Minor Arcana

Minor Arcana
King of Swords card from a Minor Arcana deck

The Minor Arcana (or Lesser Arcana) of occult or divinatory tarot refers to the portion of a Tarot deck that consists of 56 cards. The Minor Arcana are roughly similar to the cards found in a common deck of playing cards. They are distinguished from the Major Arcana (or Greater Arcana) of a Tarot deck which consists of 22 cards. The Major Arcana and Minor Arcana cards in combination form a complete Tarot deck and consist of 78 cards in total.

The Minor Arcana are divided into four suits, derived from the older Latin playing card suits most commonly named Wands or Batons, Cups, Swords, and Coins (also called Pentacles or Disks), although there are a wide variety of different names and suit symbols used. The cards can be used for divination by occultists. The Minor Arcana is related to the deck of 52 playing cards used in most modern card games.

Within the Minor Arcana there is another subdivision referred to commonly as The Courts or the Court Cards. This consists of the four character or personage cards that are in each suit of the deck; the Page, the Knight, the Queen, and the King. Contemporary playing cards do not include a Knight card, which accounts for why there are only 52 cards in a playing card deck. In some way the Page and Knight cards were merged to form the Jack in playing cards. Each suit of the Minor Arcana has ten cards numbered one through ten with the first card commonly referred to as an Ace. In addition to the ten cards there are the four court cards which make a total of 14 cards for each suit of the deck. The four suits in combination make up the Minor Arcana with 56 cards.

The reason for the distinction of Major Arcana and Minor Arcana in a Tarot deck stems from the perceived meanings that cards in each group have when used for divination. The Minor Arcana are said to represent more mundane aspects of life, including the people we meet which are represented by the Court Cards. Minor Arcana cards in contemporary Tarot decks are usually fully illustrated, a tradition that began with the Rider-Waite Tarot deck.

Contents

Symbolism

Often, the suits are associated with one of the four classical elements, with a common set of associations being Wands with fire (or air), Cups with water, Swords with air (or fire), and Coins with earth.[citation needed] Other associations are possible.

Latin suit[1] Element Class Faculty
Wands (Staves or Batons) Fire Peasantry Creativity and will
Coins (Pentacles) Earth Merchants Material body or possessions
Cups (Chalices) Water Clergy Emotions and love
Swords Air Nobility and military Reason

Each suit has 14 cards, being Ace (One), two through ten, Page, Knight, Queen, and King. The last four are called court cards, and may have different names in different decks. One common variation is the replacement of the page and knight with a prince and princess. There are Italian playing card decks which have a page, maid, knight, mounted lady, king, and queen.

Modern minor arcana decks often have the numbered minor arcana cards (Ace to 10 of each suit) named and numbered, although many resemble early decks in that there are no titles or numbers on those cards. The numbered minor arcana cards usually have the appropriate number of symbols for the suit depicted, and the court cards usually have the corresponding person depicted holding the symbol of their suit.

Modern divination decks, especially if based on the Rider-Waite tarot deck (circa 1910), will have a symbolic scene depicted on the numbered minors, although this was generally not the case before the Rider-Waite deck was published. Before this, with the exception of a handful of decks, the numbered cards of the minors showed a geometric arrangement of the suit symbols.

Cards

Wands

Pentacles

Cups

Swords

See also

References

  1. ^ Dee, Jonathan (2002). "Introduction to the Minor Arcana". In Liz Dean. Tarot, An illustrated guide. Silverdale Books. ISBN 1-856056-85-6. 

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • minor arcana — …   Useful english dictionary

  • arcana — [α: keɪnə] plural noun [treated as sing. or plural] (sing. arcanum) 1》 secrets; mysteries. 2》 either of the two groups of cards in a tarot pack: the twenty two trumps (the major arcana) and the fifty six suit cards (the minor arcana). Origin C16 …   English new terms dictionary

  • Arcana Jayne — Infobox webcomic| title = Arcana Jayne caption = author = Lisa Jonté url = http://www.girlamatic.com/series.php?name=arcanajayne status = Weekly began = ended = genre = Fantasy ratings = Arcana Jayne is a webcomic by Girlamatic editor and former… …   Wikipedia

  • Mystic Arcana — Cover of Mystic Arcana: Sister Grimm 1 (Jan 2008).Art by Marko Djurdjevic. Publisher Marvel Comics …   Wikipedia

  • Major Arcana — The Major Arcana or trumps are a suit of twenty two cards in the tarot deck. They serve as a permanent trump suit in games played with the tarot deck, and are distinguished from the four standard suits collectively known as the Minor Arcana. The… …   Wikipedia

  • Divinatory, esoteric and occult tarot — This article is about the use of tarot cards for divinatory and esoteric/occult purposes. For other uses, see Tarot (disambiguation). Tarot reading revolves around the belief that the cards can be used to gain insight into the past, current and… …   Wikipedia

  • Tarot — The tarot (also known as tarocchi, tarock or similar names) is typically a set of seventy eight cards, comprised of twenty one trump cards, one Fool, and four suits of fourteen cards each ten pip and four face cards (one more face card per suit… …   Wikipedia

  • Tarot of Marseilles — Tarot de Marseilles The Hermit or L Hermite Major Arcana from the early 18th century Tarot of Jean Dodal Style of Card : Tarot Origin: Marseille Designer: Anonymous; traditional Purpose: Recreation and Divination Structure: 22 Trumps or …   Wikipedia

  • tarot — /tar oh, ta roh /, n. any of a set of 22 playing cards bearing allegorical representations, used for fortunetelling and as trump cards in tarok. [1590 1600; back formation from taros (pl.) < MF < It tarocchi, pl. of tarocco] * * * Sets of cards… …   Universalium

  • Motherpeace Tarot — The Motherpeace Tarot is a feminist inspired deck of tarot cards, in which most of the figures are female. It was created in the late 1970s by two women from Berkeley, California, Karen Vogel and Vicki Noble. The idea for the deck came to them in …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”