Common Deck Tarot Adapted from Madame LeNormands Cards of Fortune. - Traveling within the World2024-03-29T14:45:33Zhttp://travelingwithintheworld.ning.com/forum/topics/common-deck-tarot-adapted-from?groupUrl=cardsofthetarot&commentId=2185477%3AComment%3A195564&groupId=2185477%3AGroup%3A22266&feed=yes&xn_auth=noa brief history of the lenor…tag:travelingwithintheworld.ning.com,2014-01-19:2185477:Comment:1955642014-01-19T17:48:13.822ZDept of PMM Artists & thingshttp://travelingwithintheworld.ning.com/profile/Artistsandthings
<div class="imageStage" id="imagestage"><img alt="" class="fbPhotoImage img" id="fbPhotoImage" src="https://scontent-b-iad.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-prn2/t1/q72/1544979_556917924398413_16454525_n.jpg"></img></div>
<div class="imageStage">a brief history of the lenorman cards. Most of us have heard of Mlle. Lenormand, known for having read cards to make predictions for Napoleon and Josephine, but few know much more than this about the most famous card-reader of all time. She was born May 27, 1772 in Alençon, France and died June 25, 1843, having written over a dozen books. Look over her natal chart analysis by Elizabeth Hazel in the Comments (thank…</div>
<div id="imagestage" class="imageStage"><img class="fbPhotoImage img" id="fbPhotoImage" src="https://scontent-b-iad.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-prn2/t1/q72/1544979_556917924398413_16454525_n.jpg" alt=""/></div>
<div class="imageStage">a brief history of the lenorman cards. Most of us have heard of Mlle. Lenormand, known for having read cards to make predictions for Napoleon and Josephine, but few know much more than this about the most famous card-reader of all time. She was born May 27, 1772 in Alençon, France and died June 25, 1843, having written over a dozen books. Look over her natal chart analysis by Elizabeth Hazel in the Comments (thank you, Liz). Marie Anne Adelaide Lenormand claimed to have obtained her first deck of cards when she was 14 from gypsies who taught her how to read them. It wasn’t until two years after her death that a deck of cards called “Le Grand Jeu de Mlle. Lenormand” was first published by Grimaud. This 54 card deck was actually created by a Madame Breteau, who claimed to be a student of Madame Lenormand. The 36-card “Petit Lenormand” was published in Germany around 1845 and was actually based on a race game called the “Spiel der Hoffnüng” (“Game of Hope”).<br/> <br/> supposedly, after she died her whole estate was left to er nephew and whilst sorting through her house he found the cards and published them so others could learn the secrets of the cards.</div>
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<div class="imageStage"><span class="fbPhotosPhotoCaption" id="fbPhotoPageCaption"><span class="hasCaption">lenorman cards are quite different to tarot. they are a deck of 36 cards and the meanings are usually the same for all readers and all decks, what makes them different is how they are lied out in a spread, the cards directly effect each other meanings depending on the way they are lied next to each other.<br/> (this is a picture of an original lenorman deck, newer ones are usually brighter but they follow the same plan)</span></span></div>