firefli
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None. Tarot was born after the Templars were disbanded in the early 14th Century. The Templars might have known playing cards, but that's uncertain. What is certain, however, is that the surviving craftsmen/imagers who followed Maître Jacques, the head of the Templars who was executed, continued to work and to pass on traditions within their corporations - and some of these traditions might have been Templar-inspired. Some of these craftsmen, at a later date, are said to have become cardmakers.firefli said:what decks did The Templars use?
Helvetica said:Huguenots did have something to do with cardmaking - including tarot cards - as they did with most crafts.
Let me get home and check my Schweizerische Spielkarten. Off-the-top-of-my-head I can remember a Rochas family in Geneva who were cardmakers. Rochas is a Huguenot name (and in any case, being in Geneva, would have been Protestants back then).Ross G Caldwell said:Can you give me more information on the cardmaking and tarot card parts? I have my doubts, only because of the Calvinist origin of the French protestants, and Calvinism was at its origin extremely puritanical, forbidding idle and potentially diabolical things like cards and dancing.
It could be that there are exceptions, which would be interesting to know.
And of course, centuries later, descendants of early Huguenot families would not necessarily hold to the same strict beliefs. A man such as Antoine Court de Gébelin is an example.
Helvetica said:Let me get home and check my Schweizerische Spielkarten. Off-the-top-of-my-head I can remember a Rochas family in Geneva who were cardmakers. Rochas is a Huguenot name (and in any case, being in Geneva, would have been Protestants back then).
As you say, the strict Calvinism of the 16th Century had softened - and when it came to trades and crafts, business seemed to be more important! Just because they forbade gambling does not mean they did not make cards - in the same way that you find some very nice wines in Muslim North Africa (and some ardent wine-drinkers!)![]()
Ross G Caldwell said:You're right about business - making money is never much of a sin.
kwaw said:And work was/is very much part of the puritan / protestant ethic, and being opposed to something does not necessarily equate to being unwilling to make money out of it.
Crowley's family, tee-total Plymouth Brethren, made their fortune as brewers and in ale houses.
Ross G Caldwell said:That's true. But I don't know if Crowley's father was himself a brewer. I'm not clear (despite having studied Crowley a long time) if his father and mother were converts to the Plymouth Brethren, if his father relied on past riches, etc. Can you fill me in?
kwaw said:Here is a family history of the Crowleys and Curtisses [both quaker families connected with each other, the three Crowley brothers who founded the Crowley brewery at Alton were all married to Curtis sisters] by Mary Crowley:
http://www.manicai.net/genealogy/CrowleyFamily.pdf
Kwaw