History of Tarot: From Playing Cards to Divination Tool

History of Tarot: From Playing Cards to Divination Tool

BY NICOLE LAU

Tarot's journey from 15th-century Italian card game to modern divination tool spans six centuries of transformation. What began as entertainment for Renaissance nobility evolved into one of the world's most powerful systems for self-reflection, spiritual guidance, and accessing intuitive wisdom. Understanding tarot's history reveals how a deck of cards became a mirror of the soul.

The Beginning: 15th Century Italy (1440s)

Tarot was born in northern Italy around the 1440s as tarocchi - a trick-taking card game for wealthy families. The earliest surviving decks were commissioned by Italian nobility as luxury items, hand-painted with gold leaf and intricate artwork.

The Visconti-Sforza Deck (1440s): The oldest surviving tarot deck, created for the Visconti and Sforza families of Milan. These weren't mystical tools but status symbols and entertainment.

Original Structure: 78 cards divided into the Minor Arcana (56 cards in four suits) and Major Arcana (22 trump cards). This structure remains unchanged today.

The Game Era: 1500s-1700s

For three centuries, tarot was primarily a game. Different regions developed variations - tarocchi in Italy, tarot in France, tarock in Germany. The cards had no occult associations; they were simply for playing card games similar to bridge.

Tarot de Marseille (1650s): The classic French pattern that standardized tarot imagery. Still purely for gaming, but its iconic designs would later become the foundation for esoteric tarot.

The Occult Turn: Late 1700s

Everything changed when French occultists "discovered" tarot's mystical potential.

Antoine Court de Gébelin (1781): Published Le Monde Primitif, claiming tarot originated in ancient Egypt and contained secret wisdom from the Book of Thoth. This was completely false - tarot is Italian, not Egyptian - but it sparked the occult tarot movement.

Jean-Baptiste Alliette (Etteilla) (1785): Created the first deck explicitly designed for divination, reversing Court de Gébelin's theories into practice. Etteilla's methods are still used by some readers today.

The Golden Dawn Revolution: 1888-1909

The Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn transformed tarot into a complete system of Western esotericism.

Key Innovations:

- Integrated tarot with Kabbalah (each card corresponding to paths on the Tree of Life)

- Connected cards to astrology, elements, and Hebrew letters

- Created detailed symbolic correspondences

- Developed the Celtic Cross spread

The Rider-Waite-Smith Deck (1909): Arthur Edward Waite (Golden Dawn member) commissioned artist Pamela Colman Smith to create a revolutionary deck with fully illustrated Minor Arcana. This became the most influential tarot deck in history, the template for thousands of modern decks.

The 20th Century: Popularization

1910s-1960s: Tarot remained primarily in occult circles. The Rider-Waite-Smith deck spread slowly through esoteric communities.

1960s-1970s: The counterculture movement embraced tarot. New Age spirituality, feminism, and interest in alternative practices brought tarot to mainstream awareness.

Key Decks:

- Thoth Tarot (1969): Aleister Crowley and Lady Frieda Harris's masterpiece

- Aquarian Tarot (1970): Simplified, accessible imagery

- Morgan-Greer Tarot (1979): Vibrant, borderless cards

The Modern Renaissance: 2010s-Present

The 2010s saw an explosion of tarot creativity:

Indie Deck Revolution: Thousands of new decks created by independent artists, exploring diverse themes, cultures, and artistic styles.

Digital Age: Tarot apps, online readings, Instagram tarot communities. Tarot became accessible to millions.

Mainstream Acceptance: Tarot moved from occult fringe to wellness practice. Bookstores, museums, and mainstream media embraced tarot.

Diversity: Decks representing LGBTQ+ experiences, BIPOC perspectives, neurodivergent voices, and countless cultural traditions.

From Game to Divination: How Did It Happen?

Why did playing cards become mystical tools?

1. Visual Symbolism: The Major Arcana's archetypal images (The Fool, Death, The Tower) naturally invite interpretation and meaning-making.

