896 The Magical Ritual of the Sanctum Regnum, Interpreted by
the Tarot Trumps by William Wynn Westcott.
1896 Falconnier/Wegener deck. Publication of Les XXII lames
hermtiques du tarot divinatoire by R. Falconnier. Here,
for the first time, could be seen designs which truly
mimicked Egyptian art based on the descriptions of
Paul Christian (1870). The images were drawn by
Maurice Otto Wegener and based on the detailed
descriptions by Christian. (See also 1901.) These are the
inspiration for most future Egyptian-style Tarot decks.

1896 The Square of Sevens by Robert Antrobus. (LL) See 1735.


1898 Aleister Crowley initiated into Golden Dawn on Nov. 26, taking
the motto Perdurabo.

1899 The Mystic Rose from the Garden of the King by Sir Fairfax L.
Cartwright (London: H.S. Nichols). Source for
Blakeleys Mystical Tower of the Tarot (1974).
1900 The Golden Dawn splits into many factions.
1901 Practical Astrology by Edgar de Valcourt-Vermont -published under the pseudonym of Comte C. de Saint
Germain. (Reprint, see 1973.) Basically plagiarized
material from Paul Christian (see 1870). Valcourts book
reproduced the earlier illustrations by FalconnierWegener (see 1896), adding designs for the Minor
Arcana. The only difference between the Wegener
designs and the Valcourt-Vermont reproductions is that
Trump II (The Gate of the Sanctuary) was slightly
redesigned. They are the basis for the Church of Light
Tarot (1918). These 78 images were later published as a
deck in 1978 by AGMller under the name Egyptian
Tarot. See Mark Filipas' website.
1903 Annie Horniman does Tarot reading in which she decides to
finance an Irish Theatre (the Abbey Theatre in Dublin).
1906? Founding of the Ordo Templi Orientis in Germany.
1906 Les Cartes Jouer du Quatorzime au Vingtime Sicle by
Henry-Ren DAllemagne (Paris). A major and rare work
on the history of playing cards with 3200 reproductions of
cards.
1907 Founding of Crowleys Argentium Astrum.
1909 Manuel Synthtique & Pratique du Tarot by Eudes Picard
(Paris: H. Daragon, Libraire-diteur). Original designs for
the Minor Arcana. Sceptres = fire; Coins = Earth; Cups =
Air; Swords = Water. The number progression is based
on the pattern of vegetative growth.
1909 Le Tarot Divinatoire deck created by Papus & Goulinat deck
first published.
Dec. 1909 First publication of the deck conceptualized by A.E. Waite, art
by Pamela Coleman-Smith, published by Rider & Co.
London. The two editions were different regarding
cardstock used and the pattern of the backs (roses and
lilies and brown pebbles respectively). At least two further
editions were printed before World War II which from
1972 onwards was licensed to US Games Systems Inc.
(K. Frank Jensen)
1910

The first edition of Waite's card-size book "The Key to the Tarot" was
dated 1910, but
accompanied the deck in 1909. A new expanded edition of
"The Key" appeared in 1920 and again in 1931. (K. Frank
Jensen)

1910 Key to the Tarot by A.E. Waite, published as a book and deck
set. The cards have a brown pebble backing. [There is
some indication that two editions were printed in 1910
the second on better cardstock than the first(?). Although
this might refer to the stand-alone deck in 1909 and the
set in 1910.]
1910 Le Tarot Divinatoire: Clef du tirage des Cartes et des Sorts by
Papus. Card interpretations based on Etteilla and his
disciple DOdoucet (1804).
1910 The Tarot of the Bohemians: Absolute Key to Occult
Science by Papus, translated by A. P. Morton. (for French
original see 1889; many English editions, esp. 1971).
1911 Pierpont-Morgan Library acquired the Visconti-Sforza
cards from a dealer named Hamburger.
1911 Waite's "Pictorial Key to the Tarot" is published with illustrations of all
78 cards. It is based upon the text from "The Key..." but with
new material added. Many later, but not
always faithful, editions appeared. (K. Frank Jensen)
1912 Il Destino Svelato dal Tarocco, originally designed by Bruno
Sigon in 1912 as an Egyptian-based Trump set, with a
Milanese Minor Arcana. Republished by Modiano in the
1975 as Cartomanzia 184, and in an English version in
1981 under the title Cagliostro Tarot. Interpretive
keywords at the top and bottom of the Trumps are from
liphas Lvi and Paul Christian. (see 1975, 1981) See
Mark Filipas' website.
1912 A Description of the Cards of the Tarot, with their Attributions;
including a Method of Divination by their Use in The
Equinox: The Official Organ of the A. A., published by
Aleister Crowley. This was a plagiarized version of the
Golden Dawn manuscript Book T.
1912 Prophetical Educational and Playing Cards by Mrs. John King
Van Rensselaer (Philadelphia).
1913 Rudolf Steiner founds the Anthroposophical Society.
1913 The Symbolism of the Tarot by P. D. Ouspensky (St.
Petersburg: Trood).
1917 The Key to the Universe: or a Spiritual Interpretation of
Numbers by Harriette Augusta Curtiss and F. Homer
Curtiss (San Francisco & Washington D.C.: The Curtiss
Philosophic Book Co). Founders of the Order of Christian
Mystics. (Many subsequent editions. (See 1923 for Vol.
2.) Reprinted 1983 by Newcastle. (Illustrated Majors of
RWS, Egyptian, Marseilles, Wirth decks.)
1918 C.C. Zain first publishes a series of instructional courses,
which were at that time illustrated with the reproductions

from Practical Astrology (see 1901). Contains the first


English translation of Christians original Arcana
descriptions translated in 1901 by Zains friend Genevieve
Stebbins. See Mark Filipas' website.
1918 The Illustrated Key to the Tarot: The Veil of Divination,
Illustrating the Greater and Lesser Arcana by L. W. de
Laurence (Chicago: The de Laurence Company). A totally
plagiarized version of Waites book.
1918 Mathers dies in Paris of influenza on Nov. 5. (Armistice Day
on Nov. 11)
1919 Moina Mathers returns to London, establishes the Alpha et
Omega Lodge of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.
1920 Tarot was introduced to Germany by no less than two books:
Ernst Kurtzahn ("Datyanus"): "Der Tarot - Die kabbalistische
Methode der Zukunfterforshung als Schlssel zum Okkultismus",
Talis Verlag, Leipzig. 1920. The book (dedicated to Gustaf
Meyring, author of Golem) deals with esoteric/kabbalistic tarot and
also presents what the author call the first German tarot deck, a
slightly modified version of the Etteilla deck. The 78 cards deck is
rendered in the back of the book to be taken out, but was also
available as a proper tarot deck. (K. Frank Jensen)
A. Frank-Glahn's "Das Deutsche Tarot Buch" published by Uranus
Verlag, accompanied by a deck of cards "Deutsches Original Tarot",
an Egyptain style deck, but unique. Glahn's book and cards should
become a German tarot bible, which survived up in the 1980's,
published by Hermann Bauer Verlag. (K.Frank Jensen)
1920 Crowleys Abbey of Thelema.
1920 May 16, Paul Foster Case initiated into the Second Order of
Alpha et Omega lodge. Channels most of the material for
what would become The Book of Tokens (see 1934).
1920 An Introduction to the Study of Tarot by Paul Foster Case
(NY: mimeographed).
1921-22 J. B. Trinick Tarot or Great Symbols of the Paths, a set of
Majors painted for A.E. Waite by John Brahms Trinick and
Wilfrid Pippet and used in his Fellowship of the Rosy
Cross. [Dummett & Decker]
c. 1922 Paul Foster Case resigns from the Golden Dawn.
1922 Q.B.L. or The Brides Reception: Being a Short Cabalistic
Treatise on the Nature and Use of the Tree of Life by
Frater Achad (Charles Standfield Jones) (Chicago IL:
Collegium Ad Spiritum Sanctum). Reprinted 1969.
1922 Le Tarot Egyptien by Elie Alta (Vichy: Bouchet-Dreyfus).

