Petit Oracles de les dames, c. 1807

Huck

This are the Kaplan cards (Kaplan 1, p. 157), our variant Nr. 3 of the Petit Oracle des Dames

etteilla-36.jpg


etteilla-37.jpg


... rather obviously different to the both other versions. Kaplan wrote, that the cards were once two uncut sheets, so this is a free arrangement of the still existing elements, 51 half cards.

There are no numbers, and no text (Kaplan assumes, that text likely was added in the free space below some cards). "No numbers" and "half cards" would allow the printer to variate the compositions. But the relation between figures and usual playing cards seems to have been always the same (well, we don't see all pictures).

**********

Here is deck version Nr. 4:

etteilla-31.jpg


Jupiter and Juno as Nr. 2 and 3. Both cards are given by the exhibition catalog 1984 "Tarot, jeu et magie". Only these both cards are given. And this deck was stated as from 1810 in this catalog. But it's clear, that this Jupiter doesn't look like ...

d0246218.jpg

Jupiter version 1.

PICT0212p.JPG

Jupiter version 2.

... and as the other Jupiter of version 4 should have been only a half card, it also can't be identical.

So ... there are 4 versions, at least.

For 3 of them it is stated (somewhere), that they are from 1807.

***************

Depaulis knew 1984, that the version of 1807 was version 1, which I presented at the start of the thread (contrasting to my earlier opinion, that it somehow appears, as if DDD wouldn't have known this version).
I got some photos from friendly spirits, showing parts of p. 135 of Tarot, Jeu et Magie, the catalog of an exhibition with the same name from 1984.

etteilla-61.jpg


etteilla-62.jpg


This is presented with one card (Prudentia, Peuple), which is identical to Prudentia in my version 1, as far I can see it. Further there are details in the text, which confirm the identity. The information is given,that there are 2 old decks of it in different collections. The date seems to have been given by some packing material, also with the information about "Veuve Gueffier".
 

Huck

Well, here's the passage of DDD, with which I've my problems, but also some worthwhile orientation.

etteilla-91.jpg

etteilla-92.jpg


etteilla-93.jpg



There are two red spots ... one states, that the deck of 1807 has at Nr. 9 a strong contradiction to that, what I believe for good reason to be true. Version 1 has at Nr. 9 the common Prudentia and NOT the birth of mankind. And Depaulis had himself given the data to the deck 12 years earlier. So somebody had a typo, who, I don't know. That's my interpretation of the moment.
The other red spot meets the idea, that one should know, that Jupiter had been protector and Nr. 2 in a deck called "Petit Oracle des Dames" before 1810 ... and I've to ask myself: Where and when?

Here we have Jupiter as Nr. 2 and Juno at Nr. 3 in the deck ...
etteilla-31.jpg


... which by DDD then is called "nouvel Etteilla" or "petit Nécromancien", and it was presented ALSO in the catalog of 1984.

etteilla-71.jpg


etteilla-72.jpg


It should have 36 cards (which is given with an "?" by Depaulis) and from these are 8 Etteilla trumps.

1. L'Amour
2. Jupiter
3. Juno
4. Justice
14. Prudence
15. Marriage, Union (should be card Lovers, but Depaulis interprets "Pope" ... likely he had already 1 "Love" given to the lovers, but 23 L'amour isn't a Tarot card inside the Petit Oracle)
25. Depaulis writes Etoile (means Star) and adds an "eclarissement" in brackets (but this is clearly the Sun card in the Petit Oracle).
36. Death

I've here clearly different opinions as Depaulis (1984) in the details (although I don't see the cards) and I would guess, that Steven and others with some competence would agree with me. Something went wrong there in this interpretation.

Back to the major problem:
The only possible explanation seems to be, that a new deck appeared between 1984 and 1996, that (perhaps) was shown in the exhibition 1989 (cards of the revolution) and which was addressed by Wicked Pack of Cards with footnotes to the catalog. The only victim is the reader, who "just" hasn't the catalog at hand and who wasn't at the exhibition. "Wicked Pack of Cards" is, as far the description of the Petit Oracle is concerned, "confusing" or confused and not really informative. I would expect, that the 8 cards should have been named in the text, but they left it aside, likely themselves insecure, hat they shall do with it.

Well, I don't know.
We have with version 2 (Mari's finding, earlier presented) a further deck, which the French library ALSO dates to 1807. This called itself also "Petit Oracle des Dames" (at least the website makes this), and this also contained a Jupiter as No 2 and a Juno as number 3. If DDD had in mind the existence of this deck, the somewhat troublesome footnote 5 becomes explainable.

