Seeing with Divine Mind – The Justice Card of Ancient Tarot

I prayed to Her, taking a flower in my hands:
“Mother, here is Thy knowledge and here is Thy ignorance.
Take them both, and give me only pure love.
Here is Thy holiness and here is Thy unholiness.
Take them both, Mother, and give me pure love.
Here is Thy righteousness and here is Thy unrighteousness.
Take them both, Mother, and give me pure love.”
I spoke of all these, but I could not say: “Mother,
here is Thy truth and here is Thy falsehood, take them both.”
I gave up everything at Her feet but could not bring myself to give up truth.

~ from the Prayer of Ramakrishna (translated by A. Mookerjee)

Tarot’s Lady Justice, with her direct gaze and formidable countenance, doesn’t just represent an institution, but is the embodiment of truth, and the natural sense of order and harmony that permeates the cosmos. For this reason, she has is often been equated with the Egyptian Goddess Maat.

Anubis weighing a heart against a little figure of Maat

We’ve all seen images of the Weighing of the Heart ceremony, wherein the deceased person’s heart (seat of the mind, to the Egyptians) is weighed against her feather in the ‘Hall of Two Maats’ (two truths), but Maat was also a set of principals for the living:

The ancient Egyptians deeply believed in the inherent grace and unity of the entire universe. They understood that cosmic harmony could be achieved through the most righteous ritual and public life, and any kind of disruption in this divine harmony would have many severe consequences, such as earthquakes or famine, which are caused by an impious king…’
~ Egypt Tours Portal, Ancient Egyptian Principals of Maat

“Tarocchi of Mantegna,” Anon Ferrara 1465

Similarly, to Renaissance humanists, Justice as Cardinal Virtue was a guiding principal to live by – particularly for princes – in order to maintain personal and collective, moral standards. In the ‘Mantegna Tarocchi‘, which depicts the hierarchy of stations from the lowly beggar ‘Misero’ all the way to ‘First Cause,’ Heavenly Virtues are exceeded only by the gods themselves. Note how the stork familiar of Justice harkens back to Thoth, Maat’s Ibis-headed scribe consort – perhaps indicating that virtues need to be taught and developed (the stork was also a symbol for rhetoric).

Tarot de Marseille’s Lady Justice, seated upon her throne, sword and scale in hand, seems straightforwardly emblematic. But, as with all TdM cards, might the particulars of her design reveal a more layered persona? Let’s investigate, beginning at the dawn of the Italian Renaissance…
[As always, click on images to enlarge and for more details.]

Ambrogio Lorenzetti, Justice (detail), Allegory of Good and Bad Government, 1338-39

The Allegory

Justice, still a figurehead of courthouses today, is the longest-surviving Cardinal Virtue. Her blindfold, supposed to indicate impartiality, makes her seem a bit benign, like she can’t actually witness what we’ve been up to. But prior to the 16th century, this was not the case, as we see in Ambrogio Lorenzetti’s exquisite, mid 14th c fresco, ‘Allegory of Good and Bad Government’ in the Palazzo Pubblico (town hall) of Sienna. Painted at a time when city states of Italy were becoming more secular, allegorical artworks like this in civic buildings were an attempt to incorporate the ancient virtues; to “legitimate and elevate secular activities by suggesting an association with the sacred.” By placing Justice and Judgement scenes in public places, “city states in Italy sought spiritual affirmation that their urban way of life was just as god-annointed as the old, feudal vision of society.” [Images of Justice, Curtis and Resnik, Yale Law Journal] 

Justice appears in the mural a few times, in different forms; most prominently she’s seated on a throne (‘Distributive’ and ‘Commutative’ Justice), a hand resting on either scale, whereupon two angels dish out punishment or reward. She looks upward toward the higher power, Wisdom, who looks up to God. A cord runs from each scale (one is worn away) to the hand of Concordia, symbolizing a balanced state of society. Everything is connected in perfect equilibrium, everyone knows their place and responsibility as citizens.

Ambrogio, Allegory of Bad Government (detail)

On the adjacent wall to her right/our left, the Satanic figure of ‘Bad Government’ is seated on a throne, the scales of Justice lie on the ground broken, and she sits in despair beneath him, possibly with hands bound. The relationship between the Supreme Court Justice and the Devil is established.

Watch this video for a more intricate tour of the mural. For our purposes, let it serve as an introduction to how the Virtue of Justice was “propagandized” at the time, and to some of the details that will carry over into the Tarot card.

Examples of Type I (Dodal) and Type II (Conver) Tarot de Marsielle, 18th c.

The Pillared Throne

Type II TdM differs from type I, in that Justice’s ‘wings’ are absorbed into her throne’s concave and cylindrical shape. It features two, gold-coloured columns, one which is being ‘split’ by her sword. Emblemata books tell us that, unblindfolded, with sword held erect, she is ‘Divine Justice’. This is further indicated by her crown – more on that a bit later.

It’s important to compare decks for clues, and sometimes they’re found in unlikely places. In this earliest French Tarot, below, the Empress’ hand on the covered arm of her throne could also be seen as lifting her robe to reveal a leonine leg. Though it’s likely a skin she’s seated on, the gesture evokes a legend of the Queen of Sheba, where she lifts her skirt to step over water, revealing a hairy (sometimes exaggerated as bestial) leg.

If this connection was the artist’s intention, might the Emperor then show some hint of Solomon? I think yes – he is seated in columned throne, exactly like the one in TdM Justice, and holds not a sceptre, but a sword erect. “Remember, after all, the tale of Solomon, who offered to use the sword to cut the child in half, to give each claimant her share.” Ouch.

