The Empress card is a commonly associated with the Greek goddess Persephone, symbolizing feminine power, creativity, and fertility. It aligns with Persephone’s role as the goddess of spring and the magician Hermes, Thoth, Isis, Ptah, Mercury, Apollo, Hecate, Baba Yaga, Loki. The High Priestess card, which features pomegranates, is also associated with Persephone.
The Empress Tarot card holds rich symbolism and is connected to two important goddesses: Inanna, Persephone, and Springtime Archetypes. Her return above the earth each spring symbolizes immortality, and her symbols include pomegranates, seeds of grain, flowers, and deer.
Persephone represents a woman who can cross over from one side to the other frequently and easily, having a lot of knowledge about things that grow and things that die. In a reading, the wheel of fortune brings imminent luck and could herald the near wedding between you and your partner.
The Major Arcana tarot card has been re-imagined with the maiden goddess Persephone, representing the essence of The Fool due to her naivete. Her daughter, Persephone, is represented by the High Priestess card, which also features pomegranates.
To call in the energy of Persephone as a deity, place a Persephone card in the center, such as the Queen of Pentacles or Death. This witchy, ethereal design features the future Goddess of the Underworld, Persephone.
In conclusion, the Empress Tarot card holds rich symbolism and is connected to the goddess of spring and the Queen of the Underworld. By understanding the myths of these goddesses, readers can better connect with Persephone and their associated archetypes in their Tarot readings.
📹 Tarot of Persephone’s Garden Walk Through & Review
The Tarot of Persephone’s Garden was sent to me by the beautiful creator Kara Small @ForestMoonMaiden YouTube Channel.
Who is Persephone’s lover?
Persephone, the daughter of Demeter, was a goddess of life and fertility who lived forever in the light spring of her life. Her mother, Demeter, never let her out of her sight in the green fields of Olympus. However, her mother, Hades, the Lord of the Underworld, became besotted with her. One day, Persephone fell into the Vale of Nysa and was tricked into eating a pomegranate seed. She was bound to the Underworld for half a year and lived above with her mother the other half. Hades showed her gifts, love, and praise, and she began to like him. With her mother, she knew contentment, but with him, she was Queen of the Dead.
The myth seems disturbing, but closer study reveals that Hades and Persephone had a true romance, a rarity in the world of the Roman gods. Hades stalked her, kidnapped her, and tricked her, but in some ways, he was a kind, good husband. He seemed to think it was necessary to swallow Persephone into the world of the dead, having loved her from a distance. However, there is something malevolent in the deceit of the pomegranate seeds, and his selfish purposes in trying to keep her. The agreement about Persephone’s future was created between Zeus and Hades, without asking for the mother or daughter’s consent.
Who is the goddess in the High Priestess Tarot?
The High Priestess, a figure in the Rider-Waite-Smith tarot, is associated with the Shekhinah, the female presence of the divine. She wears plain blue robes and sits with her hands in her lap. Her features include a lunar crescent at her feet, a horned diadem on her head, and a large cross on her breast, symbolizing the balance between fire, water, earth, and air. The scroll in her hands bears the letters TORA, meaning “divine law”, symbolizing the memory we carry about the past, present, and future.
She is seated between the white and black pillars of the mystic Temple of Solomon, with the Temple’s veil behind her embroidered with palm leaves and pomegranates growing on a tree shaped like the Tree of Life. The motif behind her throne is suggested in the pattern of The Empress’s gown, suggesting the two are sisters, one bringing life into the world and the other inviting the living to esoteric mysteries. In the Tarot of Marseilles, she wears a blue cape and red robe, unlike The Pope, who wears a red cape and blue robe.
What is Medusa as a tarot card?
Medusa, frequently linked with figures such as witches or sinister old women, represents the malevolent aspect of Athena, the maiden. She is endowed with wisdom and knowledge but does not utilize them for constructive ends. This oracle card addresses the concept of rage and its association with the dark side.
What deity is the Empress tarot card?
The Empress, symbolizing authority and control over the natural world, holds a scepter, a shield with Venus symbolizing love, beauty, and creativity. Her lush landscape symbolizes abundance and nurturing aspects of nature. Astrologically, she is associated with Venus, enhancing her themes of harmony and nurturing. Numerologically, she corresponds to the number three, symbolizing creativity, growth, and expansion.
In the esoteric tradition, particularly within the Kabbalistic Tree of Life, the Empress is linked to the sephirah of Binah and its path to Chokmah, representing understanding and the nurturing aspect of the divine feminine. Binah, as the Great Mother, gives form and structure to creation, emphasizing the Empress’s role as a life-giving and nurturing force.
What element is associated with Persephone?
