http://www.sacred-texts.com/tarot/sot/index.htm
a good intro.to symbolism.
http://tarotjourney.net/symbols/archive ... -the-fool/
this is good too, it gets you thinking in visual terms.The aim is to look at a card and be able to glean lots of information,without needing the book. The next stage is in inter- relation of cards to each other, but that is not difficult when you understand each card. It's like in Astrology, aspects and house placings in relation to the qualities of the signs and planets - how they modify/magnify/affect each other.Relationships.
------------------------------------------------
TAROT SYMBOLOGY
Tarot offers a system of using symbols, archetypes and an intrinsic language of the collective psyche. However, even though there are "certain preset meanings" for each of the cards which have been "translated" throughout the centuries and well documented in books or guides, every tarot card and/or deck can vary in its meaning or implication based on the individual reader's "connection" to its symbology. The collective conscious thread allows for the unique.
The great significance of symbols in tarot is the delivery of a message or story within each and every card. Every color, every image, every alpha-numeric symbol, every activity within the card spells out a distinct message to the reader. How that message is interpreted ultimately depends upon the reader's experience, practice and meditation of those symbols and within the knowledge of the basics of tarot which been well documented. Occasionally, after many years of using published decks and books, some tarotists may "create" their own unique decks, which is a long and extremely arduous process, but this aids them in further connections of their own with the symbols, images, numerology and colors, etc.
During readings or meditations of each card, be sure to use patience, and more patience, and then even more patience. It takes time to learn, "listen to" and know your cards. The tarot is a key to great wisdom and truth, which, as with any language, mathematics, science or any realm of learning, must be repeatedly studied along with meditation for the deeper spiritual insights and awakenings.
Color Symbology in Tarot
The colors of each tarot deck have their own symbolic meanings. These colors carry meaning for us in our daily life as well as for their metaphysical or esoteric value. Within each card, take note of the colors throughout the card, be it the background, possibly the sky, landscape or the clothing, buildings, amulets or tools used within the card. The following list of colors and their "basic" meanings add to the interpretation of the card. Meditation on certain colors within the card often help "clear the blocks" sometimes experienced during a reading.
White - purity, healing, white shadow (animus), union through the mind, new intellectual frontier, purity, protection
Black - the unknown, black shadow (anima), darkside of the soul, letting go, yet offering the "black hole" of endless possibilities
Brown - earth, practical issues, the home and family, grounding, application, implementation and production
Pink - emotional love, harmony, self-love, friendship
Red - heart, soul, willpower, vitality, love, passion, courage
Orange - energy, vitality, joy, life force, strength
Yellow - sun, consciousness, zest for life, clairvoyance, communication
Green - healing love, prosperity, fresh, newness, promising, inexperienced, immature
Blue - open sky, space and clear water, spirituality, tranquility, meditation
Purple - the soul, spirituality, intuition, healing, guidance
Numerology in Tarot
Many of the meanings attributed to the Tarot cards derive from numerology. In the West, numerology goes back to the philosophy of the Greek thinker Pythagoras who believed that reality can ultimately be expressed in numerical terms. We have already seen the importance of the number four in the four suits of the Tarot which are derived from the four elements of classic Greek philosophy. The fact that there are 10 pip cards is related to the fact that humans have 10 fingers and therefore use the decimal number system. Odd numbers are usually regarded as forceful, yang, or "masculine" and even numbers as stabilizing, yin, or "feminine".
Below of some of the common meanings attributed to the basic numbers that comprise our system of numbering things:
# 0: Zero is the number of pure potential, of absolute beginnings and endings (return to nothingness). Only the Fool Trump carries the number 0 in the Tarot.
# 1: "One is the loneliest number..." the popular song goes. One is the first card of the pip sequence. One is the number of beginnings, of individuality, of the child emerging from the womb, of the prime force of creation. The Washington Monument is an architectural tribute to the number one.
# 2: Two is the number of duality, of coupling, of self and other, of opposing and complementing aspects of reality, of the union of two individuals (1s).
# 3: Three is the number of the triad, of the unit formed by duality (2) and its offspring (1), of the three faces of the goddess (virgin, mother, and crone), of the creation that is made possible by joining forces with another, the tripartite genitalia of the male and the genital triangle of the female.
