(Salem Tarot)
The designs of the 22 cards in the Major Arcana can be traced back as
far as 1440, when the first known deck appeared in Italy. The 3 decks
called the "Visconti Trumps" are generally regarded as the "forefathers"
of the decks that are widely available today. It is believed that they
were originally created as a game for Nobles. It is not until centuries
later that the cards reemerged, this time as a tool of divination. In
the latter half of the 15th century, the cardmakers in Marseilles,
France began to standardize the Trumps. Before this organized
production, those who played the Trumps could dictate which they wanted
to include, and which they wanted substituted or eliminated. Certain
cards; Death, the Devil, and the Tower in particular; were considered
offensive by the more conservative Nobles. These images caused religious
leaders to attempt to ban the Trumps.
The first detailed
reference to the Trumps of the Tarot is in the form of a sermon. This
sermon, given by a Franciscan friar in Italy sometime between 1450 and
1470, contends that the Trumps were invented and named by the Devil. It
condemns the use of the cards, and generally credits them with the
triumph of the Devil. According to the friar, the Devil wins through the
loss of the souls of those who play what was then, quite probably,
nothing more than a simple game.
The rebirth of the Tarot, and
its beginnings a means of divination, are attributed to Antoine Court de
Gébelin in 1781.He believed it was Egyptian in origin, and that it
contained mystical knowledge that had been purposefully encoded in the
symbolism of the Trumps. Specifically, he theorized that the cards were
the key to lost Egyptian magical wisdom written by Thoth, the Egyptian
God of inspired written knowledge. The Trumps themselves began to
noticeably evolve from this point forward. Changes were thought to have
been introduced by the different secret societies who produced the
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