1923 Paul Foster Case founds The School of Ageless Wisdom,


probably in Boston.
1923 The Key of Destiny by Harriette Augusta Curtiss and F. Homer
Curtiss (San Francisco & Washington DC: The Curtiss
Philosophic Book Co). (See 1917 for Vol. 1. Many
subsequent editions. Reprinted 1983 by Newcastle.)
(Illustrated Majors of RWS, Egyptian, Marseilles, Wirth
decks.)
1923 The Egyptian Revival: or The Ever-Coming Son in the Light of
the Tarot by Frater Achad (Charles Stanfield Jones)
(Chicago: Collegium ad Spiritum Sanctum Publication
Department). Reprinted 1969.
1923 Le Tarot: Signification et Interprtation du Tarot Italien:
Quatrime dition revue et corrige by J.-G. Bourgeat;
Paris: Librairie Genrale des Sciences Occultes,
Chacornac Frres.
1926 April 26. Paul Foster Case establishes the Boston office of
Builders of the Adytum (B.O.T.A.).
1926 Oswald Wirth publishes revision of his Tarot deck (original,
1889) under the name Le Tarot des imagiers du moyen
ge (Tarot of the Medieval Artists).
1927 Oswald Wirth publishes his book by the same name as his
deck (see 1926).
1927 Dion Fortune founds the Fraternity (later Society) of the Inner
Light.
1927 A Brief Analysis of The Tarot by Paul Foster Case (NY). Early
version of what became The Tarot: Key to the Wisdom of
the Ages (see 1947).
1928 An Encyclopedic Outline of Masonic, Hermetic, Qabalistic, &
Rosicrucian Symbolical Philosophy by Manly Palmer Hall
(Los Angeles: Philosophical Research Press). Significant
chapter on the Tarot (later published as a booklet).
Illustration by J. Augustus Knapp will later become basis
of a Tarot deck. Later editions published as The Secret
Teachings of All Ages.
1928 The General Book of the Tarot by A. E. Thierens
(Philadelphia: D. McKay Co.) (see reprint, 1975.)
1929 Revised New Art Tarot created by J. Augustus Knapp under
the direction of Manly Palmer Hall. Republished
as Knapp-Hall Tarot (1978). Deck combines Wirth and
Falconnier-Wegener imagery with material from
Westcotts Tabula Bembina and the works of Homer and
Harriette Curtis (1917).
1930/41 Arrows of Light: From the Egyptian Tarot: A practical
application of the Hermetic System of Names and

Numbers, based upon the teachings of the Brotherhood


of Light by John H. Dequer (NY: self-published). (No card
illustrations.) No illustrations.
1931 Oswald Wirth publishes second book on Tarot, Introduction
ltude du Tarot (Introduction to the Study of Tarot).
1931 Playing Cards : History of the Pack and Explanations of its
Many Secrets by Benham, Sir William Gurney (London:
Spring Books).
1932 The Greater Trumps by Charles Williams (London: Victor
Gollancz Ltd). (Many reprintings.) Greatest tarot novel
ever written.
1933 Oracle of Tarot: A Course on Tarot Divination by Paul Foster
Case (NY: mimeographed).
1934 The Book of Tokens: 22 Meditations on the Ageless Wisdom,
commentary by Paul Foster Case. (revised, 1968).
1936 The Sacred Tarot book and deck by Elbert Benjamin
(C.C.Zain) (Los Angeles: Church of Light). (See 1918;
1969.) Gloria Beresford illustrated the deck based on
Falconnier-Wegener (see 1896; 1901). The deck is
published by the Church of Light under the
name Egyptian Tarot Cards, also known as The
Brotherhood of Light Tarot, which takes its name from the
organization which Zain founded. The Sacred Tarot is republished in 1996 with significantly improved Tarot
designs which are beautifully redrawn. See Mark Filipas'
website.
1939 The Encyclopedia of Occult Sciences introduced by M. C.
Poinsot (NY: Tudor Publishing Co.) Reprinted as The
Complete Book of the Occult and Fortune Telling (1945).
Summarizes the interpretations of Eudes Picard (see
1909).
1941 Pursuit of Destiny: With Thirty-six Tarot Cards and an
Endpaper Chart of the Cycles by Muriel Bruce Hasbrouck
(NY: E.P. Dutton and Co., Inc.) (RWS illustrations.) Based
on the Golden Dawn system and teachings of Aleister
Crowley.
1941 An exhibition of Playing Cards. The Tarot (Book of Thoth) 78
paintings according to the initiated Tradition and Modern
Scientific Thought with other Occult and Alchemical
designs to be shown at The Nicholson Gallery (Nicholson
& Venn) at 46 High Street Oxford from June 7 to June 21
1941. Catalog printed with colored pictorial wrappers. On
the cover is the variant, unused version of The Magician.
Although the descriptions and interpretations of the cards
are drawn from Crowley, the text is presumably the work
of Frieda Harris and E.W. Bryant. (from R.A.

Gilberts Hermetica Catalog, Autumn 2002.). There is


some question as to whether this exhibition ever took
place.
1942 1 July, Exhibition of the Thoth Tarot cards at the Berkeley
Galleries in London. Catalog written by Frieda Harris for
this exhibition contains several errors in attributions of
Hebrew Letters (Daleth instead of H for the Star and
Teth instead of Lamed for Adjustment).
1944(?) Completion of the Thoth Deck, conceptualized by Aleister
Crowley, art by Frieda Harris.
1944 The Book of Thoth by Aleister Crowley. Also a very limited
edition of the cards produced in monochromatic brown.
1945 The Complete Book of the Occult and Fortune
Telling introduction by M. C. Poinsot (NY: Tudor
Publishing Co.) Reprint of The Encyclopedia of Occult
Sciences (1939). Summarizes the interpretations of
Eudes Picard (1909).
1945 The Song of Sano Tarot by Nancy Fullwood (NY: Macoy
Publishing). Channeled material loosely related to Tarot,
published by PF Case.
1947 Aleister Crowley dies.
1947 The Tarot: A Key to the Wisdom of the Ages by Paul Foster
Case (NY: Macoy Publishing Co). (See 1927 for early
version.) (RWS-style Majors, drawn by Jessie Burns
Parke.)
1948 Le Tarot de Marseille book, written by Paul Marteau (owner of
Grimaud) revolutionizes the way that Tarot card
interpretations are generated through looking closely at
the picture details of the cards.
1951 Pamela Colman Smith dies at 2 Bencoolen House in Bude,
Cornwall, September 18, 1951.
1951 The Royal Road: A study in the Egyptian Tarot: Key to Sacred
Numbers and Symbols by George Fathman (Life
Research Foundation. (See also 1977.) Illustrations by
Paul Hagerup, based on drawings of Dequer (1931),
which are variations of the Falconnier/Wegener (1896).
1954 The Painted Caravan: A Penetration into the Secrets of the
Tarot Cards by Basil Rakoczi (The Hague, Netherlands:
Boucher). Tarot divination according to gypsy lore.
Letterpress book with artful illustrations.
1954 Paul Foster Case dies in Mexico, while on a vacation with his
wife Harriette.

