The Tarot Trumps and The Holy Grail
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Average customer review:Product Description
Have you ever held a tarot deck and looked at all those wonderful pictures: the Pope, the Tower, the Sun, the dreadful hanged man? Where did they come from? Who made them up? Did they have a life before they became associated with fortune telling?
Academic and writer, Margaret Starbird, has spent years researching the stories of the Holy Grail. The accidental discovery of a book on Tarot and research which began to signal links between the cards and the Grail story have led to a fascinating book.
The Tarot Trumps and the Holy Grail is the wonderful outcome of that happy accident.
The book reveals the strong link between the trump cards of the tarot deck and the medieval heresy of the Holy Grail. The adherents of the Grail heresy believed that Jesus was married, that his wife and child found political refuge in Gaul and that the human/divine bloodline of Jesus lived on in Europe.
These cards, a visual catechism, were the means by which devout believers secretly shared the hidden message of the continuation of the line of Jesus.
What messages do these cards contain which still may have meaning for those of us who continue the search for the divine feminine in our own lives?
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #431019 in Books
- Published on: 2000-09-30
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 73 pages
Editorial Reviews
From the Publisher
Margaret Starbird has done courageous research about the story of Mary Magdalene, in two previous works. When she brought this book, The Tarot Trumps and the Holy Grail, to WovenWord Press we were excited to work with her. We were delighted to be able to present the earliest still extant tarot trumps in existance in full color. What a wonderful story she has brought us!
About the Author
Margaret Starbird holds a master's degree from the University of Maryland and has studied at the Christian Albrechts Universitat in Kiel, Germany and at Vanderbilt Divinity School. She is married with grown children, and she and her husband live in the state of Washington.
Customer Reviews
Cohesive theory
This book presents an unusually coherent and cohesive theory about the origins of the Tarot Trumps and their relationship to the "Grail" heresy: the belief in medieval Europe that Jesus was married and that his bloodline survived in the Merovingians and related families in Europe. The trumps are here explained purely as an historical artifact without any reference whatever to divination. The images provide a "flash-card catechism" for the Grail story, including connections with the Knights Templar, the alleged "guradians of the Grail." In my view, other theories of the origin of Tarot trumps do not provide as plausible an explanation for their images in a purely historical context as does this little book.
Buy the Alabaster Jar...
If you read Margaret Starbird's book THE WOMAN WITH THE ALABASTER JAR you won't find very much new material in THE TAROT TRUMPS AND THE HOLY GRAIL. TT is a synopsis of the Tarot material found in her earlier book and not nearly as good because she does not link the Tarot cards to paper watermarks, fairy tales, and other material as she did in her earlier book.
Starbird suggests the Tarot cards were used as an `Ars memoria' or a technique for creating mental images that allow one to store and recall information. Thus used, the cards would have proved invaluable for relaying `heretical' information in a sub rosa fashion in a climate where "thinking outside the box" got one burned at the stake. The notion the Tarot cards were used as memory devices for transmitting verboten information is not new. For example, Cynthia Giles makes a similar point regarding a possible hidden link between Gnostic material and the Tarot cards in her book THE TAROT published in 1991.
However, Starbird specifically links the Tarot cards with the notion that Mary Magdalen was the "holy grail" who carried Jesus' child (as well as the founder of the "church of love"). Furthermore, she suggests the Tarot cards can only be seen as an `Ars memoria' for the Grail story and have nothing to do with gypsies, Egypt, or India.
Starbird's argument for the exclusivity of the Grail-Tarot connection hinges on the date of the first appearance of the so-called Charles VI or Gringonneur deck which she links to the Grail story. Starbird suggests that if the Charles VI deck dates from the end of the 14th century it had to have been created before the arrival of the gypsies who are thought to have arrived in Europe in the 15th century. (Cynthia Giles suggests the Charles VI deck first surfaced at the end of the 15th century which means they "arrived" about the same time as the gypsies. Joseph Campbell suggests the earliest date of the cards as 1392 CE. However, Campbell also suggests the Tarot cards carry archetypical symbols that can be linked to many `religious' systems and/or works of art).
The clothing of the figures in several of the Charles VI cards such as "The Lovers" became popular at the end of the 15th century which would support Giles dating of the deck, but Starbird suggests the Charles VI cards might have been "updated" with "modern" clothing in a later edition.
I enjoyed reading Starbird's suppositions and comparing them with similar proposals by other Tarot writers. However, I don't think she has proved her point in this book. She presents a much more compelling case in the WOMAN WITH THE ALABASTER JAR.
Behind the Tarot Trumps
Well all I can say is bravo! Mrs Starbird. I bought this book and I could not put it down. I read it through, twice, in one sitting. It was so logical, historical, well written, thoroughly researched, and extremly easy to read. Like many people I am sure, I looked at the Tarot Deck and wondered what the story was behind those trumps. I have seen playing card decks, from other countries, that look like tarot cards minus the Trumps which sparked my interest even more, but what about those Trumps? Have you ever wondered the same?
Pick up this book! You will not be disappointed in what Margaret Starbird presents to you in a clear concise manner. Once you read it you will just step back in awe, and say that makes so much sense.
A must read for any student of religious history.




