woodcut designs, late 15th-early 16th century (National Gallery, Washington)
La Papesse This Tarot card was originally called
La Papesse, or "The Popess". Some of the cards directly linked the woman on the cards to the papacy by showing the woman wearing a
triregnum or
Papal Tiara. There are also some modern versions of the
Tarot of Marseilles which include the keys to the kingdom that are a traditional symbol of the papacy. In
Protestant post-
reformation countries, Tarot cards in particular used images of the legendary
Pope Joan, linking in to the mythology of how Joan, disguised as a man, was elected to the papacy and was only supposedly discovered to be a woman when she gave birth.
Other variants In the
Rider–Waite Tarot, illustrated by
Pamela Coleman Smith, the Popess was changed into The High Priestess sitting between the pillars of
Boaz and Jachin (which has a particular meaning to
Freemasonry). She wears a crown similar to the Egyptian goddess
Hathor and is depicted with the
Marian imagery of a blue mantle and the
moon at her feet.
A. E. Waite, the co-creator of the Rider–Waite deck, dismissed the idea that the card originally depicted
Pope Joan and speculated that it was instead connected to the ancient cult of
Astarte. Other variants that came after Rider–Waite are the
Virgin Mary,
Isis, the
metaphorical
Bride of Christ or
Holy Mother Church. In Swiss Troccas decks, she is called
Junon ("Juno"), the Roman Queen of the Gods. The "Flemish Deck" by Vandenborre (c. 1750-1760) refers to this card as
Le Espagnol Capitano Eracasse ("The Spanish Captain Fracasse"), after a version of
Il Capitano, a character from ''
Commedia dell'Arte''.
Sister Manfreda card
La Papessa in the
Visconti-Sforza Tarot has been identified as a depiction of
Sister Manfreda, an Umiliata nun and a relative of the
Visconti family who was elected Pope by the heretical
Guglielmite sect of
Lombardy. In
The Tarot Cards Painted by Bonifacio Bembo,
Gertrude Moakley writes: This identification has been supported by other Tarot historians, such as Michael Dummett in his book
The Visconti-Sforza Tarot Cards. ==Symbolism==