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Tarot of Marseilles

Tarot of Marseilles

List Price: $18.00
Your Price: $18.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The CLASSIC Beginning wizard's Tarot
Review: As a student of wizardry, this is my first deck, which is particularly handy for later reference. The "Lovers" card here is not an Adam and Eve scene, and this tarot ditches all the biblical crap you come across these days, leaving pure French patriotism. The Magician card here may not look as good as he does in "The Vampire" Tarot or "Robin Wood Tarot", but the pope card is perfect( I am not a Christian, so I find this card annoying), while the High Priestess is absolutely lovely, and the "Death" card may cause mirth or fear, depending on your personality .Based on medieval woodcarvings, this is a great beginning Tarot deck for ALL students of witchcraft and wizardry.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Beautiful Cards, but pitch the book
Review: If this is your first deck of cards, please buy a book to go along with them. The book will teach you nearly nothing about tarot, how to read them or what they mean. The cards are absolutely beautiful though and made a fine addition to my collection.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Historic and Simple
Review: This deck is a reproduction of a centuries old Marseilles deck, rather than a new Marseilles-like deck.

The Marseilles deck is the historical predecessor to the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn's tarot deck, and it's influence can be seen on the Rider-Waite-Smith deck, the Crowley Thoth deck, and Wang's Golden Dawn deck.

The deck is worth it's price just to get a perspective or background on those prominent decks. I've found Wang's book on his deck a valuable addition.

The deck is artistically beutiful, yet simple - it has only four or five basic colours, and the pictures are simple and not loaded with symbolism (in contrast to the Crowley Thoth or the Haindl tarot).

It's interesting to look at the Camoin & Jodorowsky's restoration of the Tarot de Marseilles, which is based on hand drawn versions of the deck (the 'modern' version are based on the first printed versions, which had to use a small number of colours), which can be seen at (...).

This deck is very comfortable to shuffle - the cards are relatively narrow and long, and made of good material. An instructions booklet, which contains several spreads and card intepretations, which are quite different from those of Waite and Crowley, e.g. the 2s through 10s of each suit have no reversed meaning (the cards are symmetrical).

I've found the instruction booklet sufficient for people who simply want to read with the deck, but it covers nothing else.

There are some books on reading with the Tarot of Marseilles deck, so one can find plenty of literature to expand on the booklet. I agree with the previous reviewer that Sallie Nichols' Jung and Tarot is a good one, though be warned that :

- The book is about the major arcana only, and the minor arcana (pips and court cards) are not discussed.

- The book is psychological in nature, and it gives a lot of psychological insights, it is not a book about reading with the cards per-se.

For the historical perspective, there are several other good books, e.g. Dummet's books and the first two volumes of the Encyclopedia of the Tarot.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The CLASSIC Beginning wizard's Tarot
Review: This is a reproduction deck based on the original French deck. The book won't offer much info in the manner of learning tarot, so I would advise finding a book to go along with it. The cards are standard, well constructed and look very nice.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Fairly decent reproduction
Review: This is a reproduction deck based on the original French deck. The book won't offer much info in the manner of learning tarot, so I would advise finding a book to go along with it. The cards are standard, well constructed and look very nice.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Very Nice Re-Creation of a Classic Marseilles Deck
Review: To be honest, when I first saw this deck I didn't like it because the pictures are crudely drawn. The male figures on the Lovers and Chariot cards look sleep-deprived, and the figure on the World card is male rather than female. However, I came to appreciate the deck a great deal after researching its history. The deck is a re-creation of one published by Jean Dodal in Lyon, France around 1701 and is one of the oldest Marseilles designs currently on the market. Card titles are in English, and suits are Wands, Cups, Swords, and Coins (not Pentacles, as in occult decks). Coloring is based on the original artwork and is done in aqua blue, golden yellow, clear red, hunter green, and flesh tones.

The male figure on the World card depicts Christ. Some early Marseilles decks show the World figure as a nude, risen or ascended Christ--with halo, cape, scepter, and sometimes a leafy girdle. The Christ figure in the Dodal deck has a cape, scepter, leaf girdle, but no halo. (Somehow this figure metamorphosed into the female dancer that later became the Marseilles standard for this Trump.) Other interesting cards in the deck include Justice, who is winged rather than enthroned, and the Devil, who has a face on his belly and eyes on his knees (a depiction invented by medieval monks). The Dodal designs closely resemble the Payen tarot, circa 1760, pictured in Kaplan's Encyclopedia of Tarot, Vol. II, pg. 316.

Included with the deck is a small (4.75" x 2.5") 55-page instruction booklet that describes symbolism, traditional interpretations, and card combinations for each Trump, all of which I found interesting. However, some of the descriptions refer to occult symbols not found in the Dodal deck, and many of the card combinations are weird (e.g., Sun + Wheel indicates "persecution"). The booklet also lists interpretations and card combos for the suit cards, but these tend to be brief, nontraditional, and confusing. The only problem in doing readings with the deck is that you can't distinguish reversals for half of the pip cards (mostly wands and coins). For each of these cards, I marked a small dot with a permanent black marker in both "top" corners of the card to designate its upright position. This works well and detracts little from the designs.


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