[start 35]
3
THE FAMILY FOR WHOM THE CARDS WERE MADE
THE
SCENES represented in the tarocchi reflect the tenor of the time in
history when they attained a peak of popularity. A brief glance into
this era seems an appropriate introduction to the Visconti-Sforza family
for whom this particular set of cards was made.
Preachers have
never liked playing cards, and it can be said that the story the cards
tell is very much opposed to the basic tenets of Christianity. However,
it is not an unfamiliar story at all. It is the story of our own world,
this world of which, we are told, the Devil is the Prince, the same
world that existed in the late Middle Ages.
With a little
imagination one can see that each of the four ordinary suits in any pack
of cards is a company of knights ready for one of the jousts or
tourneys which were the favorite sports of medieval Europe. Each knight
wears the heraldic device of his own company, but "differenced" by
number, according to his rank. At the head of each company is its
King-of-arms, its Queen of Love and Beauty, and its chief Knight. In the
tarocchi and minchiate (another variety of tarot cards), there is also a
Page.
With more imagination one can see that each of these four
companies of knights is devoted to one of the cardinal virtues and
wears its device: the sword representing Justice, the cup of Temperance,
the staff or column of Fortitude, and the coin or mirror of Prudence
(1). In northern Europe these suits became known as spades, hearts,
clubs, and diamonds, respectively.
"Is it so devilish then," you
may ask, "for knights to go forth to battle on behalf of Justice,
Temperance, Fortitude, and Prudence? Isn't this the ideal of chivalry on
which Christendom depended for its very existence?"
Maurice Samuel, in his book The Gentleman and the Jew, tells how the same question presented itself to him, and how it was answered.
_____________
[note originally on p. 41]
1.
Justice was usually represented as a figure with scales and a sword,
Temperance as pouring liquid from one vessel into another, Fortitude
with a staff or a broken column, and Prudence with a mirror by means of
which she can look behind her (coins as a symbol of Prudence are rarer).
The virtues are often mentioned in relation 'to the Visconti and
Sforza, for one of their titles was "Conte di Virtù.” At the death of
Giangaleazzo Visconti the virtues were represented as mourning him as
their lord: "O chiara luce, o specchio, o colonna, o sostegno, o franca
spada, the la nostra contrada mantenevi sicura in monte e in piano!" [O
clear light, o mirror, o column, o supporter, o confident sword, you
kept our territory safe in the high places and the flat!] (Arch stor lomb,[Archivio storico Lombardo] anno xviii, p 792). For "mirrors" and "columns" as names for the suits of coins and staves see Chatto (Facts, p 53). His authority is Innocentio Ringhieri, Cento giuochi liberali et d'ingegno (Bologna 1551) p 132.
[start p. 36]
His
parents had come from Roumania to England, and he grew up learning
Jewish ideals from his parents and his Rabbi. At the same time he was
introduced to the chivalric ideals of "cricket" through the English
boys' books and magazines he read. "Cricket" summed up all the English
ideals of fair play, honesty, courage and loyalty to king and country.
He did not then know that this philosophy came indirectly from
Castiglione's The Courtier,
which adapted the classical Greek ideals to the Renaissance way of life.
He thought it was the typical Christian ideal, and assumed that
Christian church services must express it in a wonderfully intense way.
How
surprised he was when he attended a Christian church service for the
first time. "I was utterly confounded," he writes, "by the sermon
preached from the pulpit. . . . The sermon, in which the name of Jesus
appeared and reappeared with — to me —terrifying frequency, had nothing
whatsoever to do, in spirit or in substance, with that gay, magnanimous,
adventurous and gamesome world which I had come to hear glorified. It
did not proclaim, in new and unimaginably attractive phrases, the cosmic
rightness of the life of Greyfriars, The Revenge, The Charge of the Light Brigade,
and the cricket team. In a most unbelievable way it rehearsed what I
had been learning in cheder! It appeared that among the Christians, too,
the meek and the humble were blessed. It appeared that when someone hit
you, you did not answer laughingly with a straight left, and you did
not invite your friends to stand around in a circle while you carried on
with the Marquis of Queensbury rules. Not a bit of it! You turned the
other cheek! . . . It appeared that the peacemakers, not the soldiers,
not the manly, laughing killers, were the blessed." (2)
Even in
the fifteenth century people must have known in their hearts that this
was true. Or else why were the delights of the joust and the tourney
kept for the festival times, when religion was forgotten or at least
temporarily in the background? On the weekdays of the Lenten season,
when Christian laymen worked at their religion and practiced special
acts of humility and self-denial, some pious attention was given to the
fact that hardly any virtue is fostered by going out and knocking a man
down. During the rest of the year, however, the knightly combats, and
the processions of knights which preceded them, held the same place in
the popular mind of that day as baseball and football in ours. We may
come a little closer to feeling the attractiveness of the chivalrous
sports if we compare them to the bullfight, where the gallant
_____________
[note originally on p. 41]
2. The quotation from Maurice Samuel's The Gentleman and the Jew (New York, Knopf, 1950, p 20ff) is made by permission of the publisher.
