
Imported from the Mamluks of Egypt, card games first hit Europe around 1371 and within ten years had spread like wildfire from Spain and Italy to France and Germany. By 1420, German and Swiss cardmakers were producing packs by the thousands (first by stencil, later by metal engraving) marked with a bewildering array of suits, including hounds, bears, parrots, roses, helmets, banners, and bells. Games proliferated as well, and by 1534, Rabelais could name 35 different card games in Chapter 22 of Gargantua. Today, of course, there are thousands of games, from the universally popular Poker and Contract Bridge, to national manias such as Swiss Jass, German Skat, and French Belote.Now, in The Oxford Guide to Card Games, internationally renowned game expert David Parlett provides a fascinating historical guide to cards in Europe and America. Unlike other books, this is not primarily a book of rules or hints on how to play better, but a unique survey of where the games originated, how they have developed over time, and what their rituals and etiquette tell us about the people who play them. Parlett discusses such ancient games as Karnoffel (German for "hernia"), in which the King could be captured by cards named Pope, Kaiser, Devil, and Karnoffel (this subversive ranking was decried by civic authorities and Karnoffel was even banned in Augsburg in 1446, but it was very popular among soldiers and workers). We learn that the term "Bower" in Euchre comes from the German word Bauer (Boer in Dutch), which means "farmer" or "Jack," and that Poker comes from the German word Pocher, which means "bash" or "pulverize" or "brag" (Poker is, as Parlett points out, ultimately a bragging game, in which players boast--or bet--that their hand is best). And we follow the rise and fall of such games as Piquet, which was once far and away the best loved game in Europe, and Canasta, which became a world-wide phenomenon in the 1950s, for a while rivaling Contract Bridge in popularity.
This text investigates the historical origins, evolution, and cultural significance of card games across Europe and America. Author David Parlett, an internationally recognized expert in the field of game history, utilizes a comprehensive survey approach to examine how specific games emerged, transformed over centuries, and reflected the social rituals of their respective eras. The work moves beyond simple rule-setting to provide a contextual analysis of how card games function as artifacts of human social behavior.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and enthusiasts recognize this work as a definitive historical survey of card gaming culture. Readers frequently note the meticulous research and the author's ability to synthesize complex historical data into an accessible narrative format.
Page Count:
408
Publication Date:
1990-11-08
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192141651
ISBN-13:
9780192141651
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