Now we don't know, what this deck contains .. the description spares for instance the information, if this deck is complete. We seem to see the pictures of 8 cards, 4 of them are Etteilla trumps in my opinion.

2. Jupiter
3. Juno
14. Prudence
30. "Trahison, Perfidie" - treason, but the card motif is the Tarot Hermit with dog and lantern.

Trahison is between the trumps in the Petit Oracle (card 17; cards 1-22 present the trump
series).

d0246216.jpg


The Petit Oracle changed the "Hanging Man" (= Traitor) to Prudence, but then moved the Traitor function to the old Man. And they formed a figure Sagesse , which they crossed with "Fidelity".

d0246214.jpg


Likely Depaulis didn't understand this.

I think, the objects at ...
http://www-bsg.univ-paris1.fr/la_reserve/expos/jeu/horsjeu.htm

... by myself called "Version 4" are not part of a deck, they are just two piece of papers, possibly printed sheets or packing material

The paper at the lower left side has some inscriptions at the right side: you likely can only read them, when you click on the picture and enlarge it.

above: "Nouvel Etteilla - or the Petit Nécromancien"
below: "Le Petit Oracle des Dames"

By the composition of the paper one might easily understand, that these cards are from a "Le Petit Oracle des Dames". But this seems to be wrong, they are simply from the "Nouvel Etteilla".

.....
... :) ... OOps, difficult birth.

That's all only "my conclusion", the real facts are just rather confusing presented. I attempted to make the best of it. Possibly some contradictions would solve with a deck, which is unknown to me.
 

coredil

@ Huck

edited and deleted.
Uups!
Sorry for not reading attentively enough.
You already posted the same!
 

Huck

hi Coredil,

actually you had a remark in your text, which I didn't noticed before, and therefore I found your contribution very worthwhile (about a possible reason, how the error about the 9 connected to "birth of mankind" might have occurred in Wicked Pack of Cards).

************

I attempt to write a summary:

An important information is still missing: DDD gives an information about a 66 cards divination deck from 1790, which shall have influenced a part of the Petit Oracle des Dames, the other part is given as influence of the first Etteilla deck from 1788. It naturally would be worthwhile to know that. Information about it should be given in the catalog of an 1989 exhibition, Depaulis: Les cart de la Révolution: cartes à jouer et propaganda, Issy-les-Moulineaux.
Further it might be of interest to see the Mme Finet decks, though I'm skeptic, if this will really improve much.

I've given material to 5 partly fragmented decks, from which two belong to the Etteilla Nouvel or Petit Nécromancien (with 36 cards only) development. The earlier Kaplan fragment might be from another strange variant of the Petit Oracle, but it's framented state doesn't allow judgment. Two decks of the 5 confirm each other in the version of 1807. But1807 shouldn't be the original.

Stephen and and me have made some dating exploration, and we found various advertisements for the deck since 1800.
Our online discussion about it took place ...
http://tarotforum.net/showthread.php?t=169991&page=17
... and BEFORE this page, starting at ...
http://tarotforum.net/showthread.php?t=169991&page=15
.. in POST #146

Inside the discussion we once had the opinion, that the Petit Oracle des Dames existed already in 1797, but it turned out to be a google-error about the calendar of the revolution.
As "oldest advertisement" (for the moment) we have:

inside an announcement content:

etteilla-14.jpg


etteilla-13.jpg


I found then these "real announcements":

etteilla-20.jpg


30 Nivose, an 8 should be 19th of January 1800
... so very short after a new century (19th century) had started. Silvester is always a good time to sell divination decks.

etteilla-19.jpg


http://books.google.de/books?id=KW4...wBA#v=onepage&q=editions:28mZjPrif5gC&f=false

PAGE 115

**************

I found another entry in the following year, this time referring to Gueffier:

http://books.google.de/books?id=tDw...Bw#v=onepage&q=petit oracle des dames&f=false

etteilla-18.jpg


etteilla-17.jpg


I searched for the right book and for page 141: NEGATIVE at Google
POSITIVE at Gallica.fr

etteilla-22.jpg


15 Pluviose, an 9 should be 4th of February 1801

etteilla-21.jpg


http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k5483400g/f5.r=oracle.langEN

PAGE 141

*****************

In the following year 1802 a lot of entries about the Petit Oracle des Dames exist, book.google.com makes it easy to find some ...
http://www.google.de/search?tbo=p&t....,cf.osb&fp=cccabcdc61fb348d&biw=1680&bih=883
... though not all. Other requests often lead to other results not included before.

