Tag Archives: tarot tradition

Who’s the Little Sword Bearer?

Working on my review of Andrea Vitali and Terry Zanetti’s book on the Bolognese tarot I came across some interesting information that matches what some Bolognese tarot readers have confirmed.

If you read my section on the card meanings of the Bolognese tarot, you will see that I call the King of Swords “Spadino”, which literally means “little sword” or, more appropriately in this context, “little sword bearer” (the ‘bearer’ part is implied). This is because the people I have chiefly learnt from all agreed on this one name, independently from one another.

When we read Zanetti’s section on the divinatory meanings of the cards, though, we find that she calls the Page of Swords ‘Spadino’, identifying the figure with a young man. This is in contrast with the tradition I’ve received, whereby the Page of Swords is just a letter or message. Zanetti does say that the card can also sometimes signify a disquieting letter, but she chiefly identifies the Page with a young man.

The Page of Swords and the King of Swords in the Bolognese tarot / Tarocchino bolognese

I must say I find this option strangely titillating, as the Page of Swords, Spadino, would then be a male counterpart to the Page of Cups, Coppina, ‘little cup bearer’. The ending -ino, which in Italian points to something small or young, definitely fits the Page more than the King. Zanetti denies that this parallel between Coppina and Spadino exists, because the Coppina is supposed to be always negative (she’s traditionally the little floozy who snatches hubby away). But I have not found this to be the case: the Page of Cups is just a young (or younger) woman.

Ultimately, as my understanding and practice with the Bolognese tarot evolves, I know I will have to create my own deck (all traditional readers seem to have done so, preserving a part of tradition and integrating it with their own discernment and experience). Tradition is, after all, not something fixed, but something that is handed over to us (from the Latin tradere) and that we must administer intelligently.

Another interesting fact is that Zanetti emphasizes the intellectual aspect of Spadino, calling the card “young man and his thoughts”. This is in contrast with what I’ve learned from Germana Tartari, my teacher for the 50-card method, whose grandma taught her that the Knight of Swords can sometimes represent the King of Swords’ thoughts, in a kind of parallel to the Knight of Wands being the thoughts of the King of Wands.

The fact that so many traditions seem to exist should not discourage us from engaging with them. Keep in mind that the Bolognese tarot tradition evolved locally, with each city, village or even street having slightly different versions of it. Thus, this is less a matter of who is right or wrong and more one of systemic preference and whether integrating different system together leads to new systems that work, or whether it is best to keep them separate. This is something that can be established only through trial and error.

MQS

Tarot Encyclopedia – The Seven of Pentacles or Coins

(Note: this is a collection of the meanings attributed to the cards by some occultists in the past centuries. It does not reflect my own study or opinion of the cards. It is only meant as a quick comparative reference as I develop my own take.)

The Seven of Pentacles from the Builders of the Adytum (BOTA) tarot deck

Paul Foster Case (and Ann Davies)

The time period is the third decanate of Taurus, under the rulership of Saturn, May 11 to 20. Meanings:
Well-Dignified: slight gains, but of small account; much labor for small returns.
Ill-Dignified: something promising turns out badly; loss in speculation and unprofitable employment; financial restriction; unrealized hopes and
wishes.
Keyword: Loss
(From the Oracle of Tarot course)

A. E. Waite

A young man, leaning on his staff, looks intently at seven pentacles attached to a clump of greenery on his right; one would say that these were his treasures and that his heart was there. Divinatory Meanings: These are exceedingly contradictory; in the main, it is a card of money, business, barter; but one reading gives altercation, quarrels–and another innocence, ingenuity, purgation. Reversed: Cause for anxiety regarding money which it may be proposed to lend.
(From The Pictorial Key to the Tarot)

The Seven of Pentacles from the Rider Waite Smith tarot

Aleister Crowley

The Seven of Disks is called Failure. This suit gives the extreme of passivity; there is no positive virtue in it below the Abyss. This card is ruled by Saturn. Compare it with the three other Sevens; there is no effort here; not even dream; the stake has been thrown down, and it is lost. That is all. Labour itself is abandoned; every thing is sunk in sloth.

[…]

The number Seven, Netzach, has its customary enfeebling effect, and this is made worse by the influence of Saturn in Taurus. The disks are arranged in the shape of the geomantic figure Rubeus, the most ugly and menacing of the Sixteen. (See Five of Cups.) The atmosphere of the card is that of Blight. On the background, which represents vegetation and cultivation, everything is spoiled. The four colours of Netzach appear, but they are blotched with angry indigo and reddish orange. The disks themselves are the leaden disks of Saturn. They suggest bad money.
(From The Book of Thoth)

The Seven of Disks from the Thoth Tarot

Golden Dawn’s Book T

A WHITE Radiating Angelic Hand issuing from a cloud, and holding a white rose branch. Seven Pentacles arranged like the geomantic figure Rubeus. There are only five buds, which overhang, but do not touch the five uppermost Pentacles. Above and below are the Decan symbols, Saturn and Taurus respectively.

Promises of success unfulfilled. (Shewn, as it were, by the fact that the rosebuds do not come to anything.) Loss of apparently promising fortune. Hopes deceived and crushed. Disappointment, misery, slavery, necessity and baseness. A cultivator of land, and yet a loser thereby. Sometimes it denotes slight and isolated gains with no fruits resulting therefrom, and of no further account, though seeming to promise well.

