The Tarot of Marseille has probably been invented in the 15th century in Northern Italy and soon after, appeared in Southern France. From the 19th century, it has inspired many other tarot decks but its drawings and some cards have often been changed, renamed or adapted. Until the eighteenth century, the Tarot has been a game of chance, and its profound meaning went away unnoticed. The Tarot of Marseille contains seventy-eight cards, divided into fifty-six Minor Arcana and twenty-two Major Arcana.
The fifty-six Minor Arcana in the four standard suits are identified as Batons, Swords, Cups and Coins. They are:
The Aces, The Twos, The Threes, The Fours, The Fives, The Sixes, The Sevens, The Eights, The Nines and The Tens. The Pages, The Knights, The Queens and The Kings.
Batons: growth, creativity, fire element
Swords: intellectual energy, air element
Cups: emotional energy, receptiveness, water element
Coins: physical energy, money, earth element
The twenty-two Major Arcana are The Fool, The Magician, The High Priestess, The Empress, The Emperor, The Pope, The Lover, The Chariot, Justice, The Hermit, The Wheel of Fortune, Strength, The Hanged Man, The Nameless Arcanum, Temperance, The Devil, The Tower, The Star, The Moon, The Sun, Judgment, and The World.
The Magician and Strength
The High Priestess and The Hanged Man
The Empress and The Nameless Arcanum
The Emperor and Temperance
The Pope and The Devil
The Lover and The Tower
The Chariot and The Star
Justice and The Moon
The Hermit and The Sun
They work by Pairs: (they add up to 21)
The Fool and The World
The Magician and Strength
The High Priestess and The Pope
The Empress and The Emperor
The Chariot and The Star
Justice and The Hermit
The Moon and The Sun
In the mid-1990s Jodorowsky worked with a descendant of the Camoin family, who printed the Tarot of Marseille since the 19th century. They worked and put together a 78-card deck, including the original detail and 11 color printing.
There are several ways to do a tarot reading and quite a number of patterns to use. It is a long process that needs a good memory and a lot of practice. Intuition is part of it, nevertheless the study of the topic can take a long time. The tarologist can’t be impartial as he has a country, a language, a family. He has a culture, some values and traditions and can’t be easily detached from them. He is ruled by his past, his experiences and his emotions as well. Tarot Reading isn’t only a divination practice, it is a tool for understanding ourselves, the others and the world around us!