# 4: Four is the number of manifestation and material reality. There are four elements, four sides of a square, four cardinal directions of a compass, four seasons, four winds, etc. It is a number of order, structure, power, and earthly dominion. Four is the number of the prototypical complete family: a father, a mother, a son, and a daughter.
# 5: Five is a number related to the five human senses and to the pentagram representing the human form (the head plus the four limbs). Five is the midpoint or turning point of the cycle that runs from 0 to 10. As such, five can represent a crisis point or a state of instability.
# 6: Six represents the harmony that returns when we resolve the disruption and instability seen in the five. Being a combination of 2 and 3 (6 = 2 x 3), six carries with it the connotations of both 2 and 3, that is harmony, cooperation, creation, new equilibrium.
# 7: Seven is regarded as a spiritual and introspective number. Being an odd number, it carries an active, forceful, and sometimes disruptive connotation.
# 8: Eight is made up of 2 x 4, or 2 x 2 x 2. Like the four, it is a number of power, manifestation, and material accomplishment.
# 9: Nine is the last single digit in the series. It carries a connotation of completion or the ending of a cycle. It can signify the wisdom that is achieved toward the end of a cycle.
# 10: In the number 10 we see the final ending --- the sequence of pips is over. The cycle has ended and a new one is beginning. Being one more than nine, 10 often means "one too many".
The Minor Arcana
The very number of cards in a Tarot deck reflects this numerological scheme. The 10 pip cards represent a series of everyday feelings, events, and situations associated with each of the 4 suits. The four court cards represent the four members of the prototypical family: father/king, mother/queen, son/knight, daughter/page. Hence each suit consists of 14 cards (10 pips plus 4 court cards).
Mundane and family matters are thus represented by the 10 pips and 4 court cards of the four suits:
Wands (Baton, Rods), Cups, Swords and Pentacles (Coins, Disks). This makes a total of 4 x 14 = 56 Minor Arcana cards.
Wands (Rods): Clubs, Fire, Leo, Sagittarius and Aries
Cups: Hearts, Water, Pisces, Cancer and Scorpio
Swords: Spades, Air, Gemini, Libra, and Aquarius
Pentacles (Coins, Disks): Diamonds, Earth, Taurus, Capricorn and Virgo
Wands: physical activity, new, now, aggression, excitement, stimulating, courage, birth, start, masculine, passion Wands are associated with thoughts, inspirations, desires and the identifying of
goals that may create change in the future.
Cups: emotions, pleasure, partnership, love, sensitivity, relationships Cups are associated with emotions, feelings and spiritual experiences, a focus on being rather than on doing.
Swords: Mental, intellect, logical thinking, communicate, inventive, detached, study, ideas, decisions Swords are associated with action, conflict and struggle which brings about clarity.
Pentacles: practical, money, economical, reality, material, patient, foundation, caution, stability, organization, firmness Pentacles are associated with the realization of goals, material well-being and rewards for hard work.
The Major Arcana
The remaining 22 cards of the deck are the Major Arcana (major secrets) cards. These have a different numerological basis. Representing timeless spiritual truths, these cards are based on the numbers 3 and 7. The Fool, numbered 0, stands at the center of a triangle (3 sides), and each side of the triangle consists of 7 cards (connected with 7 days of the week that are named for the 7 visible planets). The Fool (numbered 0) plus the 21 lessons the Fool must learn (the other 21 Trumps) make up the total of 22 Trump cards. In numerology, 22 can be broken down into 2 + 2 = 4, the number of manifestation in the "real" world. Furthermore, 21 (the number of spiritual lessons awaiting the Fool) is the sum of the first 6 digits, that is, 21 = 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + 5 + 6, a fact that was not lost on the original creators of the Tarot deck.
By playing with these numerical relationships and their connections to the cards of the Tarot deck, one can come to a deeper understanding of the origin, structure, and meaning of the cards.
Taken From
http://www.alltarot.com/AT_Tarot-Symbols.html
I'll get a link here for Thelemapedia, which has the Crowleyan /Western /Kaballah correspondances,it's a good reference tool.
http://www.thelemapedia.org/index.php/Tree_of_Life:777