Netzach of HB:H (Unprofitable speculations and employments; little gain for much labour).
Therein HB:HRChAL and HB:MTzRAL are ruling Angels.

Etteilla

Money
Upright. This card, as far as the medicine of the spirit is concerned, means, in its natural position: Money, Wealth, Sum, Coin. – Silver. – Whiteness, Purity, Candor, Innocence, Naiveté, Moon. – Purgation, Purification.
Reversed. Restlessness, Torment of spirit, Impatience, Affliction, Remorse, Concern, Solicitude, Care, Attention, Diligence, Application. – Apprehension, Fear, Distrust, Misgiving, Suspicion.

MQS

Bolognese Tarot – How to Tackle Combinations

Life is a recipe, and the art of living consists in large part in detecting the ingredients to know if and how to mix them differently. Divination is a mirror of life, and oracular systems usually have some kind of vocabulary to create descriptions of life.

In traditional divination by cards, each card carries small bits of meaning that must be mixed together to form coherent pictures. If divination mirrors life, then it stands to reason that the recipe for something in real life should be mirrored by a recipe for that same thing in the divinatory language. This is how all card reading systems I know work, and that’s how the Bolognese tarot works, with the exception of a couple of universal combinations with odd meanings (Angel + Devil = Good news or satisfaction; Sun + Moon = sorrow; Angel + Death = yes, confirmed).

Let us make an example. What are the ingredients of an inheritance in real life? I would say the ingredients are: death (no inheritance without someone croaking); family ties (usually we inherit from someone whom we are related to, though not always); the law (inheritances are generally regulated by the law and require a bureaucratic mechanism to be set in motion); material possessions (the things we inherit).

In the language of the Bolognese tarot, these ingredients correspond to the following cards: Death: Death; Family ties: Ace of Cups and/or Seven of Cups; The Law: Justice and/or King of Coins; Material Possessions: The Star and/or a money card.

Do we need all the cards to be present? It much depends on the context. If the question is directly about an inheritance, then we could do without many of these cards, while if it is a general reading then the more cards, the clearer the message. But we might also find other cards to flavor the basic recipe: the Moon is also connected with death (the realm of shadows); tears may sometimes be expected, so the Seven of Coins could come up; the court card of the deceased person could show up, etc.

Let us make another example. Let’s take surgery. What’s the recipe for surgery in real life? I would say: a hospital, a bed, a doctor, a cutting instrument. In the Bolognese tarot these same ingredients are: Hospital: The Tower; Bed: The Chariot; Doctor: King of Coins; Cutting instrument: Knight of Swords.

Again, there can be additions and variations. The doctor or the bed might be absent, while the Ten of Cups (blood) or the Moon (unpleasantness) or the Eight of Swords (suffering) might be present. A King or Queen of Swords may take the doctor’s place to show someone holding the knife. Just like my lasagne recipe might differ from yours, but it would still be recognized as lasagne, so the way the deck mixes the ingredients might vary slightly from time to time, but the broad picture remains the same.

One last example. Let’s take marriage. In many situations, a marriage requires the following ingredients: a commitment; love (let’s assume the best intentions in this case); a celebrant. The same ingredients are, in the language of the Bolognese tarot: Love: Love; Commitment: Ace of Wands or Ace of Swords; Celebrant: The Stranger. This is the basic recipe. But we might also expect the main significators to show up. A marriage is a celebration, so the Ten of Cups (fun) might be expected; the family life is certainly impacted, so some Cup cards could be there.

Once we start recognizing that life is made up of ingredients mixed together, it becomes easy (or at least easier) to see how the tarot might mix its own ingredients, the cards, to match the recipe. In many cases, while it is useful to reason out the combinations handed down by tradition, it is much easier to understand the basic principles and be flexible in our observations.

Ultimately, divination starts with logic, not with psychic powers, even though psychic abilities may occasionally be of help. The more we immerse ourselves in the logic of divination, the easier it becomes to decode its messages.

MQS

Bolognese Tarot – Some Examples of Combinations

This is a short selection from a much longer list. Although there are a couple of traditional combinations that are not easy to read unless studied beforehand (like Sun + Moon or Angel + Devil), most of the times the combinations of cards are logical. For this reason I have omitted many obvious combos: Page of Coins (words) and Love is sweet talk or words about love. Thank you very much. The following list is just an example: I will talk more about combining cards in the future. Plus, always remember that much depends on the context of the question and of the other cards. Be flexible. The comments in brackets are my own.

Ace of Cups + Ace of Wands = 1. married life 2. a business (the interpretation depends on the question or on the surrounding cards. For instance, + Love, married life; + Star, business)

Ace of Cups + Seven of Cups = things related to the family, or strong family or family-like relationship

Seven of Cups + Sun or Angel = protection, either from the family/friends or whoever is specified in the spread

Seven of Cups + Juggler = small city or your hometown (where you grew up)

Seven of Cups + World = large city or foreign city (not necessarily in another country though)

Ten of Cups + Love = falling in love, usually being at the stage where love is more fun than hard work (if also + Juggler or + Fool, fun but immature love)

Ten of Cups + Moon = there is no happiness (the Moon covers it)

Ten of Cups + Hermit = traditionally for women it shows their period being blocked, and if the Juggler appears it can show a pregnancy

Ten of Cups + Knight of Swords = 1. Hurting yourself and bleeding (with cards showing hospitalization, an operation) 2. More metaphorically, the fun or joy is cut short

