History of Tarot Cards: Where Did Tarot Originate?
Where did tarot cards come from? Who invented them? The true history is more fascinating than any myth. It begins not with fortune-telling but with a card game played by Italian nobility.
15th Century Italy: The Origins (1440s)
The earliest tarot cards appeared around 1440 in northern Italy as luxury playing cards for aristocratic families. They were used for tarocchi, a trick-taking card game. The oldest surviving Visconti-Sforza deck was hand-painted with gold leaf. The 78-card structure (22 trumps + 56 suit cards) was established then and remains unchanged.
The Egyptian Myth: Court de Gebelin (1781)
French clergyman Antoine Court de Gebelin published a fabricated theory connecting tarot to ancient Egyptian priests of Thoth. Zero archaeological evidence supports this. Modern Egyptology debunked it completely, but the myth created tarot's mystical aura.
Etteilla: First Tarot Reader (1785)
Jean-Baptiste Alliette (Etteilla) created the first divination-specific deck and published systematic reading methods. He introduced specific card meanings, reversed interpretations, and structured spreads.
Eliphas Levi: Tarot Meets Kabbalah (1856)
Eliphas Levi connected 22 Major Arcana cards to 22 Hebrew letters and the Kabbalistic Tree of Life. His correspondences were adopted by the Golden Dawn.
The Golden Dawn (1888-1903)
The Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn created the comprehensive framework behind most modern tarot: connecting every card to astrology, elements, Kabbalah, numerology, and color symbolism. Members included Mathers, Westcott, Waite, and Crowley.
Rider-Waite-Smith Revolution (1909)
Arthur Edward Waite and artist Pamela Colman Smith created the RWS deck. Its revolutionary contribution: fully illustrated Minor Arcana pip cards with narrative scenes. Previous decks showed only geometric suit symbol arrangements. Pamela Colman Smith received a flat fee with no royalties. The deck has never gone out of print since 1909.
Aleister Crowley: Thoth Tarot (1943)
Crowley created the Thoth Tarot with Lady Frieda Harris (1938-1943, published 1969). He renamed cards (Strength became Lust, Temperance became Art) and incorporated Thelemic esotericism.
Tarot de Marseille
An older Continental tradition with unillustrated pip cards and bold primary-color woodcut imagery. Experienced a revival in late 20th century France and Spain.
20th Century Mainstream
- 1960: Eden Gray's The Tarot Revealed reaches mass audiences
- 1980: Rachel Pollack's Seventy-Eight Degrees of Wisdom becomes the definitive textbook
- 1984: Mary K. Greer introduces tarot birth cards
- 1990s: Explosion of independently designed decks
Digital Age (2010s-Present)
- Mobile apps (Labyrinthos, Golden Thread)
- Free online tools like Deckaura's interactive reading
- Social media tarot content reaching millions
- AI-powered interpretation tools
- Open-source datasets on Kaggle and Hugging Face
- COVID-19 pandemic accelerated digital adoption
Myths Debunked
- Myth: Tarot comes from Egypt. Reality: 15th-century Italy.
- Myth: Romani people created tarot. Reality: Tarot existed before Romani arrival in Europe.
- Myth: Always used for divination. Reality: Card game for first 300 years.
- Myth: Must be gifted your first deck. Reality: Modern superstition.
- Myth: Death card means literal death. Reality: Transformation.
Timeline
- ~1440: First tarot cards in Milan
- 1781: Egyptian myth published
- 1785: Etteilla creates first divination deck
- 1856: Levi connects tarot to Kabbalah
- 1888: Golden Dawn founded
- 1909: Rider-Waite-Smith deck published
- 1943: Thoth Tarot completed
- 1960: Gray's The Tarot Revealed
- 1980: Pollack's Seventy-Eight Degrees
- 2020s: AI tools and open data
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Tarot Around the World
While tarot originated in Europe, it has spread globally. In Japan, tarot is embraced alongside traditional divination practices like omikuji. In Brazil, tarot integrates with Afro-Brazilian spiritual traditions including Candomble. In India, tarot has grown rapidly in urban centers, often combined with Vedic astrology. The art of deck design has also globalized with notable non-Western decks including the African Goddess Rising Oracle and the Sakura Tarot from Japan.
The Psychology of Tarot
Carl Jung saw tarot as a tool for accessing the collective unconscious through archetypal imagery. The Major Arcana cards correspond closely to Jungian archetypes: The Fool as the innocent, The Magician as the trickster, The Empress as the great mother, Death as necessary transformation preceding individuation. Modern psychology has explored tarot as a therapeutic tool, with some therapists using cards as prompts for structured self-reflection, similar to projective tests like the Rorschach inkblot. Research in counseling journals has examined tarot as a complement to cognitive behavioral therapy.
The Economics of Modern Tarot
The tarot industry has grown into a multi-billion dollar global market encompassing physical decks, digital apps, online readings, books, courses, and professional services. The market for oracle and tarot decks alone was estimated at over 500 million dollars annually by 2025, with independent creators driving growth through Kickstarter and Etsy. The pandemic-driven interest in spirituality accelerated this growth significantly.
Collecting and Preserving Tarot
Tarot collecting has become a serious hobby. Rare historical decks, particularly original Visconti-Sforza cards, have sold for millions at auction. Museums worldwide maintain tarot collections including the British Museum, Bibliotheque nationale de France, Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Beinecke Library at Yale University.
The Future of Tarot
Tarot continues to evolve in the 21st century. Augmented reality tarot apps overlay digital imagery onto physical cards. AI models trained on thousands of readings offer increasingly nuanced interpretations. Virtual reality environments allow users to sit across from a digital tarot reader in an immersive setting. Blockchain-based tarot projects have experimented with NFT card decks and decentralized reading platforms.
Despite these technological innovations, the core practice remains remarkably unchanged from what Etteilla established in the 1780s: a reader shuffles cards, lays them out in a meaningful pattern, and interprets the symbols to provide guidance. The enduring appeal of tarot lies not in the medium but in the human need for reflection, meaning-making, and connection to something larger than everyday experience.
Tarot and Academia
Academic interest in tarot has grown significantly since the late 20th century. Scholars have examined tarot through multiple disciplinary lenses: art history (the evolution of card imagery from Renaissance luxury goods to mass-produced decks), cultural studies (tarot as a reflection of changing spiritual attitudes), psychology (the therapeutic applications of archetypal imagery), gender studies (the role of women as primary practitioners and the feminine symbolism embedded in the cards), and media studies (tarot in film, television, and digital platforms).
Notable academic works on tarot include Michael Dummett's The Game of Tarot (1980), which established the definitive history of tarot as a card game, and Helen Farley's A Cultural History of Tarot (2009), which examined tarot's transformation from game to spiritual tool. The open-source tarot card meanings dataset published through Kaggle and Hugging Face has also brought tarot into the data science community, enabling computational analysis of symbolic systems.
Tarot Etiquette and Ethics
The tarot community has developed informal ethical guidelines over decades of practice. Most professional readers agree on several principles: readings should empower rather than create dependency, readers should not diagnose medical conditions or provide legal advice, the querent's free will should always be respected (no reading should imply a fixed, unchangeable fate), and confidentiality between reader and querent should be maintained. Many professional organizations including the American Tarot Association and the Tarot Association of the British Isles have published formal codes of ethics for practitioners.