[start p. 37]
torero seeks the same kind of glory, through the exhibition of his skill and courage, as did the fifteenth-century knight. (3)
It
was from the chivalrous culture personified by the crusading knight as
the defender of the Church that the arts of the later Renaissance
flourished: the sentimentalism of courtly love with its poetry and song,
the ostentatious pageant, the chivalrous romance of knight and fair
lady. The writers of chivalrous literature knew well enough that their
work was basically un-Christian, Thus we find Chaucer repenting in his Persones Tale
[Parson's Tale] that he had written his "endytinges of worldly
vanitees," among which he names his Troilus and "the tales of
Canterbury, thilke that sounen in-to sinne." St Theresa of Avila, too,
lamented the evil effects of her girlhood habit of romance reading,
which she caught from her mother. "So completely was I mastered by this
passion," she writes, "that I thought I could never be happy without a
new book." This craze for romantic tales of chivalry undoubtedly came to
Avila by way of Milan and Ferrara, at whose gay courts these books were
as popular as the playing-cards which reflected them. Such stories
particularly appealed to the womanly mind, and St Theresa's father was
probably not the only male who disapproved of them. She reports that
they annoyed her father so much that she and her female relatives had to
be careful that he never saw them reading such literature. (4)
This
is not said in utter condemnation of the chivalrous tradition. In many
ways the awakening of a love for poetry, art, and romance quickened
Christianity itself to a new life. As much as people loved their
romances, their cards, and their tourneys, they realized inwardly that
these pleasures were not quite in keeping with the devout life. After a
gay and exhausting Carnival, the exuberant Italians really welcomed Lent
as a chance to rest from the festive season and to prove to themselves
that they were really Christians at heart. They brought their vanities
(including their playing-cards) to be burned in the bonfires at the
beginning of Lent with an honest spirit of aspiring to sanctity. Though,
human nature being what it is, the fasting gradually became wearisome,
and they were soon glad to pull a feather from the symbolic figure of
Lent at the end of each week — until Holy Saturday, when it was
completely plucked.
There is an ironic twist in this love of
chivalry. Knightly exploits were the favorite sports of the upper
classes, but the task of conducting actual warfare was given to the
hired soldier, the condottiere with his paid army, who carried on the grim business of waging wars.
__________________
[notes originally on p. 41-2]
3. Hauser (Social,
p 125) explains the high esteem in which war and hunting were held at
this time, by showing that war and hunting involve skill and courage,
whereas peacetime occupations need only patience, and are therefore
despised and relegated to slaves.
4. See Hauser (Social,
p 197-310) for chivalry as the ground of Renaissance art. Huizinga
(Waning, ch IV—X) gives the same impression. Chaucer's repentance is in
the last section [start p. 42] of "The Persones Tale" at the end of The Canterbury Tales. St Teresa's is in The Life of St. Teresa of Jesus . . . Written by Herself (London, T. Baker, 1924) p 7.
[start p. 38]
Francesco
Sforza, the fourth Duke of Milan and the original owner of the cards we
are examining, had been one of these condottieri like his father before
him, Muzio Attendolo. When Muzio Attendolo died, his nickname "Sforza"
was made the hereditary surname of the family by Queen Joanna II of
Naples (5)
The story is told that Muzio Attendolo was chopping
wood near his home town of Cotignola, when a troop of hired soldiers
rode past. "Why don't you come with us?" they called to him. He aimed
his axe at a nearby tree, and as he threw it replied, "If it stays, I'll
go!" The axe stuck in the tree, and Muzio joined the soldiers. So began
the career which led him to become a condottiere.
His military
exploits won for him the respect of the rulers who employed him. In
addition to financial rewards, he received the right to the several
heraldic devices which together formed in heraldry what is known as the
"achievement" of the Sforza family. The first of these was the quince
(in Italian cotigna), given him
by the anti-pope John XXIII in recognition of his rank as Count of
Cotignola. He continued to use this device even when John withdrew it,
somewhat as King Henry VIII of England, under similar circumstances kept
the papal title "Defender of the Faith." (6)
At a later date,
Rupert III, King of the Romans, gave him the right to bear on his shield
a lion rampant, holding the quince in its left paw, while it challenged
all comers with its right. The Sforza helmet, a winged dragon with a
man's head, formed the crest. In 1409 the Marquis of Este added a
diamond ring, in recognition of Muzio's triumph over the tyrant of
Parma, Ottobuono Terzo. The Sforza achievement is sometimes shown with
the diamond ring repeated many times, either as a whole chain of rings,
or as a separate ring at the tip of each rib in the dragon's bat-like
wings. Muzio's son, Francesco Sforza, eventually adopted three
interlaced diamond rings as his impresa.