Empress and Emperor, Catelin Geofroy 1557 [photos: Alexandra Miron, click for details]
The Justice card of Catelin Geofroy no longer exists, alas. But, following this visual lead, the columns of TdM Justice’s throne might also be suggestive of Solomon’s brass pillars; on our her right, the column of Boaz and on her left, Jachin.

“The earliest Jewish post-biblical account is of Romano-Jewish historian Flavius Josephus (Antiquities 8:165-9), who reframes the Queen of Sheba’s story for a Greek and Roman audience. He speaks of a philosopher Queen of Ethiopia and Egypt who, much like in the Hebrew Bible, travels to meet Solomon to subject him to a trial of wisdom. Josephus’ legend wasn’t picked up further in medieval Jewish and Islamic legends, but had a great influence on the further development of Christian tradition.” ~ The Collector

Solomon’s temple pillars [click pic to enlarge]
Each pillar was envisioned as having a bulge at the top, with a garland of pomegranates and a crown of lilies. The temple was also decorated with pomegranates. Described as symbols of ‘fertility and abundance’, ‘the promised land’, etc, it seems rather obvious from the Song of Songs that they have everything to do with Sheba’s divine (feminine) wisdom. So much so, that Smith and Waite (who was a Freemason) would put pomegranates and Solomonic pillars in the ‘High Priestess’ card, rather than Justice. (However, while the open pomegranates are saying one thing, her look is less than inviting, contrary to the traditional Popesse).

RWS High Priestess (detail)

In Greco-Roman tradition, the pomegranate is associated with fertility, death, changing seasons and immortality, its seeds resembling jewel-like blood droplets (often the blood of Dionysus). Persephone, by breaching the conditions of her spouse and eating six pomegranate seeds in Hades, is destined to remain underground for half the year and only return (be reborn) for the other half.

What is the little red dot on the pillar (right)?

In a similar and related tale, Eurydice is destined to remain in Hades after her beloved Orpheus breaks the one condition, that he mustn’t turn to look at her, en route back to the world of the living. The story of Eurydice may be a late addition to the Orpheus myths. In particular, the name Eurudike (‘she whose justice extends widely’) recalls cult-titles attached to Persephone. ” [wikipedia]

Eurydice’s name means wide ruling Justice. She is the prototype of Dike, one of the Horea, born to Themis and Zeus. Dike stood for the All Way, The Way, The Truth, and The Light. As Dike’s prototype, Eurydice is a mythical goddess and archetype present in the underworld before the cloaking of the myth in the traditional romantic versions during the creation of the Classics by male authors. ~ [intro to] Emily Miller, ‘Euridice’s Bones’

(Similarly, Persephone was the ‘Iron Queen’ of the Underworld, prior to the Pluto abduction myth).

Horai (seasons) with pomegranates for Summer

Coptic greek cross with pomegranates/”tree of life” from a recently discovered monastery in Egypt [Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities Egypt]
The fruit of the biblical tree of knowledge (of sex, death and immortality) was most likely a pom, not a pomme. The Lily, also a death and rebirth symbol is associated with Lilith, Isis and the Virgin Mary. Red and white are blood and milk, the colours of alchemical Rebis.

Brass signifies God’s judgement, ie, these are not merely ‘functional’ pillars. Passing between the two brass pillars represents entry into another world, eternity or another sphere. The card is divided not just vertically, but horizontally, by the bar of her scales; there is equilibrium between Heaven above and Earth below, just like in the Sienna mural. The curved back of Justice’s throne serves a dual design purpose, suggesting wings as well as heavenly spheres. Her sword traverses both realms and we notice the ball in its handle is threefold; the trinity of philosophical elements.

Temple of Apollo, Delphi

Wisdom Pillars

The two pillars of wisdom also can be likened to the two maxims inscribed at the entrance (possibly on columns) of the Temple of Apollo at Delphi. According to Pliney the Elder, these were written in letters of gold:

Know thyself
and
Nothing in excess

The famed ‘Know Thyself’ Roman mosaic (ca 30 BC-14 CE), Naples Museum

Know Thyself  [sword] 
The first application of the phrase to self-knowledge in the modern sense occurs in Plato’s Phaedrus, in which Socrates says that he has no leisure to investigate the truth behind common mythological beliefs while he has not yet discovered the truth about his own nature.

Wenceslas Hollar, The Golden Mean 1641-1644 (circa)

Nothing in Excess/Nothing too much  [scales]
The maxim has been said to have received its “ultimate expression” in  Aristotle’s theory of ethics, according to which every classical virtue occupies  a middle place between the two extremes of excess and deficiency.

Concordia detail, Sienna mural

There was also a third maxim inscribed:

Give a pledge and trouble is at hand
The Greek word ἐγγύα, here translated “pledge”, can mean either (a) surety given for a loan; (b) a binding oath given during a marriage ceremony; or (c) a strong affirmation of any kind. Accordingly, the maxim may be a warning against any one of these things.
In Plutarch’s Septem sapientium convivium, the ambiguity of the phrase is said to have “kept many from marrying, and many from trusting, and some even from speaking”. [wikipedia]

The cord around Justice’s neck may indeed have to do with being bound to one’s word – or to one’s silence – especially in monetary and matrimonial matters (Libra).

Mercy Seat, The Holman Bible, 1890 (note the curved angel wings are like bull horns).

