Tarot

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Tarot · Reflexión arquetípica

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The Lore · 1400s — Present

A tradition older than algebra

Northern Italy · Renaissance courts

Origin

The first tarot decks were painted in 1430s Milan as a card game for Visconti nobility — not for divination. Two centuries later, French occultists noticed the same 22 trump cards mirrored the Hebrew alphabet's 22 letters and recognized a hidden esoteric framework. By 1909, the artist Pamela Colman Smith and mystic A.E. Waite published what would become the world's most influential deck — the one your AI is reading from right now.

Timeline

1430
First hand-painted Visconti-Sforza deck for Milanese nobility
1781
Court de Gébelin links tarot to ancient Egyptian wisdom
1888
Golden Dawn esoteric order codifies tarot's mystical correspondences
1909
Rider-Waite-Smith deck published — becomes the global standard
2026
Astrael streams AI interpretations of the same 78 cards

The Masters

Bonifacio Bembo

15th c.

Painted the original Visconti-Sforza tarot

Antoine Court de Gébelin

18th c.

First to argue tarot's esoteric origins

A. E. Waite & P. C. Smith

1909

Designed the universal Rider-Waite deck

Aleister Crowley

1944

Created the Thoth deck — the modernist evolution

Why it matters today

Tarot endures because its 78 archetypes encode universal human situations: ambition (Wands), love (Cups), conflict (Swords), and the material world (Pentacles). Each draw is a Rorschach inkblot that bypasses your conscious defenses and reveals what you already know but won't admit.

78 cards · 22 major archetypes · 4 elemental suits · infinite combinations

Did you know?

Carl Jung used tarot as a tool for accessing the collective unconscious. He believed the cards "work" not because they predict the future, but because they reveal hidden patterns in the present.

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