How To Read Marseille Tarot

The Tarot de Marseille is a tarot deck that was created in France in the 1700s. Its name comes from the fact that it was specifically born in the French province of Marseille.

Originally, the characters on these cards were wood printed and had few colors. This deck was among the very first of its kind, therefore it stands to reason that it is considerably simpler than others.

A Marseille tarot deck is what?

The Tarot of Marseilles, which is still made today, is a typical design of 78-card pack of tarot cards with Italian suits that was highly well-liked in France during the 17th and 18th centuries for use in tarot card games. Before spreading to a large portion of France, Switzerland, and Northern Italy, it was probably invented in Milan. Many later tarot packs draw inspiration from this pattern. The International Playing-Card Society recommends Tarot de Marseille, even if it allows the two English titles as alternatives. The name is also occasionally spelled Tarot of Marseille. Despite the fact that today’s customised cards are made for this purpose, it was the pack on which the occult use of tarot cards was initially founded.

What constitutes a proper tarot reading?

Tarot readings typically proceed in the following manner after that:

  • You must first pose a query to the card deck. It ought to be unambiguous and open-ended.
  • It’s time to shuffle once you have the question in your head.
  • Draw a card (s).
  • Lay your chosen card or cards in your spread face down after making your selection.

Which deck of tarot does Jodorowsky use?

He said that the Tarot de Marseille was the sole reliable tarot, according to Mr. Jodorowsky.

So he started anew from scratch. He gave away his collection and started studying the Tarot de Marseille, a renowned tarot family with origins in the 16th century, obsessively. He eventually attained the rank of “black belt,” to use a metaphor from the dark arts. But he said that his constant frustration came from his inability to locate the ideal Tarot de Marseille deck.

The Marseille Tarot dates back how long?

In his workshop, Nicolas Conver engraved the TAROT OF MARSEILLE in 1760. The Tarot of Marseille has been restored by PHILIPPE CAMOIN, a member of the House who has carried on the tradition, following years of mutually beneficial historical research with Alejandro Jodorowsky.

IVORIIER ZAHM

For many years, your family has published the Tarot of Marseille in Marseille.

Yes, we have for many generations. PHILIPPE CAMOIN The Camoin factory was founded in 1760, according to records. Our family’s company was started by Nicolas Conver, a master card maker and engraver for the king’s court.

PETER CAMOIN

The geographical and historical roots are intricate. The majority of historians concur that the Tarot originated in Italy in the 14th century. But Alejandro Jodorowsky and I found that the Tarot of Marseille actually came into existence in the first century, not the 13th or 14th.

PHILIPPE CAMOIN Yes, countless years of study. I had to educate myself on all cultures and religions. I also discovered a link to the Coptic Orthodox Church, which was established in Egypt during the early centuries of Christianity. I even managed to show that there is a link to Mary Magdalene. I’m releasing a 600-page book on the exact same topic.

IVORIIER ZAHM

Was Tarot in some way made popular by the humanist fervor of the Italian Renaissance?

Yes, it is similar to the Apocryphal Gospels, which vanished during the fifth century and reappeared at the beginning of the 20th century. PHILIPPE CAMOIN The Tarot was extremely well-liked throughout the Renaissance, although more as a game than for its occult iconography. Although many people were interested in Tarot during the Renaissance, this does not imply that the Tarot was actually created at that time.

Did people at that time solely utilize the Tarot for divination, or did they also have other uses for the cards? OLIVIER ZAHMD

PETER CAMOIN

They may have been employed for divination later, around the 19th century, according to historians.

PETER CAMOIN

The Tarot offers metaphorical and mental support for visualization and meditation. It enables communication with the divine.

Which Tarot deck is the oldest?