Another year with much advertisement is 1806, possibly there appeared an improved edition (?), also 1820, 1827 and 1841 might be interesting.

Of special value is the information, that these early cards already had the right numbers, 42 cards and 72 /74 pictures. This possibly confirms, that the deck of 1807 is relative near to the version of 1800.
Already in 1801 the name "Gueffier" appears in the advertisements, though it appears not in the first document.

In an advertisement collection given by Fleischer in 1802 the following three notes appear:

etteilla-11.jpg


http://books.google.de/books?id=Udh..._esc=y#v=onepage&q=petit necromancien&f=false

This text, from the year 1802, "Annuaire de la Librairie" by Wilhelm Fleischer presents an object with the name "Le Petit Nécromancien" and we know, that according Depaulis in c. 1810 an object is addressed, which was a card deck (36 cards) with similarities to the Petit Oracle des Dames.
Further is advertised an card deck with 42 "tableaux", and we know that the Petit Oracle des Dames decks have also 42 cards.

The whole possibly indicates, that one publisher (likely from Bordeaux) or "auteur" manufactured all three decks "with similarities" in a creative output, and threw them all around the same time on the market.

Under this condition not only the date of the Petit Oracle des Dames (1807) must be corrected, but also the date for the Petit Nécromancien (1810).

Well, I've difficulties to verify the given reference to "CH. Pougens". The text is at google, but it is a chaos.
http://www.google.de/search?tbm=bks....,cf.osb&fp=cccabcdc61fb348d&biw=1680&bih=858

**********

The Parisian publisher "Barba", above twice noted, is described here ...
http://publishing.cdlib.org/ucpress...hf&chunk.id=d0e10699&toc.depth=1&brand=eschol
But no career more vividly illustrates the evolution of key publishers from theater to the novel over the revolutionary period than that of Jean-Nicolas Barba. Barba first appeared in the Palais Royal in 1791, where he took over the fledgling establishment of two old members of the Paris Book Guild, Jean-Nicolas Duchesne and Théodore Dabo.[105] He also bought the huge stock of theater titles that Maradan was forced to sell after his bankruptcy in 1790.[106] Between 1795 and 1799 Barba registered thirty-eight works at the dépôt . His first deposit was Charles-Pierre Ducancel's Thermidorean drama L'Intérieur des comités révolutionnaires . All of his titles were in theater, ranging from serious tragedies like Marie-Joseph Chénier's Azémire or the theatrical rendering of Voltaire's great anticlerical cause in Jean Calas , to comic operas like Severin's Le Villageois qui cherche son veau .

He was also a notorious literary pirate and dealer in pornography. In 1796, he was accused of pirating Philippe Fabre d'Eglantine's Intrigue épistolaire , and in 1797, Migneret's edition of de LaHarpe's Du fanatisme dans la langue révolutionnaire .[107] By 1802 Barba was, as the prefect of Paris described him, "very well known for this kind of trade."[108] Barba also orchestrated numerous illegal editions of the marquis de Sade's Justine , until the police finally discovered his secret warehouse in 1802.[109] Known for driving hard bargains, both legal and illegal, Barba was enormously successful.

By 1795 he had moved to the rue Git-le-coeur, in the heart of the old publishing district, and he maintained a second shop in the Palais Royal. Five years later he also had an outlet nearer to the theater at the Palais du Tribunat. Having founded one of the great publishing fortunes of the revolutionary era through popular theater, pornography, and literary pirating, Barba, too, branched out into the novel, beginning with Guillaume-Charles-Antoine Pigault-Lebrun's libertine romances. By the 1820s Barba had become one of the first editors of Honoré de Balzac.[110] Like Maradan and Migneret, Barba was instrumental in turning Paris publishing from classical theater to the romantic novel, from civic to domestic genres.

Barba seems to work rather near to "theater-life" and the author in Bordeaux ALSO seems to have lived near a theater.
 

Huck

I took an internet visit to the theater in Bordeaux. It indeed exists still with the pictures of c. 1790, though naturally in a reconstructed form.

