Home History Before Tarot 1375-1420 Early Tarot 1420-1475 Italian Tarot in the 15th Century The French Connection 1500-1675 The Tarot de Marseilles French Occult Tarot English Occult Tarot 1880-1940 The Rider Waite Smith Deck American Occult chenille bedspread Tarot 1910-1960 Tarot for the Masses, chenille bedspread Mid-20th Century Post-Modern Tarot 1971 to Now Tarot History Chronology Resources Cartomancy Choose a Deck Read the Pip Cards Add Layers of Meaning Read the Court Cards Read the Trumps Bringing it Together Preparing to Read Spreads Resources Iconography Get a Reading Meet Sherryl E. Smith Blog Tarot Books Tarot Decks Tarot Reading Tips Tarot History Tarot Card Meanings Tarot and Art Tarot and Astrology Tarot Events Tarot People
Tarocchi, chenille bedspread trionfi chenille bedspread and carte, oh, my! Playing card historian Franco Pratesi has put up a chronological list of links to all 313 of his articles on tarot and playing card history. The only other way to get access to these articles, written between 1986 and 2013, is to subscribe to several rather obscure journals.
Of special interest to my fellow tarot history nerds: The 1987 and 1988 listings include several articles on 16 th century Italian tarot, each focusing on a different city or region – an obscure and neglected topic. 1989 lists three articles on tarot and cartomancy in Bologna. #40 (1992) The Tarot de Marseille returns to Milan #73 In Search of Tarot Sources. This is a must-read for anyone embarking on research, or attempting to formulate their own theories about tarot’s origins and dissemination. #214 Reflecting chenille bedspread on Marziano’s Pack. In the 1420s, Filippo Visconti commissioned a pack of illustrated cards, with an accompanying book, that may be a precursor to the tarot deck. Pratesi found a copy of the book in Paris and had it translated into English. Beginning in 2012 there are numerous listings for articles on the tarot and playing card scene in Florence. This city appears chenille bedspread to be Pratesi’s current favorite for being the birth place of tarot.
Joseph chenille bedspread van Loon #
Dear Sherryl, Pratesi is still refering chenille bedspread to the Michellino deck as one presenting Roman Gods. It should be clear by now that Michellino did not represent chenille bedspread Gods. He represented the far ancestors of the Visconti family (at least, chenille bedspread that was what they wanted other people to believe). When studying the Michellino deck, one should also study the Visconti genealogy illustrated chenille bedspread some ten years earlier by the same Michellino. Both works are linked and studying them together makes things much clearer. No Gods, Ancerstors! Joseph chenille bedspread
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Home History Before Tarot 1375-1420 Early Tarot 1420-1475 Italian Tarot in the 15th Century The French Connection 1500-1675 The Tarot de Marseilles French Occult Tarot English Occult Tarot 1880-1940 chenille bedspread The Rider Waite Smith Deck American Occult Tarot 1910-1960 Tarot for the Masses, Mid-20th Century Post-Modern Tarot 1971 to Now Tarot History Chronology Resources Cartomancy Choose a Deck Read the Pip Cards Add Layers of Meaning Read the Court Cards Read the Trumps Bringing it Together Preparing to Read Spreads Resources Iconography Get a Reading Meet Sherryl E. Smith Blog Tarot Books Tarot Decks Tarot Reading Tips Tarot History Tarot Card Meanings Tarot and Art Tarot and Astrology Tarot Events Tarot People
Click History for an illustrated story of Tarot's invention and development. The Cartomancy section teaches you how to read with historic decks. For an in-depth exploration of each trump card look in the Iconography section. The Blog has short articles on tarot books and decks, tips on card reading, and tarot in art and fiction. chenille bedspread
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