Persephone, the daughter of Demeter and Zeus, is associated with the element Water and unites the Earth and Air. She was born from the union of the Lord of the Air and the Lady of the Earth, gaining the power to unite (Cool) from Demeter and transform (Moist) from Zeus. Persephone joins the Underworld to life above the Earth and mediates between them in her yearly cycle, celebrated in the Eleusinian Mysteries.
Gods often form quaternities with a 3+1 structure, with Zeus’s three wives being the Maiden, Mother, and Crone. Rhea, the Celestial Crone, corresponds to Fire in this structure, as she is the agent of change and arranged the threefold mating of Zeus. The quaternity has the Sky Father Zeus above and the Earth Mother Demeter below, with Persephone on one side and Rhea on the other.
The great triad of Persephone, Demeter, and Rhea is honored in the Lesser Mysteries, which take place in Anthestêriôn (the “Month of Flowers”), the month preceding the spring equinox, and corresponding to the element Water. Persephone, Demeter, and Hekate are also important triads of Goddesses of the Greater Eleusinian Mysteries, as Hekate negotiated the return of the Maiden and was associated with Fire. They are both glittering crones, with their Fire located either in Heaven or the Underworld.
Is Persephone Asexual?
Persephone is not a virgin, which suggests the presence of an autonomous sexual drive. However, she is wholly asexual and lacks the capacity for sexual desire. The only indication of sexual activity is in Hades’ line, “claimed his due / It is finished.”
What colors represent Persephone?
In Greek mythology, the color pink is associated with the goddess Persephone, who represents the vernal season. It symbolizes her sincerity and natural beauty. Green, on the other hand, is linked to fertility and love. This color is often associated with Demeter, the goddess of agriculture and Persephone’s mother. She is frequently depicted as a fertility deity.
What crystals represent Persephone?
It is recommended that Persephone be honored with flower altars and crystals expressing spring joy. Such crystals may include peridot, green tourmaline, and dioptase, which symbolize grain growth and harvest. Additionally, citrine, gold, and topaz are exemplary golden crystals that may be utilized to commemorate the growth and forthcoming harvest of the spring season.
What Tarot card is Zeus?
The Emperor Tarot card, also known as The Rebel, is a parallel card in the Osho Zen Tarot deck. It has various interpretations, including depicted with a bow, skis, shield, and sleigh in the Vikings Tarot, Kyougo Monou in the X/1999 tarot version, Sion Astarl in The Legend of the Legendary Heroes Tarot, Zeus in the Mythic Tarot deck, and “The Green Man” in the Wildwood Tarot by Mark Ryan. The Emperor Tarot Card is a significant figure in the Tarot deck, with various interpretations and meanings.
What symbolizes Persephone?
The epic battle between Persephone and Zeus ended with Zeus deciding to spend half the year with her husband in the Underworld and the other half with her mother. Persephone, the goddess of vegetation and the Underworld, returns to the earth in the spring, symbolizing immortality. Her symbols include the pomegranate, grain seeds, flowers, and deer. The myth demonstrates the cycle of seeds and the earth’s crops.
Is Persephone the High Priestess?
The text describes a woman who sits in a Temple, calm and balanced, surrounded by duality pillars. She is unfazed by her own knowledge, but is aware of the presence of the Unconscious mind, the pool of Universal knowledge that holds all answers to all questions. She knows that each of us must discover our hidden selves by ourselves, and she won’t prevent us from doing so. The author chose a version of this myth that was close to the first version, but there are numerous websites on the internet that offer other versions and add to the meanings, thoughts, and ideas expressed in the text.
📹 Persephone Tarot Deck Unboxing and First Impressions
My unboxing and first impressions video of the Persephone Tarot by Marisa de la Peña. Circo Tarot – http://circotarot.com/ Work …
Rachele, I absolutely loved this review. I appreciate you giving an overview of the PDF guide as well. Not everyone likes the PDF format, but I tried to make it as enjoyable as possible. I had a few people thinking the age line on the Ace of Cups was a flaw, but it’s not, so thank you for pointing that out too. Thank you SO much for doing this, I am so grateful for you 🥰💖
Oh my goodness!!! Iam absolutely in love with this deck!! I felt an attachment to it as soon as you started showing it!! I so wish I could get it!! It made soo much sense and is beyond beautiful!! I need this and your love of spreads deck!! I bet that would give such amazing readings!! Thank you soo much for sharing it with us!!❤❤
This deck is throwing me off – it is mixing Greek and Roman pantheons. Persephone is Greek, Prosperina is the Roman version. If the deck is being called Persephone Tarot, then the card names should follow the Greek pantheon – Artemis instead of Diana, Dionysus instead of Bacchus etc. I’m a purist that way.
Hi Ethony! I’d love to hear what you think after working with this one a little. It has been on my list, for obvious reasons, for a little while now. But just last night I was perusal a flip through and it felt so off to me that Zeus, the father of the gods, wasn’t the emperor that I took it off my list! Maybe I’m judging the deck too harshly? XO