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Egyptian Tarot by Silvana Alasia is a full 78-card deck from Lo Scarabeo that immerses every reading in the visual world of ancient Egypt. Hieroglyphs, gods, and ceremonial iconography adorn each card, creating a powerful bridge between classical tarot structure and the mysteries of pharaonic wisdom. A striking addition to any collector’s shelf or working deck rotation.
Description:
Quick Specs
Brand: Lo Scarabeo
Artist: Silvana Alasia
Type: Full 78-card tarot deck
Cards: 22 Major Arcana + 56 Minor Arcana
Best for: Practitioners seeking a complete working deck in Egyptian symbolic tradition
Egyptian Tarot Deck Full 78 Cards: Art, Origins, and Tradition
Lo Scarabeo published this Egyptian tarot deck in 1996 with artwork by Silvana Alasia painted in tempera on papyrus, giving each card the texture and warmth of an ancient manuscript. The design draws on the occultist Jean-Baptiste Pitois, who theorized in 1870 that tarot descended from the legendary Book of Thoth, the mythic repository of all Egyptian magical wisdom. That lineage gives the deck a specific intellectual heritage that separates it from purely decorative Egyptian-themed decks.
All 78 cards are present: the 22 Major Arcana map Egyptian deities onto the traditional archetypes, so Thoth presides where the Magician stands, Isis anchors the High Priestess position, and Ra illuminates the solar cards. The 56 Minor Arcana across four suits, Wands, Chalices, Swords, and Pentacles, depict scenes from ancient Egyptian daily life, ritual, and myth. Court cards use the titles King, Queen, Knight, and Knave, consistent with the original Italian tarot tradition Lo Scarabeo follows.
How Egyptian Symbolism Changes the Reading Experience
Working with Egyptian tarot imagery shifts the interpretive frame in a meaningful way. Where Rider-Waite imagery draws from Western occult and Christian symbolism, this deck pulls from the Kemetic tradition, where concepts of Ma'at, the cosmic balance of truth and justice, and the Duat, the realm of the dead, shape card meanings. Readers who know Egyptian mythology find extra layers of meaning without overriding the standard tarot structures.
The card backs feature a colored motif with falcon and Heka scepter symbols, and the papyrus-style background makes each card visually distinctive in the hand. Card titles are printed in four languages: English, French, Italian, and German, reflecting Lo Scarabeo's European publishing tradition. The included instruction booklet covers both upright and reversed meanings and provides a brief historical overview of the Egyptian tarot tradition.
This deck works well alongside my statues collection, particularly for practitioners who maintain an Egyptian deity altar. Placing a card from a reading beside a relevant deity figure deepens the visual connection between the cards and the divine archetypes they represent.
How to Use the Egyptian Tarot Deck Full 78 Cards
A guide to getting the most from this 78-card Egyptian tarot deck.
Learn the Deity Correspondences
Spend a few sessions with the companion booklet before your first reading. The guide explains how each Major Arcana card maps to an Egyptian deity and how the four suits, Wands, Chalices, Swords, and Pentacles, carry symbolic meaning.
Start with Simple Spreads
For opening spreads, choose a three-card layout for past, present, and future. The papyrus-style backgrounds and hieroglyphic borders make each card visually distinctive, helping you anchor card meanings through imagery rather than rote memory.
Deepen Practice with Mythology
Deepen your practice by pairing the deck with Egyptian mythology study. When the Magician appears as Thoth and the High Priestess as Isis, knowing their mythic roles adds nuance that generic tarot decks simply cannot offer a dedicated reader.
The Tarot Fellow Standard
I stock this deck because it occupies a specific niche that few decks fill: a complete, traditional 78-card structure wearing authentic Egyptian artistic language, not a modern fantasy interpretation layered on Egyptian names. Silvana Alasia's tempera-on-papyrus technique produces imagery that reads as genuinely ancient rather than decorative. For a reader who wants Egyptian symbolism without sacrificing the full Minor Arcana, this Lo Scarabeo edition is the serious choice. Browse my tarot decks collection to see the full range of traditions I carry.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this a full 78-card tarot deck?
Yes, this is a complete 78-card tarot deck with all 22 Major Arcana and 56 Minor Arcana cards across four suits: Wands, Chalices, Swords, and Pentacles. It includes a multilingual instruction booklet.
How does the Egyptian tarot differ from standard tarot decks?
The deck replaces traditional European tarot figures with ancient Egyptian deities and hieroglyphic imagery. Thoth takes the Magician position, Isis the High Priestess, and Ra appears in solar cards. Suit symbols follow the same pattern.
Can beginners use the Egyptian tarot deck?
Beginners can use this deck. The imagery is richly symbolic and self-explanatory for pictorial readers. The included multilingual booklet provides upright and reversed meanings so you do not need a separate tarot guide to get started reading.
Who created the artwork and when was it published?
Silvana Alasia painted the artwork in tempera on actual papyrus, inspired partly by occultist Jean-Baptiste Pitois and his 1870 Book of Thoth theory. Lo Scarabeo published the deck with titles in English, French, Italian, and German.
Egyptian Tarot Deck by Silvana Alasia — Lo Scarabeo Full 78-Card Set
Regular price
$23.95
Regular price
Sale price
$23.95
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