Lady Have Mercy

Inside Solomon’s temple was something called a ‘Mercy Seat (hilasterion, “that which makes expiation” or “propitiation” for the removal of sin), which, according to the Hebrew Bible, was “the gold lid placed on the Ark of the Covenant with two cherubim at the ends to cover and create the space where Yahweh appeared and dwelled. This was connected with the rituals of the Day of Atonement.” (Yom Kippur, occurring in Libra season).

‘Oh my heart which I had from my mother! O heart of my different ages! Do not stand up as a witness against me, do not be opposed to me in the tribunal, do not be hostile to me in the presence of the Keeper of the Balance!’ ~ Egyptian Heart Prayer

Here the lines between Justice and Judgement start to blur, and the two often get conjoined when deciphering the meaning of this card, as was the intent of Italian civic hall murals. The difference is that Judgement (or Last Judgement) is a final verdict, whether it’s pronounced in a court of law or standing before a supreme being. Justice is about honing an inner sense of self-regulating equilibrium, guided by the understanding that we will ultimately face some kind of ‘judgement’ by the god(s) of our higher conscience – maybe not hellfire or pearly gates but ‘damned’ or ‘blessed’ to live in the kind of world we helped create. They are closely intertwined, but differing concepts.

Sienna mural and Pierre Madenié details

In the ancient Greco-Roman world, supplication – begging for the sparing of one’s life, on the battlefield, for example – involved a specific set of gestures; the supplicant, on their knees (submissive stance), would clasp the dominant’s knees (they can’t walk away), reach up to clasp their chin (they can’t look away) and beg for mercy.

It’s been suggested that the scales rest on Lady Justice’s knee and are being tipped slightly. As well, the collar of her wimple, which again harkens back to our Sienna mural, has started to look a bit like hands. These are the type of details people often write off as ‘printing mistakes’, but might they have had a mnemonic function? In fact, during the Renaissance, Justice was sometimes depicted in a more gruesome way – as judges with severed hands.

Visconti-Sforza Justice,  c 1450

We can back up this notion of ‘having mercy’ with another Justice card, the Visconti-Sforza. It’s an anomaly in the deck (unless the original other two Virtues were also illustrated thus), in that the gold background does not go all the way up, but instead creates a throne back or triptych shape, while over her head leaps a knight on a white horse. Likely this figure represents the chivalric code of the Arthurian knights, who, while charged with enforcing justice, were also required to ‘be just,’ ie, to act from their higher consciousness and show mercy whenever possible, rather than give in to brutish impulses. This is in keeping with the idea of Temperance, also. We know that the Arthurian legends were extremely popular in Italy (some having been illustrated by Bonafacio Bembo, who painted the cards).

That this ‘hero rider’ – the solar hero – is situated above the Virtue’s head brings to mind Athena (wisdom and strategy, with violence only as last resort) who was conceived in and born from  Zeus’ head (intellect). The virtuous knight here takes the role of divine wisdom, by which lady Justice is guided, as in the Sienna mural.

Mycenaean rhyton 1300-1200 BC; Agrippa’s magic sigil for Aldebaran (15th-16th c)

The Bull of Heaven

Let’s turn now to TdM Justice’s turbaned crown, up above the spheres. Although upside down, there is no mistaking the symbol for Taurus the bull, its horns cleverly formed by the interruption of her hair. The bull is a vehicle and/or attribute of any god or goddess worth their salt, particularly when they are acting as supreme judge. The two horns of the bull serve the same function as two pillars, maintaining stability and equilibrium.

Central and level with the ‘sun and moon’ pillar bulges is the all-seeing, monadic eye in Justice’s bull crown. We are reminded of the ‘Bull’s Eye’ (aka ‘God’s Eye’) in the constellation of Taurus, Aldebaran, the watcher in the East. This royal star was once connected to the Spring Equinox (opposite Autumnal Antares, Heart of the Scorpion) and rises with the Pleiades aka ‘Seven Sisters.’ Aldebaran is associated with St. Michael, whose name is the rhetorical question he posed to Satan: ‘Who is like unto God?’ Might this be what Justice is asking? Could the rider of the V-S card also be a stand-in for St. George, chivalric incarnation of Michael the dragon-slayer?

St. Michael weighing souls during the Last Judgement, 15th c (click for details)

After 7 steps (or stages, or planetary spheres) we arrive at Justice, and 7 steps from Justice is the Devil. “If then you do not make yourself equal to God, you cannot apprehend God; for like is known by like.” If Justice is to be impartial in her judgement, she’s going to need that third eye.

The following is an excerpt from a fictitious 1490 dialogue by Italian doctor and humanist, Battista Fiera, between the painter Mantegna and the allegorical figure ‘Momus,’ on how to depict Justice. Mantegna, having heard conflicting accounts, has ‘consulted a series of philosophers’:

Mantegna: I began with Saxus Hippolytus. He said Justice should be represented with one eye; the eye being rather large and in the middle of the forehead; the eyeball, for sharper discernment, deep-set under a raised eyelid.

Momus: Suppose something happened behind her back? Might she not be taken in the rear? Will she be safe enough with only one eye in front?
. . . If she had an eye at the back as well, she’d be still more queenly and majestic.

Mantegna: Erasmus the Stoic [said] . . . that she ought to be shown seated, and holding scales in her hand.
“But . . . make her one-handed.”
“So that she couldn’t throw in a makeweight, of course.”
[Marianus] instructed me to depict her standing, and with eyes all over her as Argus was of old. . .  And brandishing a sword in her hand to ward off robbers, and to protect the innocent and the unfortunate . . . 
Astallius said she should be depicted sitting on a square marble chair with a slightly curved back, such as there was once at Lesbos, and measuring with a leaden rule.

