The Tower (Tarot card)
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The Tower (XVI) (most common modern name) is the sixteenth trump or Major Arcana card in most traditional Tarot decks. It is used in game playing as well as in divination.
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[edit] History
This card, which follows immediately after The Devil in all Tarots that contain it, was apparently considered ill omened from the beginning. Early painted decks such as the Visconti-Sforza tarot do not contain it. [1] Some Tarot variants used for game playing also omit it; the Tarocco Siciliano and other southern Italian tarot variants replace it with the Ship, a card that appears in the Minchiate deck as a symbol of the element water.
Early printed decks that preserve all their cards do, though. In these decks the card bears a number of different names and designs. In the Minchiate deck, the image usually shown is of two nude or scantily clad people fleeing the open door of what appears to be a burning building. In some Belgian tarots and the seventeenth century tarot of Jacques Vieville, the card is called La Foudre or La Fouldre, and depicts a tree being struck by lightning. In the Tarot of Paris (17th century), the image shown is of the Devil, beating his drums, before what appears to be the mouth of Hell; the card still is called La Fouldre. The Tarot of Marseilles merges these two concepts, and depicts a burning tower being struck by lightning or fire from the sky, its top section dislodged and crumbling. Two men are depicted in midair, falling as a result, against a field of multicolored balls.[2]
A variety of explanations of the images depicted on the card have been attempted. It may be a reference to the biblical story of the Tower of Babel, where God destroys a tower built by mankind to reach Heaven. The Harrowing of Hell was a frequent subject in late medieval liturgical drama, and Hell would be depicted as a great gate knocked asunder by Christ, with accompanying pyrotechnics. The Minchiate version of the deck may represent Adam and Eve's expulsion from the Garden of Eden. [3]
[edit] Description and symbolism
A tower has just been hit by lightning and is aflame. The top of the tower is crumbling and falling to the ground beneath. In some decks, two figures fall from the top of the tower; in others, the people themselves are on the ground in flames or are themselves hit by the lightning. Sometimes they are simply onlookers to the fire.
[edit] Divination usage
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Some frequent keywords used by card readers are:
- Chaos ----- Sudden change ----- Impact ----- Hard times
- Crisis ----- Revelation ----- Disruption ----- Realizing the truth
- Disillusion ----- Crash ----- Burst ----- Uncomfortable experience
- Downfall ----- Ruin ----- Ego blow ----- Explosive transformation
Upside down :
- To be currently in a harsh and chaotic situation but exiting in a good manner. Indeed you are falling but landing with your feet over the soil.
- The same of the normal position but less negative because their incorrect position can block some powers of the card.
[edit] Interpretation
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Many differing meanings are attributed to the card:
- To some, it symbolizes failure, ruin and catastrophe.
- To others, the Tower represents the Paradigms constructed by the Ego, the sum total of all Schema that the mind constructs to understand the universe. The Tower is struck by lightning when Reality does not conform to expectation.
- Epiphanies, transcendental states of consciousness, and Kundalini experiences may result.
- The Tower further symbolizes that moment in Trance in which the mind actually changes the direction of the force of attention from alpha condition (pointed mindward) to theta condition (pointed imaginal stageward). Theta Condition (especially in waking versions of Theta states) is that moment when information coming in to the ego mind overwhelms external or sensory stimulus, resulting in what might otherwise be called a "Vision" or "Hallucination."
- Each card in the Major Arcana is a result of the previous. After the self bondage of The Devil, life is self correcting. Either the querents must make changes in their own lives, or the changes will be made for them.
- The querent may be holding on to false ideas or pretenses; a new approach to thinking about the problem is needed. The querent is advised to think outside the box. The querent is warned that truth may not oblige schema. It may be time for the querent to re-examine belief structures, ideologies, and paradigms they hold to. The card may also point toward seeking education or higher knowledge.
[edit] In popular culture
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- Near the end of Stephen King's Dark Tower I: The Gunslinger the protagonist, Roland, draws The Tower in a tarot session. His goal is to reach the Dark Tower, from which the series takes its name.
- Chapter 27 of the 2005 novel Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince is entitled "The Lightning-Struck Tower". Appropriately to the card's meaning, events in this chapter - which takes place within a tower - force Harry to abandon many of the pretenses he has clung to throughout the book. And in quite a literal form, a character falls from the tower after being hit by a curse. (Earlier in the book, Professor Trelawney had drawn the tarot card in a reading, though she misses the significance of it.)
- In Vision of Escaflowne, Millerna draws The Tower meaning that her wedding with the prince would bring disaster but Hitomi places The Emperor over the Tower to deceive her, telling her that it was going to have a happy ending. Later on the true effect of altering this divination is shown when Dornkirk destroys the palace (An Emperor tearing down a Tower).
- In Kaori Yuki's manga Godchild Riffael Raffit's rank in DELILAH is the Tower. Remaining true to the card's meaning, the sixth volume of the series features Riff's startling betrayal and the revelation that his loyalty to the story's protagonist, Cain, was nothing but a lie. Riffael's character is arrogant and feels that he alone is worthy of being king. Furthermore, the final volume takes place in a tower that is struck by lightning.
- Atmospheric sludge metal band Isis has an album titled Celestial that is themed on the tower, as is the album's follow-up, [[SGNL>05]].
- The opening sequence of the HBO produced TV series Carnivale contains a shot zooming into a Tower tarot card to reveal the White House
[edit] References
- ^ Bill Butler, Dictionary of the Tarot. (Schocken, 1975; ISBN 0-8052-0559-4)
- ^ Paul Huson, Mystical Origins of the Tarot: From Ancient Roots to Modern Usage (Destiny, 2004. ISBN 978-0892811908)
- ^ Huson, op. cit.
- A. E. Waite's 1910 Pictorial Key to the Tarot
- Juliette Wood, Folklore 109 (1998):15-24, The Celtic Tarot and the Secret Tradition: A Study in Modern Legend Making (1998)
[edit] External links
- "Tower" cards from many decks and articles to "Tower" iconography
- The History of the Tower (Fire) Card from The Hermitage.
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