As of today, no one can accurately describe the origins of Tarot.
Some claim that cards were found in the tombs of pharaohs and Chinese ancestors. Traces of the first hand-painted tarot decks date back to the
mid-fifteenth century when the first cards were found in Florence. It seems that they have been used by Marsile Ficin (1433-1499), a Florentine scholar
and priest close to Lorenzo de’ Medici (also called Lorenzo the Magnificent). Ficin would have introduced the cards within his academy, while feeding
on the works of Botticelli, Plato, and Dante. Between the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth century, Tarot cards
circulated between Italy and Marseille where they were printed, hence the origin of the name “Tarot of Marseille”. Since then, many versions of the
“Tarot de Marseille” cards have been printed. One can find the “Tarot de Grimaud”, the “Tarot de Camoin & Jodorowsky”, or the “Great Universal
Tarot” of Bruno de Nys for example, but no Tarot is known to have been created in Arabic.