Momus: To be sure, his was a milder image of Justice, since he left out the menacing sword; and he had good reason to fear she might have a fall. But why the leaden rule? Did he mean that Justice is sometimes twisted? For is not the common herd, remembering her waxen nose, loud in proclaiming that she is?

Mantegna: No, he didn’t mean that she is twisted; but he said she was to govern with equity – now and then to slacken the reins.

Momus: What did Fiera say?

Mantegna: [H]e enjoined me to depict her covered with ears as well.

Momus: Why? Was he afraid that she might become deaf?

Mantegna: He was . . . [and Astallius and Fiera also said] that Justice was to put on the habit of a penitent . . .

Momus: So, they want her to be mortified! But didn’t it occur to them to give her wings?

Mantegna: No one thought of that.

[excerpted with from ‘Images of Justice’ by Dennis E. Curtis and Judith Resnik, Yale Law Journal]

Pierre Madenié 1709 and Giovanni Antonio da Brescia 1475-1520  (note her foot shape).

The dividing line created by the bar of her scales can also be viewed as the horizon itself, where the cusp of Libra begins the Sun’s descent. The Pierre Madenié card provides another interesting detail; the handle of the scales is shaped like a divider compass (see Star post).

In the  Bolognese card, below, Justice’s scales hang from a globus she’s holding, similar to the Empress. This detail is consistent with emblems of Divine Justice, where her foot rests upon a globe. Like the TdM version, her lower half is weighty, grounded on Terra Firma, but in this case, she is Nature, ie, natural law, natural order, as above, so below. If we zoom in closely, there is what appears to be a little, bull head shape on her collar. Remember that Taurus is the sign of FIXED EARTH.

Alla Torre Justice card and Cesare Ripa Divine Justice

In the Rosicrucian image below, we can identify some similar components to the TdM Justice card, such as the two pillars of Wisdom (solar/father/fire/air and lunar/mother/water/earth). The above is as below, and the heavenly bodies shine onto a (directional) compass. In its centre is a globus cruciger, symbol for antimony (see Empress card) which is used in the purification of gold and silver, a material and spiritual process. At the very top is the symbol for Taurus, with Aries on the left, Gemini on the right. May, high Taurus season, when the Earth is most fecund, is when alchemists collect their dew, (again, Empress/Nature).

‘The Compass of the Wise’ frontispiece for a rare book on Freemasonry and Rosicrucianism by German author Adam Michael Birkholz, 1779

Mithras 

There is also a connection of these three Spring signs (Aries, Taurus, Gemini) to the Mithras Mystery cult. Personally, I’ve never really jived with the brutal Tauroctony image – symbolic though it may be – central to every mithraeum in this exclusively male cult of Ancient Rome (2nd-3rd c).. However, it is relevant to our topic. Originally, the Iranian god, Mithra was not associated with bull-slaying:

Mithra is initiallyan ancient Iranian deity of covenants, light, oaths, justice, the Sun, contracts, and friendship. In addition to being the divinity of contracts, Mithra is also a judicial figure, an all-seeing protector of Truth…’As the god of contract, Mithra is indeceivable, infallible, eternally watchful, and never-resting. [wikipedia]

Tauroctony fresco from a Mithras cave

Mithras is always accompanied by a pair of torch-bearing attendants, the Dadophori, a pair of ‘mini Mithras’ resembling the Dioscuri (Gemini). One holds his torch upwards, the other downwards, interpreted as the rising and setting Sun (life and death), creating a triad with the central solar god at the height of his power (noon) in the middle. They may also have symblolized the equinoxes. The slaying of the bull has been interpreted as the procession of Spring Equinox from Taurus to Aries (ca 2000 BC).

V-S detail

Interestingly, if we zoom in on the Visconti-Sforza Justice card, we can see the solar knight is also situated between two luminaries or suns. [Corner ‘suns’ were often just decorative, for example in the Bolognese tradition, but that was more than a couple of centuries later, and as noted, the background of this card is an anomaly.] And while we’re on the subject, does the TdM Justice’s hair not resemble torch flames?

’Within the Christianised zodiac, Taurus the bull was seen as an image of Christ in his role as the incarnating god, sacrificed in the redemptive act.’ Having rulership over the throat and vocals,’Taurus was used in the secret zodiacal symbolism of Christianity as a symbol of the incarnate word ‘the Logos.’ ~ Fred Gettings, The Secret Zodiac: The Hidden Art in Mediaeval Astrology

Taurus was the word descending into matter/flesh, Pisces the ascent of the spirit back to the heavens.

Thus the death of the bull was the birth of life, and for this reason took its high place in the ceremony and art of the Mithraic cultus.” ~ ccel.org

Lascaux Caves Bulls/Taurus constellation: ”Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose.”

Some say that the Roman cult of Mithras, a ‘cult of the Sun that began as a personal  process in the darkness of a sacred cave’ was assimilated into Masonic traditions of the Middle Ages, or at least influenced them (he was born from a stone, after all). This purification ritual involved traversing 7 steps of his mystical staircase (possibly while on bended knee and blindfolded), corresponding to the 7 planetary spheres, in order to reach the Phrygian cap, a sword and a crown. Mithras, in the 8th sphere, represented cosmic order. 

Remnants of the olde religion?

Curiously, Ripa later includes the dog and snake in his emblem of ‘Inviolable Justice,’ to symbolize how friendship and hatred can both corrupt good judgement. 