800px-Bordeaux_grand_theatre-1.jpg


800px-Grand_Th%C3%A9%C3%A2tre_Bordeaux_engraving_by_Poulleau_NGO1p546.jpg

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Théâtre_de_Bordeaux
picture 1790, engraver artist Poulleau

The Grand Théâtre de Bordeaux was conceived as a temple of the Arts and Light, with a neo-classical facade endowed with a portico of 12 Corinthian style colossal columns which support an entablature on which stand 12 statues that represent the nine Muses and three goddesses (Juno, Venus and Minerva).

450px-Bordeaux_grand_theatre-6.jpg


450px-Bordeaux_grand_theatre-4.jpg


18_hd.jpg


inauguration-restauration-salle-gerard-boirea-L-7.jpeg


The theater become for a short time "French parliament" in 1871, after the loss in the war against Germany. Perhaps it was already before connected to national French feelings.

The style of the deck "Petit Oracle des Dames" is rather obvious similar to that, with Juno and Jupiter. It might be well possible, that an Bordeaux engraving artist was used to this style.
 

Huck

I detected at an exhibition photo (Andrea Vitali, Malta) a version of the Petit Oracle des Dames.

andrea-vitali-exhibition.jpg


http://www.letarot.it/page.aspx?id=141 ... the small photo at the right

Compare the small Amor picture with the later card:

d0246223.jpg


It's almost identical inclusive the small Pique Ace and the Venus sign above it.

I looked in the catalog of Andrea Vitali, made around the time of the Malta exhibition and found as the Amor picture as Nr. 118 ..
L'amore da "Les songes expliqués et raprésentés par 74 figures. Du mayon de connâitre
l'avenir par une nouvelle manière de tirer les cartes les cartes" di anonimo (Lilla, chez Blocquel et Castiaux, 1809).

Blocquel is a name, which appears in DDD "Wicked Pack of Cards" variously (p. 147-49), but first in context of 1838 and the Etteilla-II deck. Blocquel used pseudonyms, one of it is Z. Lismon and another might be "Julia Orsini".

I checked for something from the web, and found a description of his life:

http://www.persee.fr/web/revues/home/prescript/article/jso_0300-953x_1985_num_41_81_2813

In 1809 Simon-Francois Blocquel (1780-1863) associated himself with Jean-Baptiste Castiaux, so the production of the text below (at the photo, with Amor) had been one of the first works of this cooperation. The work above, "Le Petit Etteilla" with 33 cards, is given as from c. 1820 and was also printed by Blocquel and Castiaux (Nr. 130 in the catalog).

Blocquel was very successful and made lots of productions. This list notes 393 titles.
http://www.culture.fr/recherche/?ty...0Simon%20Fran%E7ois&portal_type=CLT_Site_Note

In the list 15 titles react on "jeux". Les Petit Oracle des Dames is not between them. Also I get nothing for "Etteilla", So this isn't a complete list.
 

Teheuti

I went through the cards and found that those cards numbered 1 to 21 are the 21 Trumps + Fool. They are based more specifically on de Gébelin and Mellet but filtered through Etteilla into a mix of all of them.

I've listed them beginning with The World (ala le Comte de Mellet) - using the normal Marseille titles and order, followed by the Petit Oracle des Dames numbering, titles and the possible source (or a translation):

World - #1 (Voyage - de Gébelin calls it Time)
Judgment - #5 (Creation de l'Homme et de la Femme - ala de Gébelin)
Sun - #2 (Eclaircissement)
Moon - #3 (Propos - Intention, goal, plan, purpose)
Star - #4 (Etoiles Brillantes)
Tower - #6 (Le Paradis Terrestre - Expulsion from Paradise - ala de Mellet)
Devil - #7 (Force Majeure)
Temperance - #10 (La Tempérance)
Death - #13 (Mortalité)
Hanged Man - #9 (Prudence - ala de Gébelin/Etteilla)
Strength - #8 (La Force)
Wheel of Fortune - #12 (Fortune)
Hermit - #14 (Le Sage)
Justice - #11 (Thémis, La Justice)
Chariot - #15 (Dissension - Man in chariot)
Lovers - #16 (L'Homme entre le Vice et la Vertu - ala de Gébelin)
Pope - #17 (Mariage - Etteilla's card for the Pope)
Emperor - #18 (Jupiter)
Empress - #20 (Junon)
Popess - #19 (La Loi et La Foi - Law & Faith)
Magician - #21 (Le Bateleur)
Fool - #21 (double-headed card with the Magician)
Consultant/Chaos is #22

