Tarot and Number

This is a brief, beginner post about the numerical cycles and number relationships in traditional/classic Tarot de Marseille (TdM). [Please note I am not going to be talking about the western Kabbalah that is incorporated into Waite-Smith Tarot.]

Pythagoras the philosopher and mathematician

I started out studying ‘western’ or ‘Pythagorean’ numerology in relation to Tarot, just as my early Tarot teachers did, consuming books that described the qualities numbers until I knew them as entities. In this tradition, numbers are reduced to a single digit, except master numbers 11, 22 and 33 (albeit we don’t go to 33 in Tarot), and viewed in terms of human personality traits. One of my teachers, Angeles Arrien, would have us figure out our life path card and card for the year, based on our birthdate. It can be insightful but also limiting. I’ve had to unlearn a few things…

Ideally, one should study the literature, then forget about it. Too much rigid this=that can actually hinder your inner understanding of the cards. Remember they are mnemonic devices, so let the image demonstrate how it illustrates the number, rather than trying to apply concepts to the image and make it fit. Play with the numbers, think also about the geometry generated by the number (3= triangle, 4=square, 5 = pentagram etc).

Note that the cards use Roman numerals, though they seem to illustrate Arabic numerical ‘concepts’ . For example The Hermit, VIIII, resonates with 9, the spiralling number that always returns to itself…as it is with people who have a 9 life path, according to numerology. 4 looks so much like the symbol for Jupiter, that the Emperor is often equated with him, though in reality the Jupiter symbol is not the same as a 4.

hermit tarot card illustrating the concept of number nine

Look at the multiples and different combinations…
For example, Empress (3), Hanged Man (1+2) and World (2+1). What is going on in this triplicity that stems from the Empress?
What minor arcana cards resonate with major arcana  cards of the same numerical value? In what suit does the 5 resonate best with the Pope card?  Which 7 with the Chariot?

The visual manifestation of the individual number is only one aspect, but the cards are not really independent of one another. They have various partners and opposites, higher and lower ‘octaves’, etc, their relationships to each other helps to define them, just as it is in life. Keep in mind the Roman numerals, too, so that XV (Devil) is the ‘higher octave’ or other face of V (Pope), not XVI (Lover), as it would be if we employed Arabic numerals (1+5 reduces to 6).

A simple example is that the numbered cards (in TdM the Fool is not numbered) contain 7 cycles of 3 (like a waltz), wherein every next ‘1’ card is also a ‘4’ (the death and rebirth of the cycle).
To Pythagoreans (and later, in alchemy, to Maria the Prophetess), this natural cycle of 4 = 1 symbolized the fundamental progression of creation:

‘One becomes Two, Two becomes Three,
and out of the Third comes the One as the Fourth.’

One – being the primordial source (monad) from which everything originates
Two – (considered the first ‘real’ number) being the duality that emerges from separation
Three – being the completion of a creation, whereby the two are united
Four – being the final stage, wherein unity is restored, but in a differentiated way

10, being the sum of 1+2+3+4 was thus considered the ‘perfect’ number, as illustrated by the tetractys. (In Pythagoras’ day, numbers were depicted with geometrically arranged dots, resembling pebbles).

So, the Empress completes the first creative cycle of 1-2-3, but the 4th card, her partner, the Emperor, signifies the ‘death’ of that cycle, AND the birth of the next. You will find that all the cards in the ‘1/4’ placement have something in common, as will all the cards in the ‘2’ placement and the ‘3’ placement.
21/The World, while being a ‘3’ placement card, illustrates wholeness and completion or ‘quintessence’; the unified ‘one’ (androgyne) at the centre of four (elements, fixed stars, seasons, etc).
With the understanding of this basic, universal foundation, we can build everything else. ~rb

empress and emperor cards of Jaques vidvill tarot

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Numerology Briefing

Someone was asking me about numerology, today, so here’s a very brief explanation on how it works.

First,  and most importantly, what is your life path number? What are you  here to do/learn in this lifetime?

Let’s say you were born today:

Feb 24 2019

We reduce each part to a single number, like so:

Feb = 2
24 = (2+4) = 6
2019 = (2+0+1+9) =12 =(1+2) = 3

Then add these sums together:
2 + 6 + 3 = 11

Conver Tarot de Marseille ca 1760

Normally, if the final sum is two digits, you would again add them together (1+1 = 2), but with 11, 22 and 33 these are ‘master numbers’ so they are left as is. But you would still take into account the number they reduce to (2), because it is an underlying influence, just a lower vibration. Especially since some people are not yet able to live according to their master number and are working up to it.

Also we take into account the birth DAY number (6/Lover), which influences the life path.
Next, you could look up your life path number online and see what it means, or you could turn to your trusty Tarot deck for clues. 11, the ‘mute’ number of paradox and therefore truth, is the Strength card. Reduced to 2, it’s the High Priestess. 11 is the master spiritual number, representing two pillars, a portal to the ‘spiritual realm’.
People with 11 life paths are therefor revealers of one kind or another.

Francois Héri 1718 TdM

22 on the other hand is the master of the material world.
22 reduces to 4, The Emperor, who is like a fortress. In Tarot, 22 is the Fool when he turns up at the other end, because both 0 and 22 are ‘God’, the emptiness (some would say the unconscious) as well as the divine architect. People with 22 life paths are usually architects of one kind or another, good at giving form to their vision.

33 is the number of perfection – best of both worlds. (It’s why Freemasons have 33 degrees).

Jean Dodal TdM ca 1650

There are many factors in numerology, but the next most important is your name number, which is what you are expressing. So  having given each letter it’s number value, add them one by one for each name, then add together the sums of these, same as we did for the date:

Jane Erre
(Jane) 1 + 1 + 5 + 5 = 12 = (1+2) = 3
(Erre)  5 + 9 + 9 +5  = 28 = (2+8) = 10 = (1+0) = 1

3 + 1 = 4
Jane’s expression is 4, The Emperor.

[Note that after 9th letter ‘i’, we have to start reducing them to a single digit, except for ‘k’ (11) and ‘v’ (22).] Often people will change their name or some letters in their name to get a number that resonates better with who they are, for example changing Michael to Michel can make a big difference.

Pierre Madenié TdM ca 1709

Now, to find your personal ‘power’ number, add your life path number to your name number.

Mine is 8 + 3 = 11. 11 is also my DAY number, which influences my 8 life path,
‘walking the spiritual path with practical feet’.

Numerology is helpful in understanding Tarot. The images are illustrations of their number’s vibration, and number mysticism that goes back to Pythagoras. The zodiacal chart is also based on mathematical harmonics, which is why it works. Used together they can provide a more complete picture.

All written content ©Roxanna Bikadoroff. Please ask permission if you would like to post somewhere and provide a credit/link. Thanks.