Masonry’s knotted cord

The Cord that Binds and Measures

Lastly we come to the golden rope or chain around TdM Justice’s neck. There are a few possible meanings for it. The most obvious explanation is that it’s to gently remind would-be criminals with, lest they should end up swinging like Le Pendu. However…

The English word ‘noose’ comes from the Old French ‘no(u)s’, from the Latin word ‘nodus’, meaning knot. But ‘nous’ was also the Ancient Greek concept for the higher, divine intellect, the mind’s eye that is the God’s eye. According to Aristotle, nous is the intelligence which apprehends fundamental truths (such as definitions, self-evident principles).’ 

‘Each intellectual virtue is a mental skill or habit by which the mind arrives at truth, affirming what is or denying what is not.’

[The cord connecting the two, Pisces fishes is called a ‘Nodus’, or ’Nodus Coelestis’, the Heavenly thread.]

Soprafino Justice with bleeding eye

Returning to the ‘Allegory of Good Government’, recall it is also the cord (or a portion of it) that binds Justice to Concordia.

“There is an unseen cord that binds
The whole wide world together;
Through every human life it winds,
This one mysterious tether.
There are no separate lives; the chain
Too subtle for our seeing,
Unites us all upon the plane of universal being.”

– Small Talks on Freemasonry, Joseph Fort Newton. Masonic Service Association of the United States, 1928

If it’s the golden chain she wears round her neck (no reason it can’t represent both), it is probably the one by which Heaven and Earth are connected. To alchemists, this chain represented a series of transformations ‘from elemental chaos to quintessence’:

‘Since all things follow one another in continuous succession, descending in order to the lowest, it will be found, by one who observes closely, that from the highest God to the lowest, all are bound together by mutual links, and the connection is nowhere broken. This is Homer’s golden chain, which he says God commanded to hang from heaven to earth.’  –Macrobius, Commentary on the Dream of Scipio.

Integrae Naturae Speculum, Artisque Imago (Mirror of the whole of nature and the image of art), created by Robert Fludd, 1617.

You can kind of see a resemblance with the Anima Mundi here to a large, mediating figure of Justice, situated between heaven and earth, overlapping the planetary spheres. In place of sword and scales are two sections of the chain. Although she embodies both solar/masc and lunar/fem, the ‘world soul’ (like any soul) is considered feminine, and of this we are assured by the second lunar crescent in her pubis. Note also that the ape (reminiscent of Thoth?), uses a divider/compass.

Jacobello del Fiore, Justice, part of triptych, 1421 (Gallerie dell’Accademia, Venice).

Finale (finally!)

Perhaps my favourite Justice painting is another very fine Italian Renaissance depiction, where her divine and civic forms meet:

Justice is the primary virtue claimed by the Venetian state, and the lions allude to the justice and wisdom of Solomon. The female figure of Justice had even come to represent the personification of Venice herself. This identity is confirmed by the presence of Saint Michael in the left panel, minister of justice at the Last Judgment, who is shown in the act of unsheathing his sword to strike the final blow to the dragon beneath his feet and asks the enthroned Justice to “reward and punish according to merit and to commend the purged souls to the benign scales.

Jacobello, St. Michael

The Archangel Gabriel, bringer of peace, is depicted in the right panel, holding a lily in his left hand as he raises his right hand toward Justice in a gesture of benediction. Venetian legend professes that on the feast day of the Annunciation, when Christ was conceived for the spiritual salvation of humanity, God decreed the foundation of the city that was to offer political salvation to the Christian world following the fall of the pagan Roman Empire. In the allusive complexity of its self-representation Venice came to celebrate itself as a virgin city, never having been conquered, never violated. Jacobello’s figure thus acquires a complex persona, at once Justice, Venice, and the Virgin Mary.”~ savevenice.org

Jacobello, Gabriel

For a Tarot analogy, we could say she is at once Justice, the World and the Empress (and throw in Strength, too). As with many paintings of the time, it can also be interpreted in alchemical terms; Michael on Justice’s right, sword in his right hand, slays a black dragon, ‘fixing’ the volatile Mercury or breaking down prima materia, while a feminine Gabriel on Justice’s left wears a white cape and holds the white lily of purification in his/her left, the ‘white queen.’ The inside of their wings are even lined with peacock feathers!

All the colours of the alchemical stages are represented; black, white, [peacock], gold and red. The complete and balanced Virtue wears a five-pointed crown (quintessence), the gold sun of wisdom and enlightenment on her chest (echoes of Athena’s aegis), and a red cape to match Gabriel’s white, signifying the union of opposites, integration of the soul, marriage of heaven and earth; the perfected work. ~rb

Jacobello del Fiore, Justice between the Archangels Michael and Gabriel, 1421 (full piece)

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Let Me Take You Down – The Juggler/ Le Bateleur of Tarot de Marseille

Isis assists with the embalming of a mummy, Kom El Shokafa, Alexandria, 2nd c

‘One becomes Two, Two becomes Three,  and out of the Third
comes the One as the Fourth.’  
~ Axiom of Maria the Prophetess and basis of the 
Pythagorean tetractys.

In a previous post, we saw how this Cosmology of Pythagoras and Axiom of Maria applies to Tarot, wherein every 4th card is also the first in a new cycle.  It is but one of the initial or initiatory, key concepts conveyed to us as a visual clue by our Master of Ceremonies, The Juggler/Le Bateleur (aka the Magician). Do you see it?
Hint: It’s ‘dessous la table’, in every Marseille-type deck.

Vieville, Conver and Noblet cards

Of course, I am referring to the legs. People tend to write off his three-legged table as simply being of the portable sort that Bagatelles used. It’s true, three legs provide the most stable table for any surface. (Especially if it happens to be a tripod with a Pythia sitting on it). But his table in fact has four. Because one of his legs is behind or combined with one of the table legs, his other leg becomes the 4th leg; ‘out of the third comes the one as the fourth.’ Another consistent feature is that the rectangular table top always extends beyond the picture border… just how long might it be?

