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Origin and history of tarot

tarot(n.)

1590s, from French tarot (16c.), from Old Italian tarocchi (singular tarocco), a word of unknown origin, perhaps from Arabic taraha "he rejected, put aside." Originally an everyday game deck in much of Europe (though not in Britain), their occult and fortune-telling use seems to date from late 18c. and became popular in England 20c. Tarot games seem to have originated among aristocrats in northern Italy in early 15c. By early 16c. tarocchi had emerged in Italian as the name of the special cards, and by extension the whole pack; whence the French word, German Tarock, etc. The tarots are thus, strictly speaking, the 22 figured cards added to the 56-card suits pack.

Entries linking to tarot

1610s in reference to the deck of cards; 1739 as the name of an old card game played with them in Italy, Austria, etc.; from Old Italian tarocchi (plural); see tarot. A 78-card deck that includes four suits, four face-cards each, plus the tarot cards as trumps

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