1957 The Fireside Books of Cards edited by Oswald Jacoby and


Albert Moorehead (New

York: Simon & Schuster). Playing card history, stories,


excerpts from novels, poems, art,
cartoons, etc. Mentions tarot often, has a section on tarot and
fortune telling including a set
of instructions distilled from 20 books by Geoffrey MottSmith to go with the tarot
decks being sold by Macys Department Store. (LL)
1958 Transcendental Magic by Eliphas Lvi (translated by A. E.
Waite) (London: Rider &
Co.).
1959 A Pictorial Key to the Tarot by A.E. Waite (NY: University
Books, their first printing).
1960 The Tarot Revealed by Eden Gray, self-published (NY:
Inspiration House). Seminal American Tarot book that is
precursor to and inspires the Tarot renaissance of the late
60s and early 70s.
1960 The Tarot Shows the Path, Divination through the Tarot by
Rolla Nordic (London). (Original illustrations of Marseillesstyle cards drawn by Paul Mathison.) Published in
American in 1979. Nordic was a major influence on
several British and American Tarot authors but not
generally known in America.
1962 The Tarot: a Contemporary Course of the Quintessence of
Hermetic Occultism by Mouni Sadhu (London: George
Allen & Unwin, Ltd.). (Original illustrations by Australian
artist, Mrs. Eva G. Lucas of Melbourne). A Russian
metaphysician who developed a yoga exercise and
meditation program to be done as part of the study of
Tarot.
1963 The Tarot for Today: Being Notes Relative to the Twenty-two
Paths of the Tree of Life and the Tarot Trumps Together
with a New Way of Approach to this Ancient Symbol,
More Suited to the Present Aquarian Age, and Entitled
The Horus Arrangement by Mayananda (London: Zeus
Press). Strongly influenced by Crowley and Eastern,
yogic practices but illustrated with a Marseilles deck.
1964 The Brotherhood of Light (Egyptian) Tarot Cards new edition
published by The Church of Light, Los Angeles CA. (see
1936). These tarot cards are not playing cards; but the
primitive symbolical pictograph writing through which
Egyptian Initiates conveyed spiritual conceptions derived
from a still more remote past. (Designs based on
Falconnier-Wegener, see 1896; 1901).

1964 The Sufis by Idries Shah (NY: Doubleday & Co.). Has an
appendix in which Shah claims the Tarot was created by
the Sufis.
1965/72 The Esoteric Tarot: The Key to the Cabala by Simon Kasdin
(Convent NJ: The Emerson Society, 1965; and NY:
Samuel Weiser, 1972). (Original illustrations of Majors
based on Hebrew letter shapes by Sylvia Schlossman of
Morristown NJ; and Jimmy Carter of Virginia Beach VA
for the Wheel of Life.)

1965 A Wicked Pack of Cards by Hugh Ross Williamson, Guild


Press, first American edition 1965 (copyright 1961,
presumably in Great Britain) -- A murder mystery about
gay men with a tarot theme: four tarot kings as the sign
at the inn and also the question of the protagonists
father among four men. (LL)
1966 Grand Tarot Belline published by France Cartes, Paris.
Booklet by J. M. Simon. A
19th century hand-made deck that combines the Marseilles
deck with Etteillas and Paul
Christians imagery and ideas. (See 1863.)
1966 The Tarot Cards Painted by Bembo by Gertrude Moakley (NY:
New York Public Library). A great inspiration and impetus
to the modern study of Tarot history. Proposed a
relationship between the Trumps, Petrarch, and
Renaissance parades.
1966 Collecting Playing Cards by Sylvia Mann (NY).
1967 The Linweave Tarot Pack produced by Brown Company, Pulp,
Paper and Board Division, 277 Park Ave., New York.
Overall design, David L. Burke. The 42 Linweave cards
presented here are intended as a partial sampler of the
58 papers in the Linweave line, and as a graphic
showcase of fine illustration from many sources on fine
paper. However, we will say this: If you consistently
specify Linweave papers for the best expression of your
artistic skills, you will be giving your talents the best
chance of fruition. This is the only real way that fortunes
are made in your business. David Palladinis first Tarot
cards appeared here.
1967 The Secret Workings of the Golden Dawn, Book T The
Tarot by S.M.R.D & others (Toddington: Helios: Rare Text
Library of Philosophical Research). Typed version of the
Golden Dawn tarot manuscript in a limited edition of 200.
1967 How to Read Tarot Cards by Doris Chase Doane and King
Keyes (West Nyack NY: Parker Publishing Co.). (Church
of Light/Falconnier-Wegener illustrations.)

1967 Tarot-Card Spread Reader by Doris Chase Doane (Prentice


Hall) (LL)
1967 The Tarot of the Magi by Carlyle A. Pushong (London:
Regency). (Influenced by Frank Lind and Rolla Nordic.
Illustrated by modified Rolla Nordic/Paul Mathison deck.)
1967 Playing Cards by Roger Tilley (London: Weidenfeld &
Nicholson).
1968 Nicolas Convers 1760 Tarot de Marseille cards reproduced
by the House of Camoin based on the original pearwood
woodcuts.
1968 Albano-Waite deck published by Tarot Productions, Inc., Los
Angeles CA. Created by Frankie Albano.
1968 The Book of Tokens: Tarot Meditations by Paul Foster Case
(Los Angeles: Builders of the Adytum). (Revision of 1934
edition.) (BOTA card illustrations by Jessie Burns Parke.)
1968 Manuel complet d'interpretation du tarot by Hades (Paris:
Bussiere). Supposedly based on a 1761 original.

