A
playing card is a piece of specially prepared
heavy
paper, thin card, or thin plastic,
figured with distinguishing motifs and used as one of a set for
playing
card games. Playing cards are
typically palm-sized for convenient handling.
A complete set of cards is called a
pack or
deck, and the set of cards held at one time by a
player during a game is commonly called their
hand. A deck of cards may be used for playing a
great variety of
card games, some of which
may also incorporate
gambling. Because
playing cards are both standardized and commonly available, they
are often adapted for other uses, such as
magic tricks,
cartomancy,
encryption,
boardgames, or building a
house of
cards.
The front (or "face") of each card carries markings that
distinguish it from the other cards in the deck and determine its
use under the rules of the game being played. The back of each card
is identical for all cards in any particular deck, and usually of a
single color or formalized design. The back of playing cards is
sometimes used for advertising. For most games, the cards are
assembled into a deck, and their order is
randomized by
shuffling.
History
Early history
Playing
cards were found in China
as early as
the 9th century during the Tang Dynasty
(618–907), when relatives of a princess played a "leaf
game". The Tang writer Su E (obtained a
jinshi degree in 885) stated that Princess
Tongchang (?–870), daughter of
Emperor Yizong of Tang (r. 860–874),
played the leaf game with members of the
Wei
clan to pass the time. The
Song Dynasty
(960–1279) scholar
Ouyang Xiu (1007–1072)
asserted that card games existed since the mid Tang Dynasty and
associated their invention with the
simultaneous development of
using sheets or pages instead of paper rolls as a writing
medium. A book called
Yezi Gexi was allegedly written by a
Tang era woman, and was commented on by Chinese writers of
subsequent dynasties.
Ancient Chinese "money cards" have four "suits": coins (or cash),
strings of coins (which may have been misinterpreted as sticks from
crude drawings), myriads of strings, and tens of myriads. These
were represented by
ideograms, with
numerals of 2–9 in the first three suits and numerals 1–9 in the
"tens of myriads". Wilkinson suggests that the first cards may have
been actual paper currency which were both the tools of gaming and
the stakes being played for. The designs on modern
Mahjong tiles likely evolved from those
earliest playing cards. However, it may be that the first deck of
cards ever printed was a Chinese
domino deck,
in whose cards we can see all the 21 combinations of a pair of
dice. In
Kuei-t'ien-lu, a Chinese text
redacted in the 11th century, we find that
dominoes cards were printed during the Tang Dynasty, contemporary
to the
first printed
books. The Chinese word
pái (牌) is used to describe
both paper cards and gaming tiles.
An
Indian origin for playing cards
has been suggested by the resemblance of symbols on some early
European decks (traditional
Sicilian cards, for example) to the ring, sword, cup,
and baton classically depicted in the four hands of Indian
statues.
The time and manner of the introduction of cards into Europe are
matters of dispute.
The 38th canon of the council of Worcester
(1240) is often quoted as evidence of cards having been known in
England
in the middle of the 13th century, but the games
de rege et regina (on the king and the queen) there
mentioned are now thought to more likely have been chess.
If cards were generally known in Europe as early as 1278 , it is
very remarkable that
Petrarch, in his work
De remediis utriusque fortunae (On the remedies of
good/bad fortunes) that treats gaming, never once mentions
them.
A miniature of courtiers playing cards with the king can be found
in the Roman du Roy Meliadus de Leonnoys (c. 1352), produced for
King Louis II of Naples.
It is
likely that the precursor of modern cards arrived in Europe from
the Mamelukes of Egypt
in the late
1300s, by which time they had already assumed a form very close to
that in use today. In particular, the Mameluke deck
contained 52 cards comprising four "suits": polo sticks, coins,
swords, and cups. Each suit contained ten "spot" cards (cards
identified by the number of suit symbols or "pips" they show) and
three "court" cards named
malik (King),
nā'ib
malik (Viceroy or Deputy King), and
thānī nā'ib
(Second or Under-Deputy). The Mameluke court cards showed abstract
designs not depicting persons (at least not in any surviving
specimens) though they did bear the names of military
officers.
A complete
pack of Mameluke playing cards was discovered by Leo Mayer in the
Topkapi
Palace
, Istanbul
, in 1939;
this particular complete pack was not made before 1400, but the
complete deck allowed matching to a private fragment dated to the
twelfth or thirteenth century. In effect it's not a complete
deck, but there are cards of three different packs of the same
style.
It is not known whether these cards influenced the design of the
Indian cards used for the game of
Ganjifa,
or whether the Indian cards may have influenced these.
Regardless, the Indian
cards have many distinctive features: they are round, generally
hand painted with intricate designs, and comprise more than four
suits (often as many as thirty two, like a deck in the Deutsches Spielkarten-Museum,
painted in the Mewar, a city in Rajasthan
, between the 18th and 19th century. Decks
used to play have from eight up to twenty different suits).
Spread across Europe and early design changes
In the late 14th century, the use of playing cards spread rapidly
throughout Europe.
Documents mentioning cards date from 1371 in
Spain, 1377 in Switzerland
, and 1380 in many locations including Florence
and Paris
. A
1369 Paris ordinance [on gaming?] does not mention cards, but its
1377 update does.
In the account books of Johanna, duchess of Brabant and
Wenceslaus of Luxemburg
, an entry dated May 14, 1379, reads: "Given to
Monsieur and Madame four peters, two forms, value eight and a half
moutons, wherewith to buy a pack of cards". In his book of
accounts for 1392 or 1393, Charles or Charbot Poupart, treasurer of
the household of
Charles VI of
France, records payment for the painting of three sets of
cards.
The earliest cards were made by hand, like those designed for
Charles VI; this was expensive. Printed woodcut decks appeared in
the 15th century.
The technique of printing woodcuts to decorate fabric was transferred to
printing on paper around 1400 in Christian
Europe, very shortly after the first recorded manufacture of paper
there, while in Islamic
Spain
it was much older. The earliest dated European
woodcut is 1418. No examples of printed cards from before 1423
survive.
But from about 1418 to 1450 professional card
makers in Ulm
, Nuremberg
, and Augsburg
created printed decks. Playing cards even
competed with devotional images as the most common uses for
woodcut in this period.
Most early woodcuts of all types were coloured after printing,
either by hand or, from about 1450 onwards, stencils. These 15th
century playing cards were probably painted.
The
Master of the
Playing Cards worked in Germany from the 1430s with the
newly invented
printmaking technique of
engraving. Several other important
engravers also made cards, including
Master ES and
Martin Schongauer. Engraving was much more
expensive than woodcut, and engraved cards must have been
relatively unusual.
In the 15th century in Europe, the
suits of playing cards varied; typically a deck
had four suits, although five suits were common and other
structures are also known. In Germany, hearts (Herz/Dolle/Rot),
bells (Schall), leaves (Grün), and acorns (Eichel) became the
standard suits and are still used in Eastern and Southeastern
German decks today for
Skat,
Schafkopf,
Doppelkopf, and other games.
Italian
and Spanish
cards of the 15th century used swords, batons (or
wands), cups, and coins (or rings). The
Tarot, which included extra trump cards, was
invented in Italy in the 15th century.
The four
suits now used in most of the
world —
spades,
hearts,
diamonds, and
clubs — originated in France in
approximately 1480. The
trèfle (club) was probably copied
from the acorn and the
pique (spade) from the leaf of the
German suits. The names "pique" and "spade", however, may have
derived from the sword of