The origin of playing cards is unknown, although they initially arrived in Europe in the late 14th century. The earliest records, mostly of card games being outlawed, are from Berne in 1367, and they appear to have spread throughout all of Europe quite quickly. Little is known about the design and quantity of these cards; the only significant information is found in a text written in Freiburg im Breisgau in 1377 by John of Rheinfelden, who, in addition to other versions, describes the basic pack as consisting of the four still-in-use suits of 13 cards, with the courts typically being the King, Ober, and Unter (“marshals”), although Dames and Queens were already well-known by that time.

The suits of Batons or Clubs, Coins, Swords, and Cups were one of the earliest card patterns to emerge. These suits are still present in classic decks of playing cards from Italy, Spain, and Portugal, as well as in contemporary (occult) tarot cards that originally appeared in the late 18th century.

Between 1440 and 1450, in Milan, Ferrara, Florence, and Bologna, additional trump cards with allegorical pictures were added to the conventional four-suit pack, resulting in the first known tarot decks. The additional cards, known simply as trionfi, later became known as “trumps” in English. These new decks were known as carte da trionfi, triumph cards, and trionfi. The first recorded account of trionfi can be discovered in a 1440 Florence court document referring to the transfer of two decks to Sigismondo Pandolfo Malatesta.

The about 15 Visconti-Sforza tarot decks that were painted in the middle of the 15th century for the rulers of the Duchy of Milan are the oldest surviving decks of tarot cards. Martiano da Tortona likely wrote about a missing tarot-like pack that Duke Filippo Maria Visconti had ordered between 1418 and 1425 because the painter he describes, Michelino da Besozzo, left for Milan in 1418 and Martiano himself passed away in 1425. He spoke of a deck of 60 cards, 16 of which featured Roman gods, and four different bird suits. The sixteen cards were referred to as “trumps” because Jacopo Antonio Marcello said that the now-deceased duke had created a new and magnificent category of triumphs in 1449. The Sola-Busca and Boiardo-Viti decks from the 1490s are two other early decks that also had classical themes.

The Minchiate enlarged deck was in use in Florence. Along with conventional tarot imagery, this 97-card deck also features astrological signs, the four elements, and other themes.

Tarot was not routinely condemned in its early history, despite a Dominican priest railing against the sinfulness of cards in a sermon from the 15th century (mostly because of their usage in gambling).

The initial decks of tarot cards are said to have been few in number because they were all hand-painted. The printing press was the first tool that made mass production of playing cards feasible. During the Italian Wars, tarot began to spread outside of Italy, first to France and then to Switzerland. The Tarot of Marseilles, which has Milanese origins, was the most widely used tarot deck in these two nations.

What should you do initially while using a Tarot deck?

What to Do First:

  • Get out your tarot deck.
  • The cards are in your hand.
  • “Knock or tap the pile of cards numerous times while holding them in your palm to disseminate your energy throughout the deck.
  • Shuffle the cards completely.
  • The cards are divided into three heaps, which are subsequently reassembled into one pile.

How are tarot cards purified?

Here are four simple steps to purifying tarot cards.

  • Meditate. Simply unwind for a moment and get rid of all your thoughts.
  • Pass each card through the smoke after burning sage.
  • Place bay leaves within the deck of cards.
  • And for protection, place a crystal on top.

Essentially a pip tarot deck is similar to a deck of regular playing cardswhich is how Tarot began, before illustrations were added, to help one visualise the meanings behind each of the cards.

There are the face or royal cards, or the jack/page, king, and queen, in both pip Tarot decks and standard playing card decks. The pip cards are the final ten cards in each suit.

As a result, each minor suit’s cards 1 through 10 feature few images, much like a standard deck of playing cards.

As this is my first ever Pip Tarot deck, learning numerology and understanding what each suit represents seem to be two key factors that are helping so much.

Without as many visual cues to tell me what each card signifies, it’s also really challenging my understanding of the Tarot. When you first utilize pip cards after becoming accustomed to the traditional Waite-Smith Tarot method, you’ll undoubtedly realize how much you’ve visually memorized versus how much you know simply by thinking of a particular card.

Don’t rule out anything that comes to mind for you intuitively while reading any cards for divination. There’s a good chance you need to hear this message.