Page of Cups + Ace of Wands = prostitute, according to tradition (it can still be like this nowadays, but look at the context of the question and the other cards. Also, prostitute can sometimes simply indicate a slutty individual, especially if no money card is involved)

Page of Cups + Juggler = son and daughter or a young girl

Knight of Cups + Angel = peace, agreement, reconciliation

Knight of Cups + Person card = the person is gentle, kind or agreeable

Ace of Wands + Love = a love relationship

Ace of Wands + Star = success at work or in business, can be the signing of a contract

Ace of Wands + Fool = “baronate” in Italian/Bolognese dialect, meaning fun sex without much thought

Eight of Wands + World = travel, removal

Eight of Wands + Hanged Man = 1. danger on the road 2. A road or path that ends abruptly

Eight of Wands + Juggler = A trip, but can have other interpretations in context

Ace of Coins + Tower + Hermit = serious money trouble and the need for making sacrifices (I guess instead of the Hermit any other troublesome card would suffice)

Ace of Coins + Ten of Coins = finances (in itself good finances, material well-being)

Ace of Coins + Ten of Cups = 1. prosperous finances 2. Can be a festive table

Ace of Coins + King of Coins = a banker or someone commanding lots of money

Seven of Coins + Fool + Moon = the blues

Seven of Coins + Ten of Coins = having little money

Ten of Coins + Ace of Cups = spending a little money on the family or home (I guess depending on the context it can also be a little money coming from the family or home)

Page of Coins + Queen of Coins = clarification or explanation (words that give you the truth)

Page of Coins + Juggler + Hermit = stuttering (probably mataphorical as well)

Knight of Coins + Page of Swords = 1. Post 2. Good news by message

Knight of Coins + Ace of Coins = good financial developments, money coming easily

Queen of Coins + Moon = hiding the truth, lack of clarity

Queen of Coins + King of Coins = expert

King of Coins + Justice = legal or bureaucratic matters (in itself can be a lawyer, notary, red tape, etc.)

King of Coins + Chariot = a doctor

King of Coins + Angel = 1. powerful protector (the one you’d ask to pull some strings, for instance) 2. A positive entity

Ace of Swords + Page of Swords = letter coming soon

Ace of Swords + Justice + Tower = prison (here the Ace of Swords is the handcuffs)

Eight of Swords + Ace of Swords + Devil = addiction (A bond to the devil for something that torments you. But it can mean being dependent from someone or something in a negative way)

Eight of Swords + Love + Devil = strong jealousy (probably pathological)

Page of Swords + World = message from afar (nowadays also probably messaging with people around the world)

Page of Swords + Moon = 1. secret correspondence 2. Letter whose content displeases us

Queen of Swords + Seven of Coins = affliction (obviously it can also mean a sad woman or a woman who causes sadness, depending on the context)

Queen of Swords + Devil = witch (or, more probably, a negative woman)

King of Swords + Juggler = an immature man or a young boy, or two sons

King of Swords + Justice = law enforcement

Fool + Juggler = bewilderment, disorientation

Fool + Ten of Cups = creativity or levity (in a medical context, since the Fool is the head and the Ten of Cups is blood, if there are negative cards it can indicate blood clots, brain strokes, etc.)

Fool + Hanged Man = estrangement from reality (+ Moon and/or + Seven of Coins, serious mental suffering)

Fool + Devil = excesses (either excessive character or using funky stuff. It can probably also indicate a negative situation that confuses us)

Juggler + Ace of Wands = conception or inception

Juggler + Moon + Devil = untrustworthy character, dangerous individual

Juggler + Page of Cups + King of Swords = children or young people

Juggler + Wheel = gambling (but it can mean other things in context)

Stranger + Fool = overturned expectations (I have experimented this combination as overturning the status quo as well)

Stranger + Moon = disappointment (unexpected bad things)

Stranger + Star = can mean a gift (unexpected object)

Love + Ace of Swords + Stranger = Marriage (the Stranger here is a priest or celebrant, the Ace are the rings. I think the Ace of Wands might be there instead of that of Swords. Without the Stranger it can still show a relationship or, if you’re single, love about to knock at the door)

Stranger + Devil + Moon + Ace of Swords = black magic (here the Stranger is the person celebrating the ritual, the Ace of Swords is the creation of magic bonds. I’m wondering if the Angel and Sun came up instead of the Devil and the Moon if it would indicate white magic)

Love + Hanged Man + Queen of Swords or King of Swords = cheating

Love + Temperance = lasting love

Chariot + Ace of Wands = sex

Chariot + Death = deathbed (but unless the question is specific or there are other cards it probably means something else)

Chariot + Moon = sickness

Justice + Ace of Wands = marriage, partnership or important contract

Justice + Moon = injustice (can probably be interpreted in various ways, such as something being wrong or unfair or mistaken)

Hermit + Person = person is indisposed (or blocked within the context)

Hermit + Temperance = lasting blockage

Hermit + Page of Wands or Knight of Wands = person is shy or solitary (has inner blockage)

Wheel + Stranger = chance meeting (probably with a person card next to it, otherwise maybe also unexpected chance)

Strength + Hermit + Moon = exhaustion, weakness, ill-health

Strength + Ace of Wands = person is very willful (I’ve noticed that the Ace of Wands next to a person card also makes them very willful)

Strength + Devil + Knight of Swords = fights

Hanged Man + Death = paralysis (literal or metaphorical)

Hanged Man + Tower = ending

Death + Wheel = what’s been set in motion cannot be stopped (probably also a change for the better, if the Wheel is upright and/or followed by positive cards)

Death + Tower = 1. Tragedy 2. Disruption

Death + Justice + Ace of Cups + Star = inheritance (the Star here refers to material possessions. I think a money card could be there instead as well.)