Muzio Attendolo
maintained his army in a state of iron discipline. Cursing and gambling
were forbidden in his camp. The soldier who jailed to keep his gear in
perfect order was flogged, and the thief or traitor was put to death.
Despite his sternness, the men in Muzio's army were proud to serve under
him, and grieved when he died tragically in the year 1424. His favorite
page had tumbled into a rapid stream, and Muzio dived in to save him.
The current was too strong, and both were swept out to their deaths in
the sea before anyone could save them. (7)
__________________
[notes originally on p. 42]
5. The biographical sketch of Sforza is based mostly on Assum (Francesco). For the change of surname from Attendolo to Sforza see p 12.
6. The legend of the axe is from Ady (History p 2). For the heraldic achievement see Litta Famiglie, vol 1, pt 1). For Muzio and the anti-Pope see notes for the trump Il Traditore, XII.
7. The discipline of Muzio's army and the story of his death are from Ady (History p 10).
[start p. 39]
On
July 23 1401 a son had been born to Muzio in Florence. The romantic
mysticism of the age is typified in this Story of the dream his mother,
Lucia, had before his birth. She dreamt that she was in a beautiful
house where there was a long and steep flight of stairs. At the top of
the stairs was a painting of the Madonna with the Holy Child in her
arms. The child had a golden apple in his hand. Suddenly the Madonna
came to life, and the Holy Child threw into Lucia's bosom the golden
apple which became her son Francesco. (8)
Under his father's training Francesco became a first-rate condottiere.
In addition, he had some of the talents of a civil ruler, and by trial
and error learned how to exercise those talents. As he learned, his
desire to rule increased, and he was understandably eager for the chance
to prove his ability. His feeling was rather like that of a man seeing
someone try to disentangle a snarl of string while his own fingers itch
with the knowledge that they can do it better.
Francesco Sforza
finally realized his ambitions when he became the fourth Duke of Milan
in 1450. The third Duke, Filippo Maria Visconti, had no male issue.
Francesco knew that the man who married Filippo's only child, Bianca
Maria, would have some claim to the ducal throne, slight though the
claim might be. Helped by his friend Cosimo de' Medici of Florence,
Francesco prevailed on the Duke to give him his daughter's hand. In 1430
the Duke promised her to him and gave Sforza the right to use the
surname Visconti. From that time on we find Sforza signing himself
"Franciscus Sfortia (or Sphortia) Vicecomes." The splendid betrothal
ceremony of Bianca and Francesco was celebrated on February 23 1432 in
the Castello di Porta Giovia. Nine years later they were married in the
Church of St Sigismund in Cremona. He was forty years of age and she
seventeen. Despite the great difference in age, they seem to have been a
congenial enough couple, if one may judge from their portraits. One
knows from history that the daughters of rulers never in their wildest
dreams expected to marry for love, and a great lady knew how to be
discreet about her love affairs. In this case, Bianca with her warm
Milanese heart and Francesco with the sense of humor of a good soldier
and ruler in all probability got along together well enough.
Six
years after their marriage Duke Filippo died, and the citizens of Milan
set up what they called the Golden Ambrosian Republic, and tried to
resume the parliamentary government of two centuries earlier. This
attempt at self-government was doomed to failure from the start.
_______________
[note originally p. 42]
8. Lucia's dream of the golden apple is from Assum (Francesco
p 12). The rest of the historical material in this chapter is also
either from Assum or Ady, except Bembo's claim to early partisanship of
Sforza, which is from Baroni (Pittura p 107).
[start p. 40]
The
centuries had sapped the democratic powers of the Milanese, and, as a
further drain on their strength, Milan was at war with Venice. Several
of the subject-cities of Milan immediately declared their own
independence. We find later evidence of our painter, Bonifacio Bembo,
reminding Sforza that he lad done and said much to keep the city of
Cremona on Sforza's side during the eventful year of 1447.
At first Francesco Sforza continued to serve Milan as its condottiere.
