Saturday, 14 May 2022

01-020 Bourgeois Tarot

01-020
Bourgeois Tarot

When talking about tarot, most people will immediately think of cartomancy. What if I told you that tarot was originally a pack of playing cards just for gaming purpose?

Tarot is not designed for occult use at the beginning. It was evolved from the 52-card deck in the 15th century and was just a deck of playing cards for games. Only until late 18th century, people started using it for cartomancy. And the most common pattern for tarot card reading, the Rider-Waite tarot deck, was first published in 1909, almost 5 decades after the first tarot game.

Like standard playing cards, tarot design changes from time to time. The only existing tarot gaming deck, Bourgeois Tarot deck, emerged from Germany in the 19th century. Bourgeois Tarot is still popular in Western Europe and French-speaking Canada.

The first noticeable difference between a tarot deck and a standard 52-card deck is the card size. There is a standard, 2¾” x 4¾”, although non-standard size cards are common. Bourgeois Tarot deck bears the French suits of clubs, diamonds, hearts and spades. The "pip" and court cards of the Bourgeois Tarot are similar in format to those of the traditional 52-card deck, with the addition of the knight (chevalier) face card. This makes each suit to bear 14 cards instead of 13. In addition, there are 21 trump cards, also called the “trump suit”, and 1 fool card.

There are 2 patterns, the Black Forest Cego pack used only in southwest Germany and the Tarot Nouveau used everywhere else, but especially in France. The pack produced by Fournier is the easiest to find. It is in Tarot Nouveau pattern.


Bourgeois Tarot

The Fournier type of Tarot Nouveau deck is composed of 78 cards. 56 are suited in the traditional French suits, with 14 cards per suit; ten "pip" cards with values 1 to 10 (the ace bears the number 1 instead of the familiar "A", and usually ranks low), and four court cards: jack (valet), knight or cavalier (chevalier or cavalier), queen (dame) and king (roi). The other 22 are the 21 trumps (atouts) and one fool.

Aces bear the number 1 instead of A


Court cards of the 4 suits – V, C, D & R



The trump cards and the fool

Each trump card has one scene show an "urban" representation of a particular trait or idea (listed below), while the other side depicts a more "rural" interpretation. The scenes depicted are as follows: 

General theme

Card number

Card theme

Urban representation

Rural representation

The four ages

2

Childhood

Children playing in the park

Boys playing at the fête

3

Youth

Group of youths in the park

Three maidens in town clothes

4

Maturity

In the office

Women with children

5

Old Age

Grandfather

Grandmother

The four times of day

6

Morning

Breakfast

Mowing the wheat

7

Afternoon

Discussion in the parlour

Rest in the field

8

Evening

Music room

The family reunited on the doorstep

9

Night

Returning home after hunting

The night watch

The four elements

10

Earth

The mine

 

Air

 

Shepherd in the mountains

11

Water

Boating on the lake

 

Fire

 

The picnic

The four leisures

12

Dance

Soirée

Folk dance

13

Shopping

The store

The village store

14

Open air

Hunting

Fishing

15

Visual arts

Photography

Painting

The four seasons

16

Spring

Gardener in the park

Sheep shearing

17

Summer

At the races

Drying the wheat

18

Autumn

At the market

Threshing wheat

19

Winter

Skating

The vigil

The game

20

The game

Cards

Bowling

Folly

21

Collective

The carnival

The military parade

1

Individual

The sad clown

The fool and the ballerina

The tarot deck is technically a “standard” deck, which means many games can be played with it. But the most common game is French Tarot. Inside the Fournier pack, there is an instruction booklet showing the rules of this game. The booklet is in French only. English rules, or rules in any other languages are widely available on internet though.


Instruction booklet, in French only

I have not played French Tarot with my kids. The game is too difficult for them. Even for me, it took me some time to understand the game play.

General Information

Player

2 to 8

Playing Time

30 mins

Age

12+

Year Released

1865

Designer

C.L. Wüst

Publisher

Heraclio Fournier

Family

Auction/Bidding, Team-Based Game, Trick-taking

Score

6.8 (Board Game Geek)

Specifications

Card size

6cm × 11cm

Deck size

78 cards

# of suits

5 – Clubs, Diamonds, Hearts, Spades & Trumps

Details

The deck is in traditional French suit. Pip cards are valued from 1 to 10, then 4 face cards V, C, D & R.

Trumps consist of 21 cards, depicting genre scenes of whimsical early 19th-century social activities.

And 1 Fool card.

There are no Jokers.

Game Play

Where to buy?

Etsy.

I got my copy from Etsy. The seller is Shop4Top from Lithuania. The shop provides free shipment through standard airmail, slow but free.

Cards are beautifully printed. I am happy to include this pack in my collection.


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