Swiss Tarot

[1][2] It is an Italian suited pack which substitutes the figures of Juno and Jupiter in place of the Popess and Pope of the Tarot of Marseilles.

[3] In 1965 the Swiss card game firm, A.G. Müller, issued a reprint which is distinguished by its cleaner lines.

The alternative name for the pack comes from this edition, the "1" simply being a number within the product line and "JJ" the replacement of 2 trumps by Juno and Jupiter (see below).

The lack of modern features like vertically symmetrical face cards, corner indices, and Arabic numerals has made this deck unpopular for tarot players outside of their native communities.

Troccas players use the French-language version but refer to their cards with their Romansh (Rhæto-Romanic) nicknames.

Jupiter, the fifth trump