He did not, however, give up his ducal aspirations, and finally the
turn of events left him free to fight for his own cause without loss of
honor. A detailed account of the force 'and counter-forces at work is
out of place here. Suffice it to say that the rulers of Milan, .the
twenty-four elected Captains and Defenders of the "Golden Ambrosian"
republic were their own worst enemies. Their blind political hysteria
led them to bring about a reign of terror within the city walls. People
who spoke against their regime were put to death, and those who were
seen talking together in groups had to prove they were innocent of any
crime against the republic. Sforza took advantage of this folly and the
internal dissension by besieging the city until it was reduced to a
state of famine. In the meantime he demonstrated his fairness and
political ability in the surrounding cities, which he conquered one by
one and ruled to the advantage of their citizens. The outcome was
inevitable. There was a desperate uprising in Milan. The Captains and
Defenders were, overthrown, and the excited' citizens sent an emissary
to invite Sforza to be their Duke. As he had foreseen, his marriage was a
factor in securing the dukedom. The Milanese were able to save their
self-respect by reminding themselves that they freely chose as their
ruler the husband of their fellow-citizen Bianca Visconti.
Duke
Francesco ruled Milan well for the remaining sixteen years of his life.
He continued the Visconti tradition, dating back at least to the time of
Petrarch, of encouraging scholars and artists, including the
distinguished scholar Francesco Filelfo. Filelfo planned an epic poem on
the life of Duke Francesco, to be called the Sforziad, but the project was never finished.
Unfortunately,
Francesco had no more success than, his friend Cosimo de' Medici in
training his sons to be good rulers. Cosimo's son Lorenzo de' Medici,
Galeazzo Maria Sforza and his brother, Lodovico "il Moro," were more
interested in the enjoyment of pleasure than in work. However, in their
time the brilliance of the court of Milan increased. In fact, Lodovico's
patronage of Leonardo da Vinci and
[start p. 41]
Bramante
marked the high point of the Italian Renaissance. But the days of the
Sforza Dukes were numbered. In 1499 Milan was taken by the French, and
Lodovico Sforza spent the few remaining years of his life as their
prisoner.
We have come a long way from the imaginary knights
which make up the suit cards of the tarocchi, through the factual story
of the family for whom the cards were made. But before we go on to the
trump cards there is one more question to' consider. Why are there
fifty-six suit cards, and why are there twenty-one trumps? The answer is
found when we remember that cards, as a game of chance, replaced dice
almost completely. In the dice games which use three dice, there are
fifty-six possible throws, and with two dice twenty-one. There are
other, more fanciful, considerations which make these numbers suitable.
Twenty-one is a triangular number with a base of six that is, 6 + 5 + 4 +
3 + 2 + 1= 21. Fifty-six is a pyramidal number' with a base of
twenty-one (a pyramid of fifty-six balls may be raised with the former
triangle of twenty-one as its base). Add the "wild" Fool to get
seventy-eight cards and you have another triangular number with a base
of twelve. Take away the Fool and you have the product of seven and
eleven, those numbers' symbolical of luck and dear to the dice player.
(9)
_______________
[note originally p. 42]
9.
It was Professor Maurice G. Kendall who pointed out to me that
fifty-six is the number of throws with three dice. See Kendall
("Studies" p 1-14). He mentions the dice game of fifty-six throws which
Bishop Wibold recommended to his clergy as a spiritual exercise in the
year 970. Burckhardt (Civilization, p 409) mistakenly refers to this as a game of cards. The original source is Mon Germ SS. vii, p 433. The Chinese have special names for the twenty-one throws of two dice, just as we do. See British Museum (Catalogue .. . Lady Schreiber
p 185) for a list of these names, which seem to be based on the picture
made by the Chinese numerals, e. g. 2-2 which looks like this in
Chinese: = =, is called "The bench." The term "triangular number" and
"pyramidal number" are used in mathematical works of reference. Robert
Graves, in his Nazarene Gospel Restored,
refers to a triangular number as the "Philonian fulfilment" of its
base; e. .g. twenty-one is the PhiIonian fulfilment of six. For seven
and eleven as symbolical of sin see Hopper (Medieval) p 24, 87, and p. 52. (Dante took over eleven as the basis for the dimensions of Hell). In the Morgante
of Pulci the giant Margutte boasts of having seventy-seven mortal sins.
The trumps plus the Fool (twenty-two cards) faintly suggest the ancient
"pi" formula, which was twenty-two divided by seven (The White Goddess, by Robert Graves, New York, Creative Age Press, 1948, p 191). This seemed too far-fetched to mention in the text.
Scan of pp.40-41 (notes): https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-YluhGwWfhkk/ ... 018det.jpg
Scan of pp. 42-43 (notes): https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-zqagnHaNTQw/ ... 019det.jpg
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