Below are two images of Anubis, god of funerary rites and underworld guide, preparing the dead. His uncovered, lower legs are always visible beneath the embalming bed, and knees about level. This ritual table traditionally had a lion head(s) and legs, which we will return to in a moment.

Legs of Anubis
Egyptian embalmer’s bed, 664-332 BC  (Met Museum, NY)

The Juggler is often equated with Hermes/Thoth, initiator into the mysteries or the ‘in-between’ state itself who oversees the alchemical process. But he’s also seen as an initiate, who maybe doesn’t yet know what all these objects he’s selling are for. As others familiar with Osirian-Orphic mystery content in TdM imagery have noted, they likely allude to dismemberment or sacrifice. They also bear a resemblance to the tools used in the Egyptian ‘Opening of the Mouth’ ceremony, which according to belief, enabled the deceased to eat, breathe, drink and use their senses in the afterlife.

Religious equipment for ‘Opening of the Mouth’ ceremony, 6th dyn. (British Museum)

Naturally, the Juggler’s objects also symbolize the four Hermetic elements (ie, the suits of the minor arcana) and the four ways a body is returned to them in traditional funerary rites. The four ‘parts’ of us that are returned to their sources – body to earth, spirit to fire, soul to water, mind or breath to air – will again be drawn from them and remixed, for another round.

Four ways a body is returned to the elements

Now, let’s just for fun assume the Juggler’s table should have another wooden leg, that it is indeed modelled on an embalming table with leonine features and that it displays tools related to the ‘opening of the mouth.’
Where would we then look for the missing leg? Only the Conver-type decks give us a proper clue [addendum: Dodal also] – the Strength lion’s single leg having a distinctly wooden look and no paw. It is most likely a printing mistake, but it is curious, since XI is the partner of I. In other TdM decks, the lion has normal, lion forepaws, which, nevertheless is a hieroglyphic feature, based on Horapollo.

The missing leg and the opening of the mouth

The Pythagorean rule informs us that every fourth card is also a first. 1 was considered masculine/solar (the monad, not a true number) and 2, feminine/lunar (the first, true number). 3, while odd, fiery and therefor technically ‘masculine,’ creates the first enclosed space (triangle/womb), so it is actually a combination of masc/fem (the Mercurial, creative magic of the trinity need not be re-explained here). 11 is two 1s or 1+1=2, the lunar partner to the solar Juggler.
I’ll discuss the 2s in another post, but let the image below, from the Catacombs of Kom El Shokafa, where Egyptian and Greco-Roman mysteries meet, serve as a preview.

Where did you get that hat? Gorgoneion as ‘death face’ of the Sun

The crown/corona worn by royals represents the Sun’s rays. To be coronated means to be crowned with the Sun and become a god-like, solar figure. In alchemy, the Sun symbolizes both the material gold and the hidden, spiritual gold, which is only achieved after a long process. The Juggler holds a little yellow coin or roundel (material gold) and there is a small, yellow flame [aka ear of golden grain] beneath the table, in the distance (spiritual gold). They are separate, at this point in the game.

One/Four cards (Camoin-Jodo deck)

Notice that every card in the 1/4 place between Juggler and Sun depicts a crown, in various phases of transmutation, as well as solar wheels (Chariot, Fortune) and phallic symbols (all seven do, but in the last card it is a horizontal wall). The Sun is its own corona (unified, risen spirit), but what about the Juggler? He is only a 1, not a 1/4, and wears not a crown but a floppy hat with a spherical, red middle.  Could this too be symbolic of the Sun?

Floppy discs

Answer is yes. The question of his hat had admittedly irked me a long time, until I saw these beautiful, French prints of Egyptian deities in the NYPL collections.

Winged solar disk, emblems of Thoth/Hermes Trismegistus (NYPL)

So the red sphere of the Juggler’s hat represents the solar disk, its brim being vaguely reminiscent of wings – or – perhaps symbolic of the funerary boat in which the Sun god Ra, and thereby Kings and Pharaohs traversed the Duat, when the sun set. The red sphere appears to sink into the brim, ie, setting below the horizon, corona faded. Meanwhile, on the distant horizon flickers that tiny, golden flame of spirit, which will become a bright Sun once again.
Pythagoreans believed in reincarnation, Pythagoras himself was said to have remembered several of his past lives.

New take on retro fashion or just comparing scars?

On that note, I leave you with a vivid, childhood memory…
My father was a psychiatrist with a sense of humour (and with whom I often played cards). Hanging on our bathroom wall was a small, framed photo of Sigmund Freud, with a quote by Groucho Marx taped beneath:

“This may be a phallus, but gentlemen, let us remember, it is also a cigar.”

~rb


All written content created by and copyright ©Roxanna Bikadoroff and may not be reprinted without permission. Please share via LINK only.

Death and the Moon in Tarot de Marseille

Previously, we looked at the influence of hieroglyphica and emblemata in the Renaissance and its connection to Tarot de Marseille, how TdM’s ‘mytho-alchemical’ imagery is hieroglyphic in nature, playfully imbedded with visual hints of esoteric meaning hidden in plain sight. The cards relate to each other in a variety of ways, too, be it by numeric pattern or other similarities. (Perhaps why they naturally lend themselves to being ‘read’, a different narrative following every shuffle).
Do read my post on  Horapollo and the Hieroglyphic Mysteries of TdM , if you haven’t, as an introduction. And as always, click images for details.

