When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission at no additional cost to you. If you want to find out how this works: [Read More Here]
The Tarot Cards of the Major Arcana
- 0: The Fool | 0: The Fool Reversed
- 1: The Magician | 1: The Magician Reversed
- 2: The High Priestess | 2: The High Priestess Reversed
- 3: The Empress | 3: The Empress Reversed
- 4: The Emperor | 4: The Emperor Reversed
- 5: The Hierophant | 5: The Hierophant Reversed
- 6: The Lovers | 6: The Lovers Reversed
- 7: The Chariot | 7: The Chariot Reversed
- 8: Strength
- 9: The Hermit
- 10: The 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: Judgment
- 21: The World
The twenty-two cards of the major arcana are usually the tarot cards that most people learn first.
Almost all readers consider them to be the most important and with good reason.
When they appear it usually means that life is currently, has been, or shortly will be, more profound or deep and meaningful than usual.
That seems straightforward but because of their significance within a reading it is critical that you interpret their meanings correctly.
Strength & Justice – Please Note!!
Please note that on our website we have Strength as 8 and Justice as 11. Some older decks and some foreign decks have them the other way around but almost all decks from the Rider-Waite onward (which was responsible for the switch) have them as we do.
This is because the correspondences arrived at by the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn did not make sense astrologically with Justice as 8 and Strength as 11. The Rider-Waite deck switched the order.
Nearly all modern decks and certainly those in the Western world have them as we do as does the American Tarot Association and other respected interpretive websites. Either way round is perfectly valid so if your deck has a different order – don’t panic!
Tarot Time is supported by its visitors. This page/post may contain affiliate links and we may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you if you should click on one of those links.
Image Attribution: “RWS Tarot 01 Magician” by Pamela Coleman Smith – a 1909 card scanned by Holly Voley (http://home.comcast.net/~vilex/) for the public domain, and retrieved from http://www.sacred-texts.com/tarot (see note on that page regarding source of images). Via Wikipedia.