1968 Tarot Instructions No author given, Tarot Productions, Inc.


More pamphlet than
book.(LL) (This booklet was apparently meant to
come with Albano's large size
major deck. This maxi size deck is only a few
millimeters smaller than the booklet,
but enough so that the booklet can't fit into the box. It
is actually printed on the box
that instructions are included, but this sentence was
hidden by a neutral yellow label
glued over it. -- K. Frank Jensen)
1968/70 The Book of Thoth: The Ultimate Tarot by Jerry
Kay published by Xeno Publications, 6311 Yucca St., Los
Angeles, CA. Deck and booklet. B&W. Available as both
22 and 78 card decks, either in booklet form or as card
deck.
1968/69 The New Tarot for the Aquarian Age (deck and booklets) by
John Starr Cooke and Rosalind Sharpe (Kentfield CA:
Western Star Press, Three Kings Production). Deck
based on detailed channeled information depicting a new
set of tarot cards that have evolved beyond the Medieval
cards for the Aquarian Age and painted by John Cooke.
[A set of b&w Atlantean tarot cards were drawn during
the 1940s based on the dreams of Cooke but not
published as cards until 1992 in The Word of One Tarot.-MKG (The Majors were published with text by Alice Kent

in black and white in spiral bound book in 1979. It was


sold as "Communify - A Game." -- K. Frank Jensen)

1968/69 The Majors of the Atlantean Tarot was, along with the
Gypsy Tarot and the New Tarot, published by Alice
Kent in black and white in 1979. They were printed on
cardboard sheets (US-letter format), but published for
cutting. The sheets and a text were spiral bound and sold
under the name of "Communify - A Game."
1969 Mont-Saint-Johns Astral Tarot deck (b&w) with 20 page
booklet, published by Mont-Saint-Johns. Art by Yurica.
Mont-Saint-Johns, Inc. felt our twentieth century
computer age called for a modernized design that would
remain faithful to the 78 ancient symbols and yet, would
be more readily assimilated by the subconscious. (see
1971, St. Croix).
1969 Grand Etteilla Egyptian Gypsies Tarot deck and booklet by B.
P. Grimaud published in English by France-Cartes/J.M.
Simon (Paris).
1969 Tarot of Marseilles deck and booklet by B. P. Grimaud
published in English by France-Cartes/J.M. Simon (Paris).
1969 Publication of the Thoth deck through the auspices of Grady
McMurtry. The photography is not very good, distorting
the colors (Llewellyn or Weiser)
1969 The Book of Thoth: A Short Essay on the Tarot of the
Egyptians: Being The Equinox Volume III No. V by The
Master Therion (Aleister Crowley); artist Executant:
Frieda Harris (Berkeley CA: K@shmarin Press,
Shambhala Publications). First American edition of The
Book of Thoth. Later editions by many different
publishers.
1969 The XXII Keys of the Tarot by Arland Ussher (Dublin:
Dolmen).
1969 The Tarot by Brad Steiger and Ron Warmoth (NY: Award
Books). (Marseilles illustrations.)
1969 Tarot and the Bible by Corinne Heline (Oceanside CA: New
Age Press). (Illustrated with the Church of
Light/Falconnier-Wegener tarot deck.)
1969 A Practical Guide to Qabalistic Symbolism by Gareth Knight
(Toddington: Helios).
1969 Sacred Tarot by C..C. Zain. New edition (see 1936).
1969 Ancient Tarot Symbolism Revealed by Professor Hilton
Hotema (Lakemont GA: CSA Press). Hotema was
pseudonym for George R. Clements who also wrote The

Land of Light (Pomeroy WA, 1959). (Card illustrations


include BOTA, Hall-Knapp, Marseilles.)
1969 Q.B.L. or The Brides Reception: Being a Short Cabalistic
Treatise on the Nature and Use of the Tree of Life by
Frater Achad (Charles Standfield Jones) (NY: Samuel
Weiser). Reprint of 1922 edition.
1969 The Egyptian Revival: or The Ever-Coming Son in the Light of
the Tarot by Frater Achad (Charles Stanfield Jones) (NY:
Samuel Weiser). Reprint of 1923 edition.
1969 The Prophetic Tarot and the Great Pyramid by Rodolfo
Benavides (translation of the 14th Spanish edition)
(Mexico: Editores Mexicanos Unidos). (Original Egyptian
illustrations w/ Marseilles and RWS influences.) Relates
Majors to the Book of Revelations.
1969 Tarot by Elisabeth Haich (Stuttgart). Translated into English,
1974.
1969 The Sybil Leek Book of Fortune Telling by Sybil Leek (NY:
Macmillan).
1969 Il castello dei destini incrociati by Italo Calvino (Franco Maria
Ricci). English translation, 1976. Fantasy stories based
on the Tarot.
1970 A Complete Guide to the Tarot by Eden Gray (NY: Crown).
First use of the term Fools Journey.
1970 Aquarian Tarot published by Morgan Press, Dobbs Ferry, NY.
Illustrated by David Mario Palladini. An authentic
interpretation of the medieval Tarot. Palladini, when he
was still a student, was one of the artists of the Linweave
Tarot (1967).
1970 Morgans Tarot published by Big Trees Press, Pelton CA.
Created by Morgan Robbins of Boulder Creek CA. This
deck is offered as an excellent tool for cutting through the
illusions and/or simultaneously turning on the illusions
which are entering the present from above.
1970 Royal Fez Moroccan deck published by Rigel Press, Ltd., 21
Cloncurry Street, London. Created by Roland Berrill and
Michael Hobdell. The deck was conceived by Roland
Berrill, founder of Mensa, in the late 1950s. Berrill
commissioned the artist Michael Hobdell to do the artwork
for this tarot. Hobdell died soon after completing the work.
Berrill commissioned a limited and numbered print run of
the deck (500 decks) but died before having time to
market the deck. These lay dormant until 1970 when
Rigel Press, Ltd. marketed the deck.
1970 20th Century Tarot published by Skor-Mor Corp., 1107 E.
Kimberly Ave., Anaheim CA. 24 page booklet written by

Kevin G. Burne. An Entertaining and Enlightening Means


of Predicting the Future. (b&w cards)
1970 Insight Institute Tarot Deck (see Frank Lind, 1971)
(appropriated by Richard Gardner and sold as the R.G.
Tarot, 1974).
1970 Tarot Cards for Fun and Fortune Telling by Stuart Kaplan (NY:
U.S. Games Systems, Inc.). (Illustrated with 1JJ
Tarot deck.)
1970 Evolution through the Tarot by Richard Gardner (London:
Rigel Press). Revised reprint of Accelerate Your
Evolution (date unknown). (Marseilles-style illustrations).
1970 Tarot for the Millions by Sidney Bennett (LA: Sherborne
Press).
1970 More Tarot Secrets for the Millions by Sidney Bennett (LA:
Sherborne Press).
1970 Foreseeing the Future by Basil Ivan Rakoczi (NY: Castle
Books).
1970 A History of Playing Cards by Catherine Perry Hargrave (NY:
Dover).
1970 Oracle of Fortuna by Ophiel (St. Paul MN: Peach Publishing).
Tatvas and four elements as relevant to Tarot structure.
1971 The 9th Dimension Tarot deck and 43 page booklet by
Calmera Leosis published by St. Croix, Inc., Whittier CA.
Revised edition of the Mont-Saint-Johns Astral Tarot (see
1969). B&w with colored backgrounds.
1971 Mastering the Tarot: Basic Lessons in an Ancient, Mystic
Art by Eden Gray (NY: Crown).
1971 The Devils Picturebook: The Compleat Guide to Tarot Cards,
Their Origin and the Usages by Paul Huson (NY: G.P.
Putnams Sons). (Illustrated by the author.) Explores
parallels to Wiccan and mythic themes in the card
designs.
1971 Tarot & You by Richard Roberts (Hastings-on-Hudson NY:
Morgan & Morgan). (Illustrated by the Aquarian Tarot.)
The first book of taped tarot card readings, using easyto-follow free-association methods, without previous
knowledge, YOU may divine by tarot for family and
friends. Various tarot card spreads are shown dealing
with goals, wishes, loves and future probabilities, plus the
new Jungian spread, a method revealing anothers
innermost mind.
1971 The Tarot of the Bohemians: Absolute Key to Occult
Science by Papus, translated by A. P. Morton.(first
modern reprint of 1910 English translation).

