from the
Rider–Waite tarot deck Wands are used in the
Enochian magic of
John Dee, the
Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn,
Thelema, and
Wicca, and by independent practitioners of magic. Wands were introduced into the occult via the 13th-century Latin
grimoire The Oathbound Book of Honorius. The wand idea from the
Book of Honorius, along with various other ideas from that grimoire, were later incorporated into the 16th-century grimoire
The Key of Solomon.
The Key of Solomon became popular among occultists for hundreds of years. In 1888, there was the publication of an English translation of the
Key of Solomon by
Samuel Mathers (one of the co-founders of
the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn), which made the text of the
Key of Solomon available to the anglophone world. That 1888 English version inspired
Gerald Gardner, the creator of
Wicca, to incorporate the wand and various other ritual objects into Wicca. The creators of the Golden Dawn got their idea to use a wand, as well as their other main ritual objects (dagger, sword, hexagrammic
pentacle, and cup), from the writings of the mid-19th-century occult writer
Eliphas Levi. Levi himself mentioned most of those objects (all except for the cup) in his writings because they are in the
Key of Solomon, whereas he got the cup from the
tarot suit of cups. In Levi's 1862 book
Philosophie Occulte, he wrote a fake excerpt of a Hebrew version of the
Key of Solomon, and that fake excerpt was part of the inspiration for the Golden Dawn's ritual objects, and especially their lotus wand. The
ceremonial magic of the
Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn uses several different types of wands for different purposes, the most prominent of which are the fire wand and the lotus wand. In Wicca, wands are traditionally used to summon and control angels and genies, but have later come to also be used for general spell-casting. Wands serve a similar purpose to
athames (ritual daggers), though the two objects have their distinct uses: an athame is used to command, whereas a wand is seen as more gentle, and is used to invite or encourage. Wands are traditionally made of wood—practitioners usually prune a branch from an
oak,
hazel, or other tree, or may even buy wood from a
hardware store, and then carve it and add decorations to personalize it, though one can also purchase ready-made wands. In Wicca, the wand can represent the element
air, or
fire (following the wiccan author
Raymond Buckland, who got his element associations from the Golden Dawn), although contemporary wand-makers also create wands for the elements of
earth and
water.
Tarot cards The
suit of wands is one of the four suits in the 1909
Rider–Waite–Smith occult tarot deck, and other, later
tarot decks that are based upon that deck. The suit of wands replaced the
suit of batons from earlier, non-occult tarot decks. Waite–Smith tarot deck also replaced the
suit of coins from earlier, non-occult decks, with the
suit of pentacles. The Rider–Waite–Smith tarot deck was designed by two members of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn,
Arthur Edward Waite and
Pamela Colman Smith. Waite provided the general guidelines for the deck (including the names of the four suits, and thus the suit of wands), and detailed guidelines for the designs of the
Major Arcana, and he hired Smith to do the painting, and to make original artwork for the
Minor Arcana. Waite instructed Smith to not paint actual
wands in the wand cards, but rather to paint large tree trunk staffs with some foliage growing on them, so as to make an association between wands and
Eliphas Levi's phrase "the flowering
rod of Aaron" from Levi's fake fragment of
The Key of Solomon. ==Status symbolism==