“Christening” The Significator – In Folk Cartomancy and “High” Divination

There is a tradition in Italian cartomancy (and possibly in other forms of folk cartomancy as well) that concerns the so-called christening of the querent’s significator. This is possibly done in order to have the divination be more certainly about the querent who comes for a reading.

Some systems, like my system for reading playing cards, have a fixed significator for the querent (the Queen or King of Clubs),1 while others (like the Vera Sibilla) do not. Either way, once the significator is known, a small magical operation takes place to connect the cards to the querent. This is what is called ‘battesimo’ or baptism/christening of the card.

There are many traditional ways of doing so. One is called ‘getting the card drunk‘ and it consists in taking the card that represents the querent and rotating it seven times (some say three times) while repeating the querent’s name each time. Another one I’ve seen used looks more similar to an actual christening, and it consists in again taking the querent’s significator and drawing a small cross symbol on the figure’s head with one’s thumb while saying “You are *name of the querent*”. There may be other systems I’m not aware of.

The practice of using a significator has largely fallen out of favor in modern tarot practice, mostly because reality has fallen out of favor with too many tarot readers, who no longer aim at describing it. This is not to say that a good tarot reader necessarily uses significators (I know some who are really good and don’t use them), but significators are a reminder that the tarot pack is a microcosm of reality, and reality contains actual people. Interestingly, many people recently became aware of the concept of significators because of traditional fortune-telling is experiencing a small resurgence.

However, it is noteworthy that the Golden Dawn and its offshoots and representatives, who greatly influenced modern tarot, did use significators. For instance, Waite recommended to select a significator even for the Celtic Cross in his Pictorial Key to the Tarot. The traditional Golden Dawn spread, The Opening of the Key, hinges on selecting a significator and counting and pairing the cards from it.

The Opening of the Key instruction recommends a brief ritual that serves to make the divination valid. This is not exactly the same as the christening I talked about, because it usually involves targeting the whole pack rather than just a card. However, I have seen GD diviners who take some time to connect the significator to the querent.

This is especially interesting to me because it shows a correspondence between folk magic and high magic (which is a distinction I don’t believe in, since ‘high’ magic is usually high only in the sense that it is practiced by people who are often high, and not just on their own farts). In part, this is because the GD, in his attempt at preserving and consolidating the whole Western tradition, often took folk traditions very seriously. In part, however, I believe that there must necessarily be such a correspondence, in as much as many streams often come from a single original spring.

MQS

  1. Same goes for the Bologna Tarot, where the Queen and King of Wands are the significators ↩︎

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2 thoughts on ““Christening” The Significator – In Folk Cartomancy and “High” Divination”

  1. „…traditional fortune-telling is experiencing a small resurgence.“ That’s encouraging.A big resurgence would be a pile-on like that horrible Lenormand bandwagon in the early 2010’s – I hope not to see that. But I don’t want it going extinct, either. I’m weary of trust fund kids saying third party readings are „unethical.“

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