1971 How to Understand the Tarot by Frank Lind (London:


Aquarian). Founder of the Insight Institute and their Tarot
deck (1970).
1971 The Tarot Speaks by Richard Gardner (London: Rigel Press).
1971 Tarot and the Game of Fate by Yitzhac Kahn (San Francisco:
Sebaac Publishers).
1971 Keystone of Tarot Symbols: An Outline of Tarot Symbology in
a Nutshell by the Holy Order of MANS (San Francisco:
Holy Order of MANS). (Re-drawn BOTA-style card
illustrations. See also 1974, 1979.) The Holy Order of
MANS was founded in 1968 by visionary Earl Wilbur
Blighton, as a monastic order of esoteric (Rosicrucian)
Christianity dedicated to charity (Raphael Shelters) and
their missionary work in 49 states. The order grew rapidly
until Blightons death in 1974 when there was a power
struggle among Blightons wife and others. The new
director focused on a more conservative and less
metaphysical path, eventually joining with a defrocked
priest from the Russian Orthodox Church. Since 1988, it
has splintered into many groups. The Tarot books and
deck are still available.
1971 The Meaning of Tarot by David Hoy (Nashville TN: Aurora
Publishers). (Original RWS-style card illustrations by Dale
Phillips).
1971 The Sexual Key to the Tarot by Theodor Laurence (NY:
Citadel Press). (RWS illustrations.)
1971 Official Rules of the Tarotrump Card Game by Stuart R.
Kaplan (NY: U.S. Games Systems, Inc.).
1971 Maps of Consciousness by Ralph Metzner (NY: Collier).
Combined Paul Russell Schofields Actualism with John
Cookes Tarot.
1972 Hoi Polloi Tarot deck published by Hoi Polloi Inc., New York.
Marketed by Reiss Associates, Inc. NY.
1972 Tarot Cards designed by David Sheridan, published by
Mandragora Press, 31 St. Martins Lane, London, with
full instructions by Alfred Douglas.
1972 The Tarot: The Origin, Meaning and Uses of the Cards by
Alfred Douglas, card illustrations by David Sheridan,
published in the UK by Victor Gollancz, Ltd., London and
by Taplinger Publishing Co., NY.
1972 Yeats, the Tarot and the Golden Dawn by Kathleen Raine
(Dublin: Dolmen Press).
1972 Understanding the Tarot by Dr. Leo L. Martello (NY: HC
Publishers). (RWS illustrations.)

1972 How the Tarot Speaks to Modern Man by Theodor Laurence


(Harrisberg PA: Stackpole Books). (RWS illustrations.)
1972 Tarot Classic by Stuart R. Kaplan (NY: Grosset & Dunlap).
(Illustrated by the Tarot Classic/Marseilles-style deck).
1972 Tarot Card Symbology by Max Freedom Long (Cape
Girardeau MO: Huna Press). (RWS illustrations.) Includes
articles from Huna Vistas going back to 1965.
1972 W.E. Butler founds the Servants of Light based on a
correspondence course created with Gareth Knight.
1973 Dynamic Games Tarot deck, published by Dynamic Design
Industries, Anaheim CA.
1973 James Bond 007 Tarot Deck by EON Productions Ltd and
Glidrose Publications, Ltd. Published by AG Muller & Cie
in Switzerland for U.S. Games Systems, Inc.. Card
Designs by Fergus Hall, Courtesy of the Portal Gallery
Ltd, London. The James Bond 007 Tarot Deck is
featured in the popular Film, Live and Let Die, a United
Artists Release.
1973 Tarot: How to foretell your future in the cards by Kathleen
McCormack (Surrey: Fontana Books/Collins). (Illustrated
by Italian Piedmontse deck.)
1973 The Windows of Tarot by F. D. Graves (Dobbs Ferry NY:
Morgan & Morgan). (Illustrated with the Aquarian Tarot.)
Light-weight.
1973 The Book of Tarot by Fred Gettings (London: Triune Books).
Illustrated large-format book. Interpretations based on
Marseilles cards and geometric symbolism.
1973 The Tarot and Transformation by Lynn M. Buess (Lakemont
GA: Tarnhelm Press). (Illustrated with Church of
Light/Falconnier-Wegener style cards redrawn by Roxana
R. Donegan)
1973 Practical Astrology by Comte C. de Saint-Germain
(Hollywood: Newcastle). Reprint (see 1901).
1973 Pictorial Key to the Tarot by A. E. Waite (Causeway; their first
printing). (See 1910; 1959; 1979.)
1973 The Playing Card; an Illustrated History by Detlef Hoffmann
(Greenwich, Conn. New York Graphic Society).
1973 The History of Playing Cards with Anecdotes of their Use in
Conjuring, Fortune-Telling, and Card-Sharping by Rev.
Ed. S. Taylor (reprint Rutland VT: Charles E. Tuttle Co).
(see 1865 original).
1974 The New Tarot first published by creators William J. Hurley
and J.A. Horler, CA.

