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More Major Arcana Cards:
0 - The Fool
1 - The Magician
2 - The High Priestess
3 - The Empress
4 - The Emperor
5 - The Hierophant
6 - The Lovers
7 - The Chariot
8 - Strength
9 - The Hermit
10 - Wheel of Fortune
11 - Justice
12 - The Hanged Man
13 - Death
14 - Temperance
15 - The Devil
16 - The Tower
17 - The Star
18 - The Moon
19 - The Sun
20 - Judgement
21 - The World

Other Tarot Cards:
Suit of Cups
Suit of Pentacles
Suit of Swords
Suit of Wands

 

16 - The Tower

The Tower is the 17th Card in the Major Arcana of the Tarot.
(It is card No.16 because the 1st Card, "The Fool" is called Card No.0.)

The Tower is often thought to be one of the most negative, and most justifiably feared cards in the Tarot Deck. (Contrast this with those cards such as Death, The Devil, and The Hanged Man, which some people fear because of their misunderstanding of them.)

The reason for such strong attitudes to this card is that The Tower can indicate a dramatic "wake-up call", "bolt from the blue", or need for concious self-improvement. Sometimes, it can indicate circumstances that may be difficult to cope with initially.
However, no card is completely negative. The Tower card can help us to recognise and overcome attitudes that we may hold and which are keeping us stuck or isolated in some way.

Many tarot decks include an image of a tall tower from which people (typically a male and a female figure) are falling. The most traditional images of thiscard also include lightening strking the top of the tower, fire at the top of the tower, and a raging sea at the bottom of the tower - dramatic, energetic, imagery.

Some specific terms associated with "The Moon" Tarot card include:
Darkness, Possible Deception, Caution, Important of "gut" (instinctive) reactions, Situation affected by something from our past.

 

The Major Arcana cards are thought to be the most powerful cards in the Tarot. They tell a complete story when arranged in upright and numerical order. It is a story of development and enlightenment, sometimes called "The Fool's Journey".

Some texts include meanings for "reversed cards", which apply when the cards are shuffled in both order and orientation. This doubles the number of possible "cards" in the deck from 78 to 156. (In terms of the probabilities of obtaining results by chance alone, it is not a simple doubling as once a card has been drawn it cannot be selected again in the opposite orientation in the same reading.)

Why doesn't this page include a picture of this Tarot Card ?