The Hermit Tarot Art History: Symbolism Across Decks

The Hermit Tarot Art History: Symbolism Across Decks

BY NICOLE LAU

The Hermit has been seeking wisdom for over 500 years, but its appearance has evolved dramatically across different tarot traditions. From medieval time to solitary seeker, each deck's interpretation reveals different facets of this master of inner wisdom and solitude. This is the art history of The Hermit—how symbolism, culture, and philosophy have shaped the card we know today.

The Origins: Medieval Tarocchi (15th Century)

The earliest known tarot decks emerged in 15th-century Italy. The Hermit was originally "Il Tempo" (Time) or "The Old Man"—representing time, age, and the wisdom that comes with years.

Key characteristics:

  • Old man with staff or hourglass
  • Representing time, age, and experience
  • Focus on the passage of time
  • Numbered IX (the ninth card)

Symbolic meaning: In medieval society, The Hermit represented time itself—the wisdom that comes with age, the experience earned through years, the patience required for understanding.

This wasn't yet the wisdom-seeker we know today—it was about time and age bringing wisdom.

Tarot de Marseille (17th-18th Century)

The Marseille tradition standardized tarot imagery across Europe. The Hermit became the solitary seeker with lantern.

Key characteristics:

  • Old man with lantern and staff
  • Hooded cloak
  • Focus on solitary seeking
  • Numbered IX (the ninth card)

Symbolic evolution: The Marseille Hermit introduces the lantern—representing the light of wisdom, the search for truth, the solitary journey to understanding.

This version emphasizes the solitary seeker, the one who withdraws to find wisdom.

Rider-Waite-Smith Deck (1909)

This is the transformation that defined The Hermit for modern tarot. Created by artist Pamela Colman Smith under Arthur Edward Waite's direction, this version elevated The Hermit from time to inner wisdom.

Key characteristics:

  • Old man on mountain peak
  • Lantern containing six-pointed star
  • Staff for support
  • Gray cloak representing invisibility
  • Snowy mountain peak
  • Focus on inner wisdom and solitude
  • Numbered 9 or IX

Symbolic revolution: Waite and Smith completely reimagined The Hermit. No longer about time or age, this became about inner wisdom, solitary seeking, and the journey to find your light.

The mountain peak represents the highest point of understanding. The lantern contains a six-pointed star (the Seal of Solomon), representing divine wisdom. The gray cloak represents withdrawal from the world. The staff represents the journey and support of experience.

This version asks: What if wisdom isn't about age, but about seeking? What if truth is found not in time, but in solitude?

Thoth Tarot (1969)

Created by Aleister Crowley and painted by Lady Frieda Harris, the Thoth deck presents The Hermit as a cosmic principle of inner light and spiritual seeking.

Key characteristics:

  • Figure holding lantern with serpent
  • Rich symbolism of inner light
  • Virgo symbolism prominent
  • Focus on spiritual wisdom and inner light
  • Numbered IX

Symbolic depth: Crowley's Hermit is the inner light—the wisdom that comes from within, the truth found through solitary seeking.

The serpent in the lantern represents wisdom and transformation. The Hermit is the guide who has found the light and now shares it with those ready to seek.

Crowley wrote: "The Hermit is the Spiritual Guide." The wisdom isn't external—it's the inner light that guides the soul.

Modern Interpretations (1970s-Present)

Contemporary tarot has exploded with diverse interpretations of The Hermit, each reflecting different cultural perspectives and spiritual philosophies.

Wild Unknown Tarot (Kim Krans)

The Hermit appears as a turtle—representing slow wisdom, patient seeking, and the journey inward. Emphasizes The Hermit's connection to patient wisdom.

Modern Witch Tarot (Lisa Sterle)

Contemporary figure in solitude, seeking wisdom in modern context. Brings The Hermit into accessible, contemporary practice.

Afro-Brazilian Tarot

The Hermit as Obaluaê, Yoruba deity of healing and wisdom—divine solitary healer, wise elder, patient teacher.

Tarot of the Divine (Yoshi Yoshitani)

The Hermit as various wisdom deities from world mythology—emphasizing universal themes of solitary seeking across cultures.

Symbolic Elements Across Traditions

The Figure

Medieval: Old man with hourglass
Marseille: Old man with lantern
Rider-Waite: Hermit on mountain peak
Thoth: Figure with serpent lantern
Modern: Various representations of wisdom-seeker

The Lantern

Medieval: Not present (hourglass instead)
Marseille: Simple lantern
Rider-Waite: Lantern with six-pointed star
Thoth: Lantern with serpent
Modern: Sometimes present, often symbolic

The Staff

Medieval: Walking stick
Marseille: Staff for support
Rider-Waite: Staff representing journey
Thoth: Staff of wisdom
Modern: Sometimes present, often reimagined

The Setting

Medieval: Simple background
Marseille: Minimal setting
Rider-Waite: Mountain peak
Thoth: Cosmic background
Modern: Various settings representing solitude

Evolution of The Hermit's Number

The Hermit has consistently been numbered 9 (or IX) across traditions:

Medieval: IX - the ninth card

Marseille: IX - representing completion

Rider-Waite: 9 or IX - the number of wisdom

Thoth: IX - spiritual completion

Nine is the number of completion, wisdom, and the hermit's solitary journey to truth.

What The Art Reveals

Across five centuries and countless decks, certain truths about The Hermit remain constant:

  • They always involve wisdom—whether through time, age, or seeking
  • They represent solitude—whether withdrawal or independence
  • They involve light—whether lantern, star, or inner knowing
  • They show seeking—whether for truth, wisdom, or understanding
  • They are numbered nine—the principle of completion and wisdom

The art evolves, but the archetype endures. The Hermit keeps demonstrating that wisdom comes from within, that solitude serves a purpose, and that truth is found through seeking.

Choosing Your Hermit

When selecting a tarot deck, pay attention to how The Hermit is depicted. Different artistic interpretations will resonate with different aspects of your journey:

Choose Rider-Waite if: You want clear symbolic imagery and the classic wisdom-seeking interpretation.

Choose Thoth if: You're drawn to spiritual light, cosmic wisdom, and Crowley's philosophy.

Choose Marseille if: You prefer traditional imagery and want to connect with the solitary seeker aspect.

Choose modern decks if: You want representation that reflects your culture, identity, or contemporary understanding of wisdom.

Or collect multiple decks and notice how The Hermit speaks differently through each artistic lens. The archetype is vast enough to contain all interpretations.

The Hermit's Future

As tarot continues to evolve, so will The Hermit. Future decks will undoubtedly present new interpretations—perhaps The Hermit as digital detox, as mindful solitude, as the wisdom found in disconnecting to reconnect.

But regardless of how the art changes, The Hermit's essential message remains: Wisdom comes from within. Solitude serves a purpose. Truth is found through seeking. And the light you seek is already inside you.

The Hermit has been seeking wisdom for 500 years, demonstrating this truth. It will be seeking for 500 more. Because the principle it embodies is eternal: the answers you seek are within you, solitude leads to wisdom, and your inner light is your guide.

May you find your Hermit.
May its image speak to your wisdom.
May its solitude call to your seeking.
May you discover, through art, that you've always been The Hermit.

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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."