1974 Swiss 1JJ Tarot deck, published by U.S. Games Systems,


Inc., made in Switzerland by AGMller, distributed
exclusively by U.S. Games Systems, Inc., New York.
Complete with Instruction Brochure by Stuart R. Kaplan,
Americas Leading Tarot Authority.
1974 R.G. Tarot Cards deck published by Rigel Press, Ltd. Original
English Pack Design. Booklet by Richard Gardner.
1974 Jewels of the Wise by the Holy Order of MANS (San
Francisco: Holy Order of MANS) (Re-drawn BOTA-style
card illustrations.)
1974 Toward the One: The Perfection of Love , Harmony , and
Beauty by Pir Vilanat Inayat Khan (NY:
Harper/Colophone). Contains tearout Major Arcana Sufi
Tarot by Dane Rudhyar.
1974 The Mystical Tower of the Tarot by John D. Blakeley (London:
Watkins). Illustrated with Marseilles and Charles VI
cards. Shows parallels between Tarot, the Orphic mystery
traditions, and a 19thcentury Sufi work.
1974 Tarot: An Illustrated Guide by Rebecca Micca Warner (NY: St.
Martins Press & London: Academy Editions). (Primarily
Marseilles illustrations.)
1974 The Secrets of Ancient Witchraft with The Witches Tarot by
Arnold and Patricia Crowther, with introduction and notes
by Dr. Leo Louis Martello (Secaucus NJ: Citadel Press).
Illustrations of Majors by Arnold Crowther.
1974 The Hanged Man: Psychotherapy and the Forces of
Darkness by Sheldon Kopp (Palo Alto CA: Science and
Behavior Books)
1974/76 Egyptian Temple Cards: Past, Present, Future, Key to the
secret doctrine of ancient Egypt. Authentic Egyptian Deck
with Instruction Book. Manufactured by Osirian
Enterprises by A. J. Metcalfe. (54 non-Tarot cards.)
1975 Mountain Dream Tarot: 78 Photographic Cards by Bea
Nettles. Distributors: Light Impressions Corp., Rochester
NY. The Mountain Dream Tarot came to me in a dream
in the summer of 1970. The decision to assemble a
photographic set of cards was made in my sleep. I began
the next morning at Penland School of Crafts in the
mountains of North Carolina. I chose models who suited
the cards and after reading the cards description we took
a walk to find the right place to make the picture. . . . My
cards are an intuitive, not a literal interpretation of the
ancient deck.Republished in 2001.
1975 Cagliostro Tarot 184 published by Graphic Arts, Modiano,
Trieste, Italy from original Egyptian-style design by Bruno
Sigon of 1912. Explained by Docteur Marius in an 80

page booklet titled, Destiny Revealed by the Tarot. (see


1912, 1981).
1975

Royal Fez Moroccan Tarot deck published by U.S. Games.


(see 1970).

1975/78 Spanish Tarot: Reproduccion de un Tarot del Ao 1736,


published by H. Fournier, S.A., Vitoria, Spain.
Instructions by Stuart Kaplan.

1975 El Tarot: La Baraja Profetica by Joss Irish Roca (?)


Mexico (LL)
1975 Dictionary of the Tarot by Bill Butler (NY: Schocken Books).
Published in England as The Definitive Tarot. Compared
decks and card interpretations from many sources.
Includes a symbol dictionary.
1975 The Tarot by Richard Cavendish (NY: Harper & Row).
1975 Wisdom of the Tarot by Elisabeth Haich (London: George
Allen & Unwin Ltd.). Published with a set of Wirth-based
Majors. Strongly based on the work of Oswald Wirth with
a Hindu-yoga twist.
1975 The Royal Road: A Manual of Kabalistic Meditations on the
Tarot by Stephan A. Hoeller (Wheaton IL:
Quest/Theosophical Publishing House). (RWS
illustrations.)
1975 Astrology & the Tarot by A.E. Thierens (Hollywood:
Newcastle). (Originally published as The General Book of
the Tarot, see 1928).
1975 The Guide Meditation: The Manual on Theory and
Technique by Edwin C. Steinbrecher (Santa Fe: selfpublished). First edition of a major work on a Tarot
meditation practice. Many editions. Published by Samuel
Weiser in 1988.

1975 Prelude to Science: An Exploration of Magic and


Divination (section on tarot) by
Richard Furnald Smith, Scribner, 1975 (LL)
1975/77 The Tarot by Joseph Maxwell (NY: Samuel Weiser).
Translated from the French with Amplification of the
Tarot, Introduction and Notes by Ivor Powell. (Not
illustrated, but the deck described is clearly the Marseilles
of Nicolas Conver of 1760 which was reprinted (see
1968).

Comments: This book was originally published in


France, apparently in several
different editions. It was translated into English in 1975.
The translator and publisher don't say when the French

editions were published, but from clues in the text (i.e.,


references to previous editions, etc.), it seems to have
been first published sometime between 1900 and 1930.
Maxwell was a French lawyer who held high positions
in the French judiciary and wrote books on many
subjects, including the occult. This is one of only a few
of his books to be translated into English. He posits
Southern Germany as the birthplace of the cards. His
interpretations of the Majors are based heavily on
numerology, and he interprets the pip cards according
to pictorial elements of the Marseille designs. He
assigns elements to the suits as follows: Wands = Earth,
Cups = Water, Pentacles = Air, Swords = Fire. (Lee
Bursten)
1976 Tarot: The Royal Path to Wisdom by Joseph D. DAgostino
(NY Samuel Weiser). (RWS illustrations.)
1976 The Yeager Tarot: Tarot of Meditation deck, published by
Credo Company, Laguna Beach, CA. Art by Marty
Yeager. Republished in a sanitized (masking of sexual
organs) version by U.S. Games in 19??.
1976 Xultn Deck published by Wisdom Garden Books, Venice CA.
Created by Peter Balin.
I met Peter Balin (creator of the Xultun Tarot) in the
early 80s - he came to dinner at my house in San
Francisco. He told me that he created the deck after
seeing a RWS deck one evening at a party. At the time he
was a down-and-out carpenter. A friend suggested he do
a deck, which he laughed at, but the idea wouldn't go
away. In fact, he suddenly saw in his mind this huge
painting - all one piece - which he knew was the Major
Arcana - only it was Mayan. But, he knew nothing about
Tarot and little about the Mayans although he had lived in
Mexico for a while. He was working at an art gallery during a really slow period - so he started on the canvas
and became obsessed, finishing the painting almost nonstop. It was only when it was finished that he realized it
could be cut up into the 22 cards. People kept insisting he
should publish it, but the price was astronomical as far as
he was concerned. Then other people began giving him
money to do it - some of them strangers who walked into
the gallery - and he very soon had enough to publish.
There were many images that he put into the deck that he
knew nothing about - and only later found out that they
were very significant in relation to the Mayan cosmology
and to the particular Tarot card. He said he felt during the
whole process that he didn't really have a choice about it the image of the painting of the Majors appeared as a

whole in his mind after seeing a Tarot deck once and he


couldn't stop painting (except to eat and sleep) until he
had finished it. And, when he thought that publishing was
impossible, it came together almost despite him. The
book came later - after lots of people had given him input
and helped him put together the Tarot and Mayan
information that was already encoded into the painting.
- Mary K. Greer on TarotL.
1976 A Feminist Tarot by Sally Gearhart and Susan Rennie
(Watertown MA: Pandora's Box). First book to give
feminist interpretations (RWS deck).
1976 Womanspirit Circle Lilith in Santa Cruz. The Matriarchal Tarot
conceived out of which emerged at least three
subsequent decks - Daughters of the Moon (1984), Book
of Aradia (1984, Djinni Van Slyke), and Shekhinah's
Tarot.
1976 The Castle of Crossed Destinies by Italo Calvino, translated
by William Weaver. (NY: Harcourt, Brace). Fiction,
stories. (Illustrated with Visconti-Sforza and Marseillesstyle decks.)
1976 The Symbolism of the Tarot by P.D. Ouspensky (NY: Dover).
1976 Forbidden Images: The Secrets of the Tarot by David Lemieux
(NY: Barnes & Noble).
1976 Tarot: Its Meaning, Mythology and Methods of Devination by
Martin J. Wyatt (Leicestershire: Valldaro Books).

