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This is the Queen of Hearts from a pack of large Tarot cards (called Taroch or Tarok in German). Cards in this pack measure 74 x 129mm. Queens are worth 4 points in the game of Tarot. Game of Tarot ((jeu de tarot)) cards are used in ordinary card games rather than in cartomancy / divination. The history of Tarot goes back to 15th century Italy. There were 78 cards, including 21 'trump' cards and a 'fool' or 'skeench' dressed as a harlequin, which in modern packs would be called a joker. The large numbers of cards and the complicated rules led to a decline in the popularity of these Tarot card games. Austrian Taroch cards use French symbols (clubs, diamonds, hearts and spades), and a simplified pack numbering 54, which still includes the 21 trumps plus the fool. These make up the 22 'Taroch' cards. This particular pack was made by Piatnik (Vienna) in 1900.
Close up os psychic reader cards on a wood table. We can see three tarot cards and the hand of the reader.
A Jacobean Christmas at an English country manor house.
Circular Pattern Design on Banknote
vintage old black and red casket with silver dollar coin isolated on white background
Neapolitan Scopa Briscola playing cards
Ancient Spanish copper coin of the Kings Fernando e Isabel. Catholic kings. Coined in Segovia. Blanca.
Illustrated ornate book cover for Orlando Furioso, an Italian epic poem by Ludovico Ariosto, illustrated by Gustave Dore
Gypsy woman portrait from old Mexican money
Royal Flush Hearts isolated on white
spanish coin collectible numismatics isolated antique metal wear antique hobby
Magnolia Flower Pattern Design of North Korea Banknote
a bronze metal which is the back of the award token
This is the Queen of Spades from a well-known deck of vintage /antique (19th century) playing cards. It was printed in chromolithography by Bernard (Bernhard) Dondorf from Frankfurt aM, Germany, and the deck included characters from Shakespeare's plays as face cards. The Queen of Spades is illustrated as Gertrude, Queen of Denmark from the play (Hamlet). Bernard (Bernhard) Dondorf opened a lithographic printing business in 1833, first producing playing cards in 1839. His playing cards were popular for their designs and overall quality. He retired from the business in 1872 after producing popular and widely-copied designs for many years.
half a Swiss franc coin, hard currency
Swiss two-franc coin on a white background
Set of vintage coins (Great Britain, Sweden, France). Clipping path included.
...an old Spanish coin, a means of payment from the Iberian Peninsula made of metal
Mongolian Horse Race Pattern Design on Mongolian Banknote
Antoninianus. Ancient Roman copper coin of Emperor Probus.
This is the King of Hearts from a well-known deck of vintage /antique (19th century) playing cards. It was printed in chromolithography by Bernard (Bernhard) Dondorf from Frankfurt aM, Germany, and the deck included characters from Shakespeare's plays as face cards. The King of Hearts is illustrated as Henry V (from the play (Henry V)). Bernard (Bernhard) Dondorf opened a lithographic printing business in 1833, first producing playing cards in 1839. His playing cards were popular for their designs and overall quality. He retired from the business in 1872 after producing popular and widely-copied designs for many years.
3 Tarot cards drawing, the world, the sun, the lover
High resolution photograph of a detail from a painting of Hands held together in prayer
3 Kopecks 1916 Nicholas II on white background. Coin of Russian Empire. Obverse Nine shields upon crowned double-headed imperial eagle. Reverse Value flanked by stars within beaded circle
Neapolitan playing cards ace of sticks
...an old Spanish coin, a means of payment from the Iberian Peninsula made of metal
Ancient Egyptian Pharaohs Ramesses II Portrait Pattern Design on 50 Piastres Egyptian Banknotes
A piece of an eighteenth-nineteenth century alchemy text from an artefact
This is the Jack of Diamonds from a well-known deck of vintage /antique (19th century) playing cards. It was printed in chromolithography by Bernard (Bernhard) Dondorf from Frankfurt aM, Germany, and the deck included characters from Shakespeare's plays as face cards. The Jack of Diamonds is illustrated as Sir Thomas Lovell from the play (Henry VIII). Bernard (Bernhard) Dondorf opened a lithographic printing business in 1833, first producing playing cards in 1839. His playing cards were popular for their designs and overall quality. He retired from the business in 1872 after producing popular and widely-copied designs for many years.
Free Images: "bestof:Piedmontese tarot deck - Solesio - 1865 - 3 of Coins.jpg en Piedmontese tarot deck Solesio 1865 3 of Coins 1865 http //gallica bnf fr/ark /12148/btv1b10513772t"
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