2. Randomness as Oracle: Shuffling and drawing cards creates randomness that can be read as meaningful - a perfect structure for divination.

3. Cultural Timing: The late 1700s saw renewed interest in ancient wisdom, secret knowledge, and mysticism. Tarot fit perfectly.

4. Psychological Depth: The cards map human experience so completely that they function as mirrors, reflecting the reader's unconscious.

Tarot Today: Multiple Traditions

Modern tarot encompasses diverse approaches:

Esoteric/Occult: Following Golden Dawn correspondences, Kabbalistic associations, ceremonial magic.

Psychological: Using tarot for self-reflection, therapy, personal growth (influenced by Jung).

Intuitive: Reading based on personal intuition and card imagery rather than traditional meanings.

Cultural: Decks and practices rooted in specific cultural traditions beyond Western esotericism.

Bringing Tarot Into Your Practice

Choose Your Deck: Start with Rider-Waite-Smith or a deck that speaks to you visually. Our Tarot Tapestries featuring classic tarot imagery can inspire your practice.

Learn the History: Understanding tarot's evolution deepens your connection to the cards.

Create Sacred Space: Use our Ritual Candles and Sacred Geometry Tapestries to create an intentional space for readings.

Practice Daily: Draw a card each morning. Let tarot become a daily dialogue with your intuition.

The Living Tradition

Tarot's history isn't finished - it's still evolving. Every new deck, every reading, every interpretation adds to the tradition. What began as a game became a spiritual practice, and now it's whatever each practitioner makes it.

The cards are the same 78 that Italian nobles played with 600 years ago. But their meaning has transformed completely. That's the magic of tarot - it adapts, evolves, and reflects each era's needs.

From game to oracle. From entertainment to enlightenment. The journey continues.

Related Articles

Kabbalah and Tarot: Path Assignments and Symbolism

Kabbalah and Tarot: Path Assignments and Symbolism

Discover Golden Dawn's Kabbalah-tarot synthesis - 22 Major Arcana assigned to 22 Tree of Life paths with Hebrew lette...

Read More →
Tarot Collecting: Historical Decks, Museums, and Archives

Tarot Collecting: Historical Decks, Museums, and Archives

Discover tarot collecting - museum treasures (Visconti-Sforza, Charles VI), valuable historical decks, what makes dec...

Read More →
Modern Tarot Renaissance: Indie Deck Explosion (2010s-Present)

Modern Tarot Renaissance: Indie Deck Explosion (2010s-Present)

Discover the 2010s-present indie tarot explosion - how Kickstarter, Instagram, and digital tools democratized deck cr...

Read More →
Tarot and Psychology: Jung's Archetypal Interpretation

Tarot and Psychology: Jung's Archetypal Interpretation

Discover Carl Jung's revolutionary psychological interpretation of tarot - Major Arcana as archetypes of the collecti...

Read More →
Regional Tarot Traditions: Italian, French, Spanish, German

Regional Tarot Traditions: Italian, French, Spanish, German

Explore regional tarot traditions across Europe - Italian tarocchi (Bolognese, Piemontese, Sicilian), French Tarot de...

Read More →
Tarot in Popular Culture: From James Bond to Modern Media

Tarot in Popular Culture: From James Bond to Modern Media

Discover tarot's journey from occult fringe to pop culture phenomenon - James Bond's Live and Let Die (1973), TV show...

Read More →

Discover More Magic

Regresar al blog

Deja un comentario

About Nicole's Ritual Universe

"Nicole Lau is a UK certified Advanced Angel Healing Practitioner, PhD in Management, and published author specializing in mysticism, magic systems, and esoteric traditions.

With a unique blend of academic rigor and spiritual practice, Nicole bridges the worlds of structured thinking and mystical wisdom.

Through her books and ritual tools, she invites you to co-create a complete universe of mystical knowledge—not just to practice magic, but to become the architect of your own reality."