Temperance + Hanged Man = end of something (that lasted a while)

Temperance + Ace of Swords = short (short-ish) timeframe (here the Ace of Swords reduces the slowness of Temperance. It can probably also indicate a lasting bond.)

Ace of Coins + Temperance + Ten of Cups = finances slowly flourishing

Page of Coins + Devil = angry words, fights

Devil + Angel = great satisfaction or good news (regardless of the order of the cards)

Devil + Ace of Wands = great passion (primarily sexual but to be adapted to the context)

Tower + Chariot + King of Coins = hospital (other cards like the Moon, the Seven of Coins etc. may be present)

Tower + Chariot + Knight of Swords = surgery (I’ve already experimented this combination. The Queen of Swords was present indicating the female surgeon. Otherwise a King of Swords would be probably a man or the King of Coins would generically indicate the doctor)

Tower + Ace of Coins = financial sacrifice, financial limitations, bankruptcy with other bad cards

Tower + Fool + Moon = mental breakdown

Star + Ace of Coins = a well-paid job

Star + Temperance = stable job (if followed by cards of ending like the Hanged Man, temporary job)

Star + Queen of Coins = intellectual job (but I think it depends on the context)

Chariot + King of Coins + Star = therapy, prescription (here the Star indicates meds)

Moon + Person card = traditionally a dead person (someone who is no longer visible to us. But it needs to make sense in the context. It can probably also mean someone who is sad or is hiding something)

Moon + Eight of Wands + Hanged Man + King of Swords = danger on the road at night (probably due to a man)

Sun + Moon = Sorrow (if the cards are swapped around, with the Sun last, it is still sorrow but it is lessened or it goes away more quickly)

Sun + King of Coins = the doctor’s cure works (probably to be extended to any kind of professional help)

Sun + Devil or Ace of Wands = strong vitality or energy

Angel + Queen of Coins = faith

Angel + Page of Coins = prayer (probably also good/positive words)

Angel + Juggler + World = pregnancy (the World is the belly)

Angel + Death = yes, for sure (either to a question or to the cards preceding them)

World + Person card = person is not yet known or comes from far away (keep in mind that once upon a time even the next town was far away) or travels

World + Star + Ace or Ten of Coins = commerce (but it can probably mean other things too)

Three Aces together = “Tre assi son tralasci”, three aces equal abandonment. Radical change, leaving the old for the new.

Four Aces together = “Quattro assi fan fracassi”, four aces make a lot of noise. Destabilizing situations, chaos, pandemonium

Three Kings together = Success

Four Kings together = Triumph

Three Queens together = Problem*

Four Queens together = Failure*

Three Knights together = Good news, Speed

Four Knights together = Speedy good news, great speed

Three Pages together = gossip, talking

Four Pages together = slander, bad people

*Some (including one of my teachers) see the Queens less unfavourably, as delays (Queens, in this case, are probably seen as taking a long time to deliver the heir/result)

Bolognese Tarot – Introduction to Combinations

The Tarocco Bolognese is famous in Italy for relying heavily on combinations of cards. Rather than each card being a full picture, the cards are like small tiles in a mosaic, and need to be interpreted as a whole. No individual card can tell us much of anything. Let’s take the most favorable card in the deck, the Angel. In itself a wonderful card of protection and solution. Yet, alone, the Angel merely says “protection” or “solution” or “friendship” or any other keyword. We still don’t know if this protection exists, is longed for, is missing, is crumbling, or what effects it will have.

In this, the Bolognese tarot is much closer to the Sibilla or Playing Cards or other traditional oracles than to how tarot is often read nowadays (but regular tarot did use to be read in a combinatory manner in the past, before the Waite deck became popular and people started focusing on illustrations).

Since each individual card doesn’t say much by itself, the spreads tend to rely on a larger number of cards. The smallest traditional spread done with the Bolognese tarot is the thirteen card spread, which I have already shown, and which I will cover again. This is a small tableau of three columns of four cards (or four rows of three cards) plus one at the end. In this small tableau, the cards are interpreted in their interaction with one another.

Often, therefore, it is necessary to be able to see the big picture when interpreting the Bolognese Tarot. Occasionally, all cards are important and need to be considered. At other times, one or two cards come up in the spread that we don’t know how to interpret and don’t make sense to us, and there is no point in banging our head against them, trying to fit them into the interpretation at all costs: we should be able to see where the answer to our question lies, where the cards that are clearly forming a message are clustering, and go from there.

Look at the spread as if it were a bunch of people in central square. Some are there to meet other people and discuss something important or go somewhere interesting together. Others are simply sitting there because their wife kicked them out so she can finish waxing the floor in peace, so they just sit alone. They don’t have much to add. They are just there. Or, if you prefer the image of the mosaic I used earlier, some tiles go together to show the cool angel warding off the horde of demons, while other tiles are just vaguely blue and form the sky in the background.

This sounds complicated but it isn’t necessarily, once we have developed an eye for which cards tend to go together. Don’t fixate on rigid 1+ 1 + 1 + 1 +1 = 5 kind of combinations. In cartomancy, 1 + 1 +1 + 1 +1 often equals a bunch of crap if you are not careful. Who says that it’s 1 + 1 +1 +1 +1, and not 1 + 1 on one hand and then 1 +1 +1 on the other? Or 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 and then one left over? Who says the cards add up, instead of detracting from each other? The Angel is good, but followed by the Hermit and the Tower it is diminished. Strength makes you strong, but Strength followed by the Moon? Not so much.

