Image of Death (Tarot)

Death (Tarot)

Death is, no doubt, the most terrifying of the Tarot cards to get at a reading. Therefore, guides to the Tarot usually point out that it’s not necessarily about death, but some significant loss, change, or revelation. Well, it’s about death, too. That’s part of life. I’ve had Death appear just a few times in my Tarot readings, but in those cases it has proven to be about real death, or at least something almost as sinister. Not my own death — yet — but one happening in my surroundings or the surroundings of the person I did the reading for. We have to respect the simple fact that life has its horrors. Therefore, so do all methods of divination. If we want to peek into the future, everything isn’t going to be good news. We have to prepare for that, before trying any system of divination. Just looking at the Tarot Death card gives a hint of its grimness. Death on a white horse, black flag in hand, people mourning beside a corpse. The bishop, too, indicates that something definite and shocking has happened. It could be the scene after a battle, or an accident, or a plague ravaging the country. But the sun in the background of the Tarot Death card image reveals that life will go on, anyway. The child on the picture gives the same message. Death is part of life. We’re born, so we will die one day. Although it’s the very first rule of existence, it’s the most difficult one to come to terms with. That’s why we tend to be shocked when death appears — in our lives, or as a card in a Tarot reading. It’s as if we pretend it can be escaped by being ignored. But the only way of learning to live with it is to accept it. That said, the Tarot Death card is not always about physical death, although that can be the case. It can also indicate a drastic change including a costly loss, a painful farewell, and things of that kind. It’s sure to be difficult and the change is lasting. The situation after this event is quite different and will not be reversible. So, it’s always a death of sorts… If the Tarot Death card refers to a person, which is quite rare, it is either someone marked by death or something similarly sinister, or it is a person bringing it. Such a person is an acquaintance that can be very costly to you, even dangerous. Be wary… If the Tarot Death card in your divination spread relates to an event, it is something that sinister — though not necessarily death — happening in your surroundings. It may afflict you, more or less, but it is probably not happening primarily to you. Still, there is reason to be careful… If the Tarot Death card has a position in the divination spread referring to you, it may very well be a serious warning about your health or some other very serious problem already striking you. If you can change the route you are on, you should. It is a warning. It may also mean that you can cause problems, even serious harm, to others.
Alias Death
Real Names/Alt Names N/A
Characteristics Personification, Tarot, Game-themed, Occult, The Renaissance, Public Domain
Creators/Key Contributors Pamela Colman-Smith, Unknown
First Appearance Ducal courts of northern Italy (c. 1440)
First Publisher
Appearance List Sola Busca (1490s) — earliest surviving deck [Open Culture] [WaiteSmith.org]; Monde primitif… (Vol. 8: “Du Jeu des Tarots”) (1781) by Antoine Court de Gébelin; Manière de se récréer avec le jeu de cartes nommées Tarots (1783–1785) by Etteilla (Jean-Baptiste Alliette); Dogme et rituel de la haute magie (1856) by Éliphas Lévi; The Tarot: Its Occult Signification, Use in Fortune-Telling, and Method of Play (1888) by S. L. MacGregor Mathers; Le Tarot des Bohémiens (1889) by Papus (Gérard Encausse); Rider Waite Tarot (1909) by A. E. Waite and Pamela Colman Smith [WaiteSmith.org]; The Tarot of the Bohemians (1910) by A. P Morton [Internet Archive]; The Pictorial Key to the Tarot (1911, 1959) by A. E. Waite and Pamela Colman Smith; Le tarot des imagiers du moyen âge (1926) by Oswald Wirth; The Book of Thoth: A Short Essay on the Tarot of the Egyptians (1944) by Aleister Crowley; Le Tarot de Marseille (1949) by Paul Marteau; The Tarot Revealed (1960) by Eden Gray; Tarot Cards for Fun and Fortune Telling (1970) by Stuart R. Kaplan; The Encyclopedia of Tarot (Vol. 1) (1978) by Stuart R. Kaplan.
Sample Read The Pictorial Key to the Tarot (1911, 1959) by A. E. Waite and Pamela Colman Smith [Internet Archive]
Description Death is, no doubt, the most terrifying of the Tarot cards to get at a reading. Therefore, guides to the Tarot usually point out that it’s not necessarily about death, but some significant loss, change, or revelation. Well, it’s about death, too. That’s part of life. I’ve had Death appear just a few times in my Tarot readings, but in those cases it has proven to be about real death, or at least something almost as sinister. Not my own death — yet — but one happening in my surroundings or the surroundings of the person I did the reading for. We have to respect the simple fact that life has its horrors. Therefore, so do all methods of divination. If we want to peek into the future, everything isn’t going to be good news. We have to prepare for that, before trying any system of divination. Just looking at the Tarot Death card gives a hint of its grimness. Death on a white horse, black flag in hand, people mourning beside a corpse. The bishop, too, indicates that something definite and shocking has happened. It could be the scene after a battle, or an accident, or a plague ravaging the country. But the sun in the background of the Tarot Death card image reveals that life will go on, anyway. The child on the picture gives the same message. Death is part of life. We’re born, so we will die one day. Although it’s the very first rule of existence, it’s the most difficult one to come to terms with. That’s why we tend to be shocked when death appears — in our lives, or as a card in a Tarot reading. It’s as if we pretend it can be escaped by being ignored. But the only way of learning to live with it is to accept it. That said, the Tarot Death card is not always about physical death, although that can be the case. It can also indicate a drastic change including a costly loss, a painful farewell, and things of that kind. It’s sure to be difficult and the change is lasting. The situation after this event is quite different and will not be reversible. So, it’s always a death of sorts… If the Tarot Death card refers to a person, which is quite rare, it is either someone marked by death or something similarly sinister, or it is a person bringing it. Such a person is an acquaintance that can be very costly to you, even dangerous. Be wary… If the Tarot Death card in your divination spread relates to an event, it is something that sinister — though not necessarily death — happening in your surroundings. It may afflict you, more or less, but it is probably not happening primarily to you. Still, there is reason to be careful… If the Tarot Death card has a position in the divination spread referring to you, it may very well be a serious warning about your health or some other very serious problem already striking you. If you can change the route you are on, you should. It is a warning. It may also mean that you can cause problems, even serious harm, to others.
Source Death – Tarot Card Meanings
Death: The Rider-Waite Tarot (1909) | Pamela Colman-Smith
Death: The Rider-Waite Tarot (1909) | Pamela Colman-Smith