Now I'll repeat with the Dames order:

World - #1 (Voyage - de Gébelin calls it Time)
Sun - #2 (Eclaircissement)
Moon - #3 (Propos - Intention, goal, plan, purpose)
Star - #4 (Etoiles Brillantes)
Judgment - #5 (Creation de l'Homme et de la Femme - ala de Gébelin)
Tower - #6 (Le Paradis Terrestre - Expulsion from Paradise - ala de Mellet)
Devil - #7 (Force Majeure)
Strength - #8 (La Force)
Hanged Man - #9 (Prudence - ala de Gébelin/Etteilla)
Temperance - #10 (La Tempérance)
Justice - #11 (Thémis, La Justice)
Wheel of Fortune - #12 (Fortune)
Death - #13 (Mortalité)
Hermit - #14 (Le Sage)
Chariot - #15 (Dissension - Man in chariot)
Lovers - #16 (L'Homme entre le Vice et la Vertu - ala de Gébelin)
Pope - #17 (Mariage - Etteilla's card for the Pope)
Emperor - #18 (Jupiter - ala de Mellet)
Popess - #19 (La Loi et La Foi - Law & Faith - an original interpretation)
Empress - #20 (Junon)
Magician - #21 (Le Bateleur)
Fool - #21 (double-headed card with the Magician)
Consultant/Chaos is #22

Some of the booklet is taken directly from de Mellet (and probably from de Gébelin, too).

This is really intriguing!
 

Huck

World - #1 (Voyage - de Gébelin calls it Time)
Sun - #2 (Eclaircissement)
Moon - #3 (Propos - Intention, goal, plan, purpose)
Star - #4 (Etoiles Brillantes)
Judgment - #5 (Creation de l'Homme et de la Femme - ala de Gébelin)
Tower - #6 (Le Paradis Terrestre - Expulsion from Paradise - ala de Mellet)
Devil - #7 (Force Majeure)
Strength - #8 (La Force)
Hanged Man - #9 (Prudence - ala de Gébelin)
Temperance - #10 (La Tempérance)
Justice - #11 (Thémis, La Justice)
Wheel of Fortune - #12 (Fortune)
Death - #13 (Mortalité)
Hermit - #14 (Le Sage)
Chariot - #15 (Dissension - Man in chariot)
Lovers - #16 (L'Homme entre le Vice et la Vertu - ala de Gébelin)
Pope - #17 (Mariage - Etteilla's card for the Pope)
Emperor - #18 (Jupiter - ala de Mellet)
Popess - #19 (La Loi et La Foi - Law & Faith - an original interpretation)
Empress - #20 (Junon)
Magician - #21 (Le Bateleur)
Fool - #21 (double-headed card with the Magician)
Consultant/Chaos is #22

Some of the booklet is taken directly from de Mellet (and probably from de Gébelin, too).

This is really intriguing!

... :) ... Yes, this is really an interesting game.
But there was a French revolution. And it's France. So that's not a model withe Emperor and Empress.

22 Chaos and just the Questionnaire
21 Fool merged with Magician
20 Juno is Juno ... there is no Popess. See Belgian Tarot.
19 There is no Emperor or Empress. Instead there is ...

d0246219.jpg


18 Jupiter is Jupiter ... there is no Pope. See Belgian Tarot.
17 That's not the Pope. That's Love.

d0246217.jpg


...

Minchiate:

0 Fool = Chaos ... in Petit Oracle 22
1 Magician ... in Petit Oracle 21
2, 3, 4 = 3 rulers ... in Petit Oracle 18-19-20
5 Love = in Petit Oracle 17
 

Huck

Here's another Love, mixed with the traitor ...

petit-oracle-16.jpg
d0246216.jpg


... and the traitor is now a half Hermit, and the earlier Traitor is now Prudentia and the Peuple:

d0246209.jpg


... and before her is a snake, who had told her wrong stories to the Peuple. But the Peuple is prudent now, and has its Justice for the Riche Corrupteur. One shouldn't orget: there was a French revolution.

petit-oracle-11.jpg
d0246211.jpg


And there also good Hermits, which cooperate with Fidelity.

petit-oracle-14.jpg
d0246214.jpg


And there's a far greater universe with much more Love ...
d0246223.jpg

... cause that's the Petit Oracle des Dames and the publisher knows, that his customers love this aspect very much ... :)

*****

For the traitor-connection to the Hermit one has to consider, that the church had is problems with the French revolution.