1976 The Quantum Gods: The Origin and Nature of Matter and
Consciousness by Jeff
Love (London: Compton Press Ltd.). His Qabalah Mandala
shows the intersection of
tarot, qabalah and astrology; quantum physics meets the
Tree of Life. (LL)
1976 The Rational Tarot: How to Use It, Why It Works by Richard
Spencer Le Gette
(London: Arthur Barker Ltd.) Poems start each of the two
sections, one on the Oracle,
the other on Science. (LL)
1976/81 The Golden Cycle: A Text on the Tarot by John Sandbach
and Ronn Ballard (Chicago: Aries Press). (No
illustrations.) Metaphysical linguistics approach to Tarot.
1977 The Way of the Sorcerer by Peter Balin. A Verbatim Report of
a Talk on the Higher Arcana of the Xultun Tarot Deck
given by its author Peter Balin at Esoteric Speakers

Platform in Phoenix Arizona on June 21st, 1977. (Venice


CA, Wisdom Garden Books).
1977 The Tarot: How to Use and Interpret the Cards by Brian Innes
(London: Orbis Publishing).
1977 The Royal Road by George Fathman (Mokelumne Hill CA:
Health Research). Reprint (see 1951).
1977 The Tarot: Path to Self Development by Micheline Stuart
(Boulder CO: Shambhala). (Marseilles-style illustrations
as a journey by the Fool from the World to the Magician.)
One day I had gathered enough pieces of the mysterious
puzzle to see in a flash the whole picture. I realized that it
was a chain in which every link fitted neatly within the
next. It is said that the order of the cards has shifted a bit
over the centuries: I can well see it, but it does not matter.
As we have to pass through each link until the whole
chain has been experienced, it is of no great account if
sometimes one is experienced before the other.
1977 The Oracle of Thoth: The Kabalistical Tarot by R.A. Straughn
(Bronx NY: Oracle of Thoth Publishing Co.) (Original
Egyptian-influenced Majors illustrated by Paul Stephen
Grayson.)
1978 The Flight of Feathered Serpent by Peter Balin (Venice CA:
Wisdom Garden Books). A book about the tarot and the
Maya Indians view of the world. (Illustrated with authors
Xultun Tarot deck).
1978 A New Woman's Tarot by Billie Potts (Elf and Dragons Press).
1978 Knapp-Hall Tarot Cards, published with The Tarot: an
Essay (Los Angeles, Philosophyical Research Society,
Inc.). Deck first published,1929.
1978 The Encyclopedia of Tarot (Vol. 1) by Stuart Kaplan (NY: U.S.
Games Systems, Inc.).
1978 Wisdom of the Tarot: Taught Simply: Ten steps to learning to
read the Tarot Cards by E-Lois Winkler Lovell (Anaheim
CA: Love).
1978 El Sendero Inicitico en los Arkanos del Tarot y Kbala by
Samael Aun Weor (Budha Maitreya, Kalki Avatara de la
Nueva Era de Acuario) (Mexico: Iglesia Gnostica
Cristiana Universal). A major work by this Gnostic
philosopher, since translated into several languages
including French and English. Illustrated by the Majors of
a Falconnier-Wegener style Egyptian deck that has been
published as the Egipcios Kier Tarot Deck (Buenos Aires;
and U.S. Games, 1984).

1979 The Amazon Tarot deck published by Elf and Dragons Press.
Created by Billie Potts, River Lightwomoon, Susun Weed,
and other artists.
1979 Tarotmania (later renamed Tarot Therapy: A Guide to the
Subconscious) by Jan Woudhuysen (Wildwood House,
Great Britain) (LA: J.P. Tarcher). (Original card
illustrations by Louise Aaltje) .
1979 Tarot: A New Handbook for the Apprentice by Eileen Connolly
(No. Hollywood: Newcastle). First in a series of three
books on the Tarot. (RWS illustrations).
1979 Pictorial Key to the Tarot by A.E. Waite (NY: Samuel Weiser;
their first printing). (see also 1910; 1959; 1973.)

1979 The Game of Life by Timothy Leary. Seriously tripped out


stuff---acid, DNA, spacetime continuum. (LL)
1979 Tarot Revelations by Joseph Campbell and Richard Roberts
(No publisher named).
1979 God of Tarot by Piers Anthony (NY: Jove). Fiction. In 1975, at
a judo tournament, Anthony met and became friends with
a brother in the Holy Order of MANS (1971, 1974).
Anthony was intrigued by their unique mix of Gnostic
Christianity, co-ed communalism, and Tarot. Out of this
came a character who would appear in several novels:
Brother Paul of the Holy Order of Vision. He also created
an imaginary deck called the Animation Tarot, having 100
cards in five suits. By September of 1977, he had a
250,000 word manuscript that no one wanted to publish.
Also, members of the real order were told not to read the
manuscript or speak with him, which he regretted since
the novel stemmed in significant part from his admiration
of their operation. He reluctantly agreed to splitting the
book into a trilogy. Jove then stopped publishing science
fiction and the next two volumes were published by
Berkeley (1980). It wasnt until 1987 that the novel
appeared in one volume (NY: Ace).
1980 The Game of Tarot: from Ferrara to Salt Lake City by Michael
Dummett with the assistance of Sylvia Mann (London:
Gerald Duckworth & Co.). The definitive work on playing
the Tarot card game (with rules from many countries),
plus the history and varieties of the Tarot deck.
1980 Seventy-Eight Degrees of Wisdom: A. Book of Tarot by
Rachel Pollack (Aquarian Press).
1980 Jung and Tarot: An Archetypal Journey by Sallie Nichols (NY:
Samuel Weiser).

1980 Numerology and Your Future by Dusty Bunker (West Chester


PA: Schiffer). Numerology as related to the Tarot cards.
1980 Twelve Tarot Games by Michael Dummett (London:
Duckworth).
1980 Vision of Tarot and Faith of Tarot by Piers Anthony (NY:
Berkeley). (See 1979.)

1980 The Magic Tarot by Frederic Lionel (published in France


as Le Tarot Magique, Editions du Rocher) (LL)
1980 Niki de Saint Phalle began work on her tarot garden
sculpture.
1980 The Tarot Design Coloring Book by Caren
Caraway (Stemmings). There are plenty of
color-in decks but this is the only coloring book per se
that I know of. (LL)
I propose that 1980 marks the end of the hippie/Tarot revival era and
serves as the transition into the full maturity of the modern, 20 th century
Tarot renaissance.
There are three other Timelines that are absolutely essential supplements to
this one:
Collected Fragments of Tarot History by Michael J. Hurst
A History of Egyptian Tarot Decks by Mark Filipas
Herstory of Womens Tarot by Joan Cole

Playing Cards by the Master of the Banderoles


Der Meister mit den Bandrollen

he Master of the Banderoles - so-called because of the banderoles (speech

banners) present in many of his prints - originated in the North Netherlands during the
mid-fifteenth century. He (or she) was one of the earliest professional printmakers.
Most of his output consisted of devotional and decorative images for the emerging
market for prints which would have been pasted onto boards or into books. He tended
to copy subjects from other sources whilst building up a composition, or reuse his own
motifs, rather than create original works.
Right: detail from 'Fortune and Death' by the Master of the Banderoles, c.1450-1475
showing a banderole or scroll containing 'speech' text emanating from the King

Working almost within living memory of the first arrival of playing cards into Europe,
the Master of the Banderoles set of playing cards provide a rare glimpse into their early
development. Some of the Master's work was based on Italian models, so it is possible
that he visited Italy. These eight cards appear to be from an Italian (or Spanish)-suited
pack of at least 48 cards, although no Aces or court cards are present in the fragment.
The cards have been engraved in sequential order and are separated by a single line.