Fool and Death (Camoin-Jodorowsky deck)

The Unnamed Card – Death

The Unnamed card (‘Death/La Mort’) is a prime example. Most Tarotists are aware of its relationship with The Fool/Le Mat, and how they strike the very same pose. By design alone, it is immediately apparent that the two figures are related or even one and the same; the first being unnumbered, the second, unnamed. Suddenly it all makes sense, right?

Original Tragicomedy act: the Greek Muses Melpomene (T) and Thalia (C)

Let’s take a closer look at the Unnamed card and its relationship to another major, The Moon, that we might find the visual clues needed for a better understanding of their mystery teachings.

The first consistent features we notice in the TdM skeleton, are its colour-emphasized spine and hip bones, and the skin pulled back around his skull, creating a crescent shape. Also, his spine appears to be made of grain. Typically, it matches the grain in the Emperor’s necklace (which his chicken-basilisk surely must covet!). The Emperor wears the golden seeds of his own, cyclic renewal. 1 + 3 = 4 and in number order, both cards are in the 1/4 place.

grain storage?
Skull face (featuring  pyramid and new Moon) and Moon face of TdM

It’s obvious, too, that the Reaper’s face is a mirror image of the Moon. Makes sense, the Solar year has 13 moons, the last one being the ‘killing Moon.’ [Clarification: although there are 13 moons within a solar year, there are not 13 full, synodic cycles of the moon in every solar year, but roughly every 2.5 solar years (when we get a ‘blue moon’). 2.5 solar years is one Saturn transit through a zodiac sign.] It’s ultimately why Sun worshippers suffer from triskaidekaphobia. Try as they might, the Greeks could not make 13 – or death – be rational and fit in. They felt the same way about 0, rejecting it outright (ie, no number?). The “inconstant Moon” has long been considered a kind of depository for souls coming and going between incarnations. It is not the light of wakefulness.

Of course Horapollo is talking about the djed bone of Osiris and we can see how the card must be a reference to the Osirian myth. While the djed bone has obvious phallic implications, it is actually symbolic of the grain god’s spine, by which his ‘kundalini energy’ or ‘life force’ climbs:

“The djed was an important part of the ceremony called “raising the djed“, which was a part of the celebrations of the Sed festival, the Egyptian jubilee celebration. The act of raising the djed has been explained as representing Osiris’s triumph over Seth. Ceremonies in Memphis are described where the pharaoh, with the help of the priests, raised a wooden djed column using ropes. The ceremony took place during the period when fields were sown and the year’s agricultural season would begin, corresponding to the month of Koiak, the fourth month of the Season of the Inundation. This ceremony was a part of one of the more popular holidays and celebrations of the time, a larger festival dedicated to Osiris conducted from the 13th to 30th day of the Koiak. Celebrated as it was at that time of the year when the soil and climate were most suitable for agriculture, the festival and its ceremonies can be seen as an appeal to Osiris, who was the God of vegetation, to favor the growth of the seeds sown, paralleling his own resurrection and renewal after his murder by Seth.” [wikipedia]

Seth and his hungry familiar, the Oxyrhynchus

As for his phallus, remember that when Isis collected her dismembered beloved’s pieces to put them back together, she could not find this last bit, which had been eaten by a fish, so the resourceful Goddess had to make a new one, using magic. Might we even see a fishbone shape in the reaper’s frame, its head being the hips and tail being the crescent? Peut-être.

Claude Burrell 1751 (Yves Renaud repro 2015) and a bass

Dismemberment is the  beginning of the transformation process. This card alludes to that which Osiris/Osiris-Dionysus presided over, the natural cycles of death and resurrection/rebirth. He was also called ‘god of the living’ and ‘lord of silence’ (ie, no name?). The black soil [of Kemet (‘kmt‘), the ‘black land’ from whence comes ‘alchemy’] pertains to fertility – new growth from rich putrefaction and loam. The Egyptians took their cues from nature, the great alchemist. 

“In some rare instances, Osiris was depicted wearing a crown that included a rendering of the moon. This has led some researchers to surmise he was associated with the moon or the night.” [Ancient Egypt Online

Thoth (Thoth-Hermes), Ibis-headed god of the Moon, who oversees the whole transmutation, might also be at hand…

Ibis beak and scythe

The Moon – Rebirth

Now that we’re experts on the Lunar associations in the Unnamed card…what about the Moon card’s association with Death?

That the crayfish may literally represent the astrological sign of Cancer in TdM is, as the detective novels say, a ‘red herring’. But the association reminds us that in ancient Egypt, Cancer was a scarab – symbol of birth, life, death, resurrection and immortality.

Osiris Canopus with ‘scrab’ (detail) Roman-Egyptian 100-200 AD

Crabs and other sea creatures (and worms) become active, lay eggs, spawn or hatch with lunar cycles/tides, just as we came into the world through our mother’s watery womb at the end of 9 (1+8) lunations. Cancer also rules the breasts and Momma’s milk. Interestingly, in Arab astronomy, the four stars of Cancer were seen as a crib or manger, while in Chinese, as ghosts or spirits of the deceased. [Tip: Stick with stars, planets and constellations, rather than ‘signs’ if/when applying to TdM.]

Cary and Dodal Moon cards – 200 year difference in crayfish design

The Great Mother’s milk is of course the Milky Way, by which the stalwart scarab navigates. Surely this did not escape the Egyptians, whose sky was the Goddess Nut, and readers familiar with Pythagorean and Orphic beliefs will see the significance. Note how the position of the crayfish mimics the upward facing scarab in Egyptian art. Scarab amulets carved with magical hieroglyphs were buried with the dead to protect the heart (seat of the mind) and ensure a safe transition. But the full Moon’s bright light can actually make the scarab’s journey longer and more difficult.

