by Max Kahl (Author), Midirath Arianrhod (Author)
This is one of the oldest and most precious Tarots preserved. It has archaic elements and very careful drawings, as well as the colors and the design in general.
It was painted for one of the most important and famous families in Italy.
The allegorical representation of the concepts collected by the Arcana is very close to the Christian tradition and the religious thought it contains, as can be seen, for example, in the representation of the theological virtues
in some of the cards.
This work was made shortly after 1450 by order of the new Lord of Milan, Francesco Sforza (1466), who had risen to power shortly after his marriage to Bianca Maria Visconti, Duke Filippo's natural daughter.
The Arcana of this Tarot reflect the imaginary of the Italian Renaissance: an era far away in time, but close in terms of culture, characterized by a new appreciation of the arts, of philosophy and of man. The cards were hand-painted in bright colors and then covered with a very thin layer of gold that was worked by hand with geometric and symbolic motifs: the twenty-two Major Arcana are extraordinary. We can say that they are frescoes of the time that reflect the thought of the Renaissance.