Above: an uncut sheet of eight playing cards probably the work of the Master of the Banderoles, an artist
who is supposed to have worked on the Lower Rhine about 1470. The designs suggest Italian inspiration.
Height of sheet: 192 millimetres; Width: 270 millimetres. The Trustees of the British Museum. All rights
reserved.

The Master of the Banderoles produced religious and devotional images as well as
subjects such as grotesque alphabets and these playing cards. Some of his works are in
series with a common format. He worked in the new medium of engraving which
required draughtsmanship and technical ability for copying the works of existing
masters. The cross-over between religious and profane images is evident in the cup suit
symbols which are in fact ciboria, cups for holding hosts from the Christian Eucharist
and presumably sacred, similar to the chalices used for wine. The Master of the
Banderoles seems to be very familiar with their designs. They were usually made of
precious metal, or plated with silver, and possibly decorated with engraving. Ciboria
were sometimes kept at homes to be handy for the Last Rites where needed. The impish
little figures - putti - cavorting amongst the ciboria add a slightly irreverent sense of
fun and playfulness to the playing cards, consistent with their use as a recreational
game.
Cherubs and Putti, which started reappearing in medieval art during the 15th century,
were distinct. Cherubs were Angels and thus close to God. Putti were associated with
Eros/Cupid and profane love and used as decorative art on buildings, frontispieces and
illuminated capital letters. The Master of the Banderoles entertainingly merges spiritual
and secular themes in his pack of playing cards by placing putti amongst the ciboria.

Similar antics can be seen in the miniature figures adorning the numeral cards in
another elaborate Italian or Spanish-suited, Gothic pack of playing cards, produced in
South Germany, which appears to commemorate the marriage, in 1496, of Felipe I of
Spain and Doa Juana, daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella more

Right: Ace of Batons and Six of Cups from the pack of cards by the South German Engravershowing
children cavorting amongst the pip symbols, late 15th century.
Left: Aces of Cups & Coins from a Gothic Spanish-suited pack produced in Spain, late 15th / early 16th
century decorated with small children playing around the suit symbols.

In addition, there is anotherGothic Spanish-suited pack with naked children


gamboling in the numeral cards, produced by woodcuts rather than engraving, believed
to have been made in Spain around the same time.
The practice of decorating playing cards with small naked figures, or putti, persisted
for several centuries in many Spanish and Italian-suited cards. In the Baroque period
the putto came to represent the omnipresence of God. see example

Bibliography and References:


Lockhart, Anne I.: Four Engravings by the Master with the Banderoles, The Bulletin of the Cleveland
Museum of Art, Vol. 60, No. 8 (Oct., 1973), pp. 247-254
Acknowledgements: thanks to Samten de Wet for kind assistance with research.
I do think there may be some further amplification of these Cups in Master of the Banderoles deck. I have
been working on the subject, within a certain Hermetic context. The key is to discover the use of The Four
Elements - as they correspond to the Four Suits of the Tarot. These elementary attributions are very ancient
- I think they go back to the Pre-Socratics. This needs to be documented. It suggests to me, that the Tarot is
a sort of living fossil of ancient wisdom - someone is now talking about Tarosophy - rather clumsy - but may
be a point there - wisdom of The Tarot.
If we accept the Cups as belonging to the Element Water - all sorts of other associations can be calibrated,
for example, the Fountain. Here again, there are plenty of putti cavorting around Fountains, and they are
Fountains themselves - as in the Pissing Putti - a common theme which also reappears in Alchemy. Urine, is
of course, WATER - and there are deep links between WATER and SPERM - both of these substances
feature in the Birth of Venus Myth - and we cannot consider the putti without placing them in their
archetypal matrix, which is Venus/Aphrodite.

Strangely enough, many Renaissance putti are shown with the Dead Christ. Flowers, which are ruled by
Venus, are actually the sex organs of the plant kingdom, are placed on graves. Many Roman sarcophagi are
decorated with putti. The subject is vast.
I would suggest an Italian origin for these ideas - which permeated through Venice to Augsburg, Nuremberg,
and the so-called Northern German Renaissance - which had as its climatic fruition, the work of Durer.
Warburg scholars have paid attention to this field, and even for example, Durer made versions of the socalled Tarot of Mantegna. The classical research for this imaginal world can be traced back to Cyriacus of
Ancona. These are a few bones of thought . . . Samten

Methods of Production

ncrease in demand for cultural objects led to the inventing of quicker and
cheaper production methods woodcuts, movable type, paper instead of parchment,
multiple copies. As card-playing became more popular production was accelerated by
these alternative processes, including hand-made cards, cards printed
from woodblocks or using stencils, or other improvised techniques.
Below Left: archaic sixteenth century Spanish playing card by Francisco Flores. Right: XV century printed
German playing card / XV century hand-painted hunting pack.

Early packs involved artisan methods of card production which was time-consuming but
the resulting cards were very sturdy. Pasteboard was manufactured from several sheets
of paper glued together. More expensive cards were produced from engravings in
copper using the skills of the goldsmith and engraver and illuminated with many
colours including gold and silver. These cards have greater detail and a more
naturalistic use of line. Such packs were given as wedding gifts, bequeathed as
heirlooms and regarded as valuable items. They were often produced for collectors or as
curios for princely display cabinets.
Luxury hand-painted packs were only available to a few, who enjoyed them privately or
with elite company as objects of fashionable esteem. The printed or mechanicallyproduced versions, cruder in design and execution, were viewed simultaneously by
larger audiences but were prone to deteriorate more rapidly especially if they were
heavily used. Wood engraving and traditional woodcuts, despite the modern
developments of chemical, mechanical or electronic processes, still remain the most
expressive forms of illustration, adding a sense of vibrancy, old world chivalry and
romance.
See also Francisco Flores, The South German Engraver, Mantegna Tarocchi, Rotxotxo Workshop
Inventories, Barcelona Amos Whitney Playing Card Workshop.

Above: illustration of Card Maker's Workshop from L'Encyclopedie by Diderot, d'Alembert, Paris, 1751. At
the left-hand side we can see pasting operations and polishing by means of flints fixed to apparatus
suspended from the ceiling. In the back room freshly pasted sheets are being pressed and the excess water
squeezed out into the bucket. In the central area, sheets of cards are being cut using a cutting machine
whilst at the right-hand side finished cards are being inspected and sorted into complete packs. Learn more

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