Nutrient-rich dung is my gold:  Winged scarab, Greek Period (304-330 BC)

It’s tempting to assume that TdM printers were unfamiliar with the number of legs on a crayfish. But might there be a better explanation for its having only 6?
Greco-Romans and Gnostics, incorporating Egyptian culture/religion also used amuletic, carved scarabs and gems – which, as mentioned previously, were collected and studied during the Italian Renaissance:

“The leading families of Renaissance Italy, the Visconti and the Sforza dukes in Milan, the Estes and Gonzagas in Ferrara and Mantua, or the Medicis in Florence, were certainly willing to pay huge sums of money for authenticated ancient gems: Piero de’ Medici is reported to have remarked that an engraved gemstone was ‘worth more than gold itself.’ They became treasured family heirlooms.” [John Mack, The Art of Small Things]

Like hieroglyphica and coinage, this art form influenced emblemata and likely Tarot as well.

[addendum: the crayfish was used on Greek coins as a symbol for ‘city.’ Marseilles, a port city,  was originally founded and colonized by the Greeks.]

Roman carved gems with triplicate Hekate and Moon card crayfish
Hekate with Anubis (gem and impression), 2nd century

The Moon card, being 18,  falls into the ‘3’ position and contains the three dominions of the Goddess Hekate; sky, earth and sea. Hekate (pronounced Hekaté) was portrayed in antiquity as three figures around a central column; forming the Lunar Goddess triad with Selene and Diana, or Underworld Goddess triad with Demeter and Persephone (mysteries). Goddess of crossroads, the saffron-robed, torch-bearing Hekate was invoked to guide souls in the afterlife (some sources say Hermes was her consort) – note the crayfish’s torch-like claws. 

Green Conver Moon card and Hecate lamp (Roman, 1st-4th c)
Selene with ‘claws’ and torch (Roman, 1st c)

But she had many other roles besides psychopomp, including Goddess of childbirth. Let’s not ignore the crayfish’s uterine shape, either.

The two fortresses in the distance are thought by some to be her temple towers, which is not unreasonable. As well, the Lunar Nodes – ecliptic points where paths of Sun and Moon cross (hence eclipses), connected to reincarnation – have an approximately 18.5 year cycle. Hmm. The visual clue, however, is that these structures are the only elements here, besides the Moon and ‘spirit-dew’, that are above the horizon (the dogs look as if sinking beneath it). There are few cards that make use of depth perspective, so this should alert our attention.

Addendum: Tarot expert Andrea Vitali points out something so hidden in plain sight, even I didn’t spot it (!), which is that the entire lunar cycle is depicted in the card; the two towers representing waxing and waning phases, the middle obviously being the full phase, and the water/crayfish being the dark Moon, when it is not visible. This adds to the idea of Hekate residing here, in the underworld/between world or unconscious realm, so to speak. As mentioned, the claws resemble the guiding torches she bears during this passage. 

Pompeii fresco (detail)

The horizon is where the stars rise and set, ie, are born and die. Circumpolar stars never sink beneath the horizon, thus represent the eternal. Two such stars were known to the Egyptians, therefor, as the Indestructibles; Kochab, in Ursa Minor and Mizar, in Ursa Major, which flanked the Pole Star (then Thuban, constellation of Draco). Pharaohs’ pyramids were built in exact alignment with these stars so they could be directly ‘beamed up, Scotty.’

For those without custom-built pyramids, the in-between state might be less streamlined and more perilous. The Moon here appears to occult the Northernmost star, just as she obscures the Milky Way for our scarab. A wandering soul without a visible sky map might find themselves reborn down here, rather than as a god in eternity. I say we invoke the crayfish.

And look, it’s those 4 stars! A bit of a stretch, perhaps…but how curious that the tip of the right dog’s tail in the Conver Moon card is clipped by the border. Accidental or intended clue?
The little croc-headed beastie pasted in the lower right is Ammit, the composite Goddess (I think also part leopard and hippo) who gobbles scale-tipping hearts. Actually, she is more like a composter of the heart-mind:

“Two ways are offered to our soul after death: either a final liberation or a return into incarnation in order to continue the experience of becoming conscious. Many are the texts alluding to reincarnation, either overtly or implicitly through such locutions as ‘renewal of life’ or ‘repetition of births’.
The Judgment of the Dead takes place in the ‘Hall of the Double Maât’. This judgment is made in the presence of the dead person’s consciousness, Maât, while the other Maât, cosmic consciousness, presides at the weighing of his heart. Placed on one of the pans of the scale, and weighed against the feather of Maât, the heart expresses the feelings and passions which, if too heavy, risk drawing the soul back again towards earth.”
[Lucie Lamie, Egyptian Mysteries New Light on Ancient Knowledge]

Thus we return to the first lesson, that of the Fool (Le Mat, as if that wasn’t obvious enough) and the Unnamed being as one. An important, first lesson to get us through life, death and all the in-betweens. ~rb

PART II explores a more likely reference for the two guardian beasties.


Who will reach the Moon first?

*Happy Sun and Pluto into Aquarius!*

All written content (except in blue quotations) is original, researched and composed by and copyright ©Roxanna Bikadoroff. It may not be reprinted anywhere without permission. Please share via LINK only (a short pull quote/paragraph is ok, with a link/credit). Thank you.