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Court Cards

The 16 figure-cards of the Minor Arcana — Page, Knight, Queen, King in each of the four suits.

Court Cards

The Court Cards of a tarot deck are the 16 figure-cards of the Minor Arcana — four cards in each of the four suits (Wands, Cups, Swords, Pentacles). The standard Rider–Waite–Smith deck names them Page, Knight, Queen, King; Aleister Crowley's Thoth deck (1944) renames them Princess, Prince, Queen, Knight with corresponding structural adjustments. The 16 court cards function in Western esoteric tarot interpretation as representing either persons in the querent's life or aspects of the querent's own personality register, classically read through the elemental attribution of the suit (fire/air/water/earth) combined with the rank's register (youth/action/maturity/mastery).

Tradition and grounding

The court-card structure traces to the 14th-century Mamluk Egyptian playing cards, which included three court cards per suit (malik, na'ib malik, and na'ib thani — king, deputy, second deputy). Italian tarot decks of the 15th century expanded this to four court cards per suit by adding the Page (fante in Italian), producing the 16-court-card structure that remains standard in modern Western tarot. Divinatory interpretation of the court cards emerged later; the late-19th-century Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn — an esoteric organization that systematized existing and newly-developed tarot material rather than recipients of any ancient lineage — developed the elemental-within-elemental attributions (e.g., Page of Wands as earth-of-fire, Knight of Wands as air-of-fire) that inform contemporary esoteric court-card interpretation.

Structure and composition

The 16 court cards in the standard Rider–Waite–Smith structure:

  • Pages (four: Page of Wands, Page of Cups, Page of Swords, Page of Pentacles) — classical register: youth, student, messenger, beginning of the suit's register. In Golden Dawn-derived elemental- within-elemental attribution, Pages are classically attributed to the earth-within-element register.
  • Knights (four: Knight of Wands, Knight of Cups, Knight of Swords, Knight of Pentacles) — classical register: action, pursuit, movement, the dynamic expression of the suit's register. Attributed to air-within-element in Golden Dawn framework.
  • Queens (four: Queen of Wands, Queen of Cups, Queen of Swords, Queen of Pentacles) — classical register: mature nurturing authority in the suit's register, the receptive- authoritative expression. Attributed to water-within-element.
  • Kings (four: King of Wands, King of Cups, King of Swords, King of Pentacles) — classical register: mature active authority in the suit's register, the expressive-authoritative culmination. Attributed to fire-within-element.

Crowley's Thoth-deck naming reassigns these to Princess, Prince, Queen, Knight with corresponding structural shifts — the Knight of the Thoth deck (Crowley's rename of the standard King) carries the classical King-register meaning, which causes interpretive confusion when readers mix Thoth-deck and Rider–Waite-tradition sources.

Western esoteric interpretation register

Western esoteric tarot reads the court cards in one of two primary modes: as people in the querent's life (Court card = a specific person with the combined register of suit-element and rank), or as aspects of the querent's own personality operating in the situation (Court card = a part of the self expressing the combined register). Practitioners choose the mode based on the spread's question and context. Within either mode, the interpretive register combines the suit's element with the rank's classical register: a Queen of Cups reads as the mature-nurturing authority register within the water- element domain (emotion, relationship); a Knight of Swords reads as decisive-active register within the air-element domain (thought, conflict). The 16 court cards together span the complete suit-by- rank matrix that Western esoteric tradition has developed over 20th-century tarot literature.

Related Concepts

Tradition-reported practices

Western tarot practice reads court cards as persons or as aspects per the practitioner's preference, determined through context- register attention to surrounding cards and the querent's question. The tradition reports these reading conventions; interpretation of specific court-card appearances is the reader's practice.

Court Cards — The 16 figure-cards of the Minor Arcana — Page, Knight, Queen, King in each of the four suits. | VastuCart