Look at the flow and apply logic to it. See how the small meanings of the cards cluster together to form one coherent bit of mosaic. That coherent bit of mosaic may be next to another bit that is coherent in itself, without the two going together: in one corner you may have the scene with the angel warding off the demons, but right next to it you could have God creating Adam and Eve. Mix them the wrong way and you’ll have the angel warding off God, while the demons create Adam and Eve. Not good on the angel’s resume.

Also, don’t fixate rigidly on methods like “the first card is the noun and the second is the adjective” that were popular some time ago in the Lenormand community. I don’t use Lenormand, don’t know if that’s how they work, but it certainly doesn’t help with the Bolognese tarot. Again, the big picture is essential. Once we have that down, we can carefully add the details.

Finally, go for concrete life. The cards can talk about many things, from the most mundane to the most deep, including spirituality, psychology and so on. Do keep in mind, though, that the card readers of yore didn’t ponder too many questions we (often deludedly) consider deep. Not because they were dumb (they weren’t) but because they had other priorities: they were too occupied seeing if they could put away enough food for the winter or if the doctor would be able to come in time from two towns over on his rickety buggy to see what was wrong with little Guido.

Ordinary life is our starting point. It is in it that more spiritual or introspective topics are nestled. Without real life, spirituality falls into the void, failing to manifest, and it therefore remains an abstract collection of feel-good statements. But just because we start from real life doesn’t mean the tarot can’t talk about it in sometimes strikingly deep or metaphorical ways.

The tarot is highly metaphorical. Never forget that the old card readers had entire poems, folk songs, stories and even Bible books committed to memory. They were often capable of seing meaning in things we consider bland. Again, they were practical, not dumb. Life is highly metaphorical and symbolic if you know how to look at it, and the tarot is a good lens. Of course Truth (Queen of Coins) and Love can mean a true love, but what does it mean that your job is true? Think about it.

MQS

Bolognese Tarot – The Major Arcana

While the number of Minor Arcana differs from system to system, being usually comprised of the aces, court cards and a variable number of pips, the Major Arcana of Bolognese Tarot the are always the same: eighteen classically recognizable trumps (the regular ones, minus the Emperor, Empress, Pope/Hierophant and Popess/High Priestess), plus any number of Moors (from zero to all four, depending on the school of thought). For more information on the peculiarities of this deck read here.
NOTE: when I was kindly taught the 45-card system, the person who taught it to me considered the Moor card to be part of the suit of swords, possibly due to the spear. I include it in the Major Arcana simply because the four Moors are replacements for the four missing trumps.
NOTE 2: The Bolognese major arcana sequence is older than the one we are used to, and quite different. I stick to the sequence we know just to avoid confusion. It has no divinatory implications either way.

The Fool, The Juggler, The Moor, Love in the Bolognese Tarot

The Fool
A neutral card, with both positive and negative implications. It represents oddity and strangeness, but also carefreeness and thoughtlessness, and possibly confusion, uncertainty, mental trouble, lack of restraint, etc. Its meaning is very sensible to how the cards surrounding it modify it. It is always a bit of a question mark in many spreads, so much so that a teacher and friend said that there is a tradition, when the cards are unclear and the Fool is among them, to put the deck back together and knock on it, asking the Fool to be more clear. It is also a card of creativity and inspiration, if it makes sense within the context. For instance, it can show a line of work where one needs to follow their own sensibility, vision or intuition.

The Juggler
Again a neutral card that heavily depends on the others. It is mainly the significator of children. For this reason, it is important when we talk about pregnancies or the family, or when we explore someone’s childhood. It also has the implication of childishness or of things that are small and of little literal or moral value, or something that hasn’t found its footing or stability. For this reason, depending on the combinations, it can represent someone who is not to be trusted. It can also signify situations where we are like children, that is, powerless or passive. According to others it can also sometimes depict a beginning. According to most, it is also the card of pets.

The Moor or The Stranger
In the 45-card system I know, only one of these cards is used, namely the one with the earring and the spear. It represents a stranger, and therefore things that disrupt regular life, hence the ideas of surprise, unexpected events or meetings, hiccups along the way, etc. The other cards will tell us if the unexpected situation is good or bad. In itself it can be mildly annoying, as we tend not to like disruptions to our routine. It is also traditionally associated with a priest (oddly enough) and therefore with all kinds of ceremonies.1

Love
It means mostly what it says on the tin: love. It is possibly the single most important card in the single most requested type of consultation, i.e., about relationships. Whether the love is strong or weak, childish or mature, increasing or declining depends on the cards surrounding this one. It also represents one’s emotional world, emotions in general, and it is a card of good heart and good feelings. When not talking about love, it can show something that involves your heart (you are emotionally invested for good or ill), or something you love. In itself it is positive, signifying joy.

The Chariot, Justice, The Hermit and the Wheel of Fortune in the Bolognese Tarot

Chariot or The Bed
This is where the Bolognese Tarot is at its oddest. In the card’s design, the Chariot appears to be still, with the horses resting on each side, and the man looks unhappy. For this reason, the Chariot has been called the Bed card. This led to interpreting it exactly the opposite way as most would: instead of movement, stasis. In itself it is a negative card of tribulation, illness, static situations, tiredness, exhaustion. It can also signify nooky time with other cards (like the Ace of Wands). Mostly, though, it signifies illness, either literal or figurative (e.g., an unhealthy love, an unhealthy way of expressing anger, etc.) Still, some card readers retain the traditional idea of moving toward a goal quickly, and attribute it to the card when surrounded by good cards.2

Justice
Mainly this is the card of everything legal and justice-related. When talking about wills, fines, trials, bureaucracy and similar things, Justice is an important card, as the cards surrounding it can tell us if the situation is going to go well or not. It is also the card of fairness or of things that are just or ok, or equilibrated. It represents control, controlling, testing, etc. (including in a medical or academic sense). Justice next to a person can mean a just person, the person’s sense of justice, or someone wearing a uniform.

The Hermit
The Bolognese variant of this card has none of the introspective undertones that it has been attributed in other traditions. This is a bad card: it is called blockage (in italian Blocco or Incaglio, the latter word indicating a ship that has run aground). It shows big obstacles that delay a situation, whether indefinitely or momentarily depends on the rest of the spread. It is also the card of small ailments, either seasonal (cold, flu), obnoxious but not life-threatening (like toothache) or age-related. Obviously it can also indicate a character that is reserved or tending to isolation, as the blockage can be inner as well as outer.

The Wheel
This is the only card in the Bolognese tarot whose reversal is discernible and is read accordingly. Look to the left: if the crowned figure is ascending, the card is upright. If the young boy is ascending, it is reversed. According to some, when upright the Wheel represents good luck, when reversed bad luck. According to others, the Wheel represents movement and evolution of circumstances in general, but when upright it brings stability (stable good luck, decisive chances, etc) while when reversed it shows instability (unstable luck, with ups and downs, requiring effort). I have been taught according to the second school. Much also depends on the surrounding cards. Still, unstable luck is always more likely to turn into bad luck when surrounded by bad cards.

Strength, the Hanged Man, Death and Temperance in the Bolognese Tarot

Strength or Fortitude
Considered a very good card, Strength brings energy, decisiveness, steadfastness, focus in meeting obstacles and taking action. The cards following it, however, can block it or diminish it, so it is important to pay attention to them as well. In itself, when coming up at the end of a sequence or with positive cards, it shows a situation that is reliable (“strong”) or a person (if next to a court card) who is strong in a positive sense, usually to help us. When following negative cards it can indicate the ability to pick yourself up or stand your ground. It always indicates an active stance in the matter.

The Hanged Man or The Traitor
Here we enter the realm of history. In spite of the many mystical interpretations of the Hanged Man that started popping up during the occult revival, traditionally the card was inserted in the oldest packs to represent how traitors were punished in the Middle Ages (namely, by being hanged by a foot), and thus served as a cautionary tale to those playing tarot games never to betray the church or the government: “Know your place and stay there. Don’t try to overreach, or we’ll hang you upside down, so instead of moving upward in life, you’ll be going downward to hell.” That’s the message. The Bolognese tarot retains this old tradition, as the Hanged Man is mainly the card of treason. The treason can be literal (cheating, betrayal, etc.) or it can be metaphorical (a situation that betrays you, stabs you in the back when you are heading for the finish line, that makes you feel cheated on or sorely disappoints you). It is one of the worst cards in the pack, and it can show situations that end badly (like traitors in the past), or that are being upended. Even when no one is betraying anyone in particular, it can still symbolize life kicking you in the nuts, so you feel betrayed by it, as if you’ve ended up in a bad place or situation. Sometimes, in my experience, the upending can be good, but only when the querent’s expectations are negative and the cards following the Hanged Man are positive. In this case, the negative expectations are betrayed. In itself, though, the upending tends to be of the negative kind.

Death or Thirteen
This card is never actually called by its name, but by its number (tredici, i.e., thirteen). Different schools of thought interpret it slightly differently. It largely depends on the context though. Its first meaning is that of physical death, but this is rare and never by itself. In itself it shows the end of something. It can also indicate an inner sense of loss or death (“mortificazione”, which has the same root as the Italian “morte”, death, but indicates inner devastation and mortification). When, however, Death cannot be interpreted as ending, it can act as confirmation: “tredici conferma”, “the thirteenth card confirms”, or, if you will, “as sure as the fact we all die”. For instance, when it is surrounded by positive cards, it acts as a highlighter, confirming them. Same with negative cards: it makes them stronger and more important in the querent’s destiny. It can also indicate a situation that changes radically. Suppose, for instance, the cards preceding it are bad and those following it good: in this case it shows the end of the bad situation.

Temperance
The old diviners must have taken a look at this card and thought it looked like an hourglass, because the main meaning is that of time, the passage or flow of time. It is usually a slow card, which slows down the reading. It is connected with such concepts as waiting, patience, stagnation, but also of things that last a long time, take a long time or happen after a lot of time has passed. For instance, if it is followed by cards that show falling in love, it might mean that we will fall in love after a long time, while if it is preceded by cards of love it indicates that the love will last a long time. Use your commonsense. I have also found that, when it falls in the first few lines of a spread, the cards surrounding it, and especially those preceding it, tend to either talk about the past (a long time ago) or have started a long time ago and still drag on. Finally, some card readers connect it with the flow of water, and therefore water in general. I haven’t verified this connection but it does make sense.

The Devil, The Tower, The Star in the Bolognese Tarot

The Devil
In Italian “Diavolerie”, i.e., things that bedevil you. It is a deeply negative card, but with some redeeming qualities. In the main it is connected, traditionally, with anger, which depending on the context can range from annoyance to rage, due to things, people or circumstances bedeviling you. In general, though, it can indicate all passions that seize us and we fail to control. When falling with a person card, it is usually a sign the person is negative for us (depending on the context it can show jealousy or envy as well). When it describes a situation, it is bad for us. It is a card of excess all around, but it can indicate sexy energy, when with cards that talk about it, and it can also represent a strong energy when surrounded by very positive cards. Finally, it is one of the cards connected with magic.

The Tower
The image shows a burning building, and the main meaning is consequently that of places we’d rather not find ourselves in, mostly prison or hospital (or, if next to the Ace of Cups, our home). However, it can also signify a metaphorical prison, that is, a situation that is strongly limiting for us and prevents us from fleeing or moving freely, where we must sacrifice our hopes and aspirations or resources at least in part (“sacrificio” is one of the main Italian keywords for this card). Whether this card can indicate neutral or positive places is up for debate, as it depends on the school of thought. I guess in the appropriate context and with the appropriate cards it might, but generally, in my experience, it mostly shows negative places or negative situations. It can, however, show neutral places of authority (like a city hall, where there is an authority above us) or very large or foreboding buildings.

The Star
Another peculiar card. The main keyword is “roba”, i.e., stuff, especially referred to one’s objects, belongings and possessions. This is because the image shows three people holding some unspecified object. Some say they are the three Wise Men bringing gifts to Jesus, others say they are merchants. Either way, the emphasis is on objects and materiality. This is the card of business, belongings, objects, work (either one’s work life or working on something). It can represent study (which is the student’s work). In health readings it shows the objects used in medicine, that is, meds (and therefore therapy in general). This card can represent gifts when coupled with other specific cards. To summarize: business, work, stuff (material/practical life), study, gifts.

The Moon, The Sun, The Angel / Judgement and the World in the Bolognese Tarot

The Moon and the Sun
The reason I talk about these two cards together is that they complement each other. They are also called “le due rosse”, “the two red (cards)”. Their main meaning is temporal: the Moon shows things happening by night or in the evening, the Sun shows things happening by day. But they are also two polar opposites. The Sun indicates positivity, life, energy, clarity, success, happiness, vitality. When coupled with other cards it slants them positively. The Moon indicates negativity, death, lethargy, secrets, falsity, dissatisfaction, sadness. When coupled with other cards, it slants them negatively.

The Angel or Judgement
The best card in the deck, the Angel is the card of goodness, peace, friendship, protection. It brings solutions to difficult situations. However, if followed by cards indicating obstacles or impossibility, it can show the solution is delayed or impossible. When coupled with a person card, it can signify the person is an angel for us, helping and protecting us, or that they are good. It is also the main card connected with spirituality.

The World
Around the world“, “the world outside“. It is the card of travel and journeys, as well as of distance. It signifies movement, whether literal or metaphorical. Often it shows actual journeys, relocations and removals. The journey doesn’t have to be very long, however traditionally, when falling next to a court card it can show a person we don’t yet know (the person comes from the outer world, i.e., is not part of our daily life), although, depending on the context, it can also show someone who travels or someone who lives distant from us. It can indicate a stranger, though again, how much of a stranger depends on the context. It shows situations that are open, in motion, and it gives the sense of something big or large or important (as opposed to the Juggler, which is something small). It can be symbolic of life (the great journey). Finally, some attach the idea of something recurring to it (like recurring thoughts, etc.)

MQS

  1. In other reading systems with more cards, where more Moors are used, the priest is often associated with the Moor with the hat, who is also the doctor. ↩︎
  2. How positive or negative (or neutral) the card is depends on the system as well. In systems with more cards, where there is a specific illness card (the Moor with the hat) the Chariot is more neutral. In the 45-card system, it is more negative. ↩︎

Bolognese Tarot – Master Post

Here I gather all my writings about my explorations with the Tarocco Bolognese or Tarocchino Bolognese (literally Small Bolognese Tarot), a traditional Northern-Italian fortune-telling deck. There are traditionally several ways of using this deck, almost all of which require the reader to create a reduced pack (hence the ‘small tarot’). The most common systems use a reduced pack of 50 or 45 cards, with the 45-card deck being probably older. Although I quickly introduce both systems, I currently focus mainly on the 45-card system.

Introductory Articles

A Quick Intro to the Bolognese Tarot
Introduction to the 50-card Deck
Introduction to the 45-card Deck
Making Sense of the Various Systems as a Beginner

Card Meanings and Combinations

Meanings of the Minor Arcana
Meanings of the Major Arcana
Introduction to Combinations
Some Examples of Combinations
How to Tackle Combinations

Spreads

Great Spread N°1: The Bed Sheet
Great Spread N° 2: The Staircase
Great Spread N° 3: The Significator Spread
The Thirteen Card Spread
The Cross Spread (with Example)
Three Variants of the Couple’s Spread

Book Reviews

Germana Tartari’s Tarocchino Bolognese. Storia Divinazione
Maria Luigia Ingallati’s I Tarocchi Parlano
Rossella Giliberti’s Manuale Pratico di Lettura di Tarocchino Bolognese
Lia Celi’s Manuale di Cartomanzia

My Articles on the Bolognese Tarot

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The Main Problem (Cross Spread Example Reading)

Those who read my Sibilla and Playing Cards sections are probably familiar with the cross spread I use with those decks. Turns out, the same spread can be used with the Bolognese tarot.

This querent is the same I read for here and had a crush on a colleague. The cross spread I present here is a prequel to that spread.

A general cross spread

The cross spread may be used to look at a person’s life in general or to answer general questions (“tell me about my career”). In this case it was general. I’ll keep it short:

  1. Above the head position (what the querent would like or is thinking about): King of Cups, Juggler/Magician, Ace of Cups. This screams “pucture perfect family” with a husband (King), children (Juggler) and a hearth (Ace of Cups)
  2. Under her feet (what she doesn’t want or what she has trouble with): Love, Ace of Wands and Eight of Wands. Love and Ace of Wands together represent a relationship, and the Eight of Wands is a road or path, so it could indicate a love life. Note that this position could indicate that she doesn’t want a relationship, but considering what the cards on her head are saying, it is more plausible that she wants a relationship but has trouble obtaining it.
  3. To her left (past or present): Star, King of Coins, Death. This position talks about work. After checking with her, I discovered she had lost her job in the months prior to the reading and had found a new one.
  4. To her right (near future): Page of Swords, Fool, Seven of Cups. This speaks generically about confusing messages concerning the home.
  5. Center (in her heart): Angel/Judgement, Devil and King of Wands. Well, Angel and Devil together represent, traditionally, great satisfaction, connected to a man. This seems to be the cards’ polite way of saying she’s turned on by him.
  6. To the side (for her): Ace of Swords, Knight of Coins, Ace of Coins. Speedy positive news about money. Probably connected to the near future position, but we didn’t look further into it.

And the reason we didn’t look further into it is that the most important cards (those comprising the central column, i.e., above, heart and below) are all connected with love. This is how the spread about the colleague was born. Note, however, that this spread, when done in general, can give us brief messages about the most disparate fields of life, and it is up to us then to expand on them by either adding cards or doing other spreads.

MQS

Recovery From Surgery (Example Reading)

Plenty of readings this time of year, and an above average number on health issues. An acquaintance of ours, an elderly man whom we know from theater, had to go under the knife for major surgery, my husband and I decided to see how the situation would evolve. I used the 45-card Bologna tarot system and the 13 card spread.

Recovery from Surgery. Spread with the Bologna

I am immediately reassured by the lack of dramatic sequences. However, the first row is interesting: Death can indicate a major turning point, the Chariot is the bed card in this tradition, and the Tower is a place of suffering, such as a hospital. Death and Tower can be a tragedy or painful situation. Technically you’d need the Knight of Swords together with the Chariot and Tower to predict surgery, but considering I didn’t even need to predict it (I knew it already) the cards are being remarkably specific.

We also find that his thoughts (the Knight of Wands) are not at ease (the Fool and Justice, that is, irrgularities on his idea of what is right). It could simply indicate bewilderment at the question of how he is going to move on from this. Note that the Tower weighs his thoughts down.

In the following row we see that there is love and care around him (Seven of Cups and Love) and that this care is going to have to last quite a while (Temperance). The recovery is going to take its time. Finally, the cards reassure us that the people and doctors taking care of him mean well and know what they are doing (the Queen of Coins is the truth, wisdom and knowledge).

All in all it could certainly have been worse.

MQS

The Great Spreads With the Bologna Tarot – The Significator Spread

This is the last full-deck spread I am aware of that can be performed with the Bolognese Tarot. It doesn’t have an Italian name. The person who taught it to me, together with the 45-card method, just calls it “la stesa”, “the spread”. For her, this is THE spread, while all other systems, whether large or small, are in a separate category, as it were. My other teacher, who taught me the 50-card spread, is also aware of such a way of laying out the cards, but doesn’t have a name for it either.

To distinguish it from the other spreads I call it the Significator Spread, because it requires you to lay out a significator for the querent on the table, as opposed to the bed sheet spread and the staircase spread, where the significator remains in the deck.

In most regular readings, you are going to select either the King of Wands, for a man, or the Queen of Wands for a woman, though someone might ask to lay out the cards for someone else (e.g., a father would be the King of Cups, a daughter the Page of Cups, etc.) You may also choose to ‘christen’ the significator to connect it with the querent. Once this is done, you shuffle the deck, cut it, and then lay out the cards in the following manner:

141516Sign.272829
171819123303132
202122456333435
232425789363738
2610111239
13
4041424344

You may notice some similarities between this spread and the thirteen card spread, which also belongs to the same cartomancy tradition. Here is an example:

The Significator Spread using the Bologna tarot

In this case, the cards 1 to 13, that is, those underneath the significator, indicate either the past or the present of the querent, or sometimes the immediate future, if you’ve already discussed the querent’s past using other spreads. The cards 14 to 26 indicate what comes after (usually the nearer future), while the cards 27 to 39 show the further developments. Finally, the cards 40 to 44 can either give something upcoming and noteworthy or, according to others, simply be omitted from the spread. It is your choice. If you use the 50-card deck, you can add another row of five cards underneath.

As with the regular thirteen card spread, the central column of each thirteen-card cluster is more important, while the cards on the side either give details or may be ignored depending on the situation (after all, not all the cards in the deck are going to be read, otherwise everything would happen to everyone). Finally, remember that not every information you glean is going to be about the same topic, since this is a broad spread to tell a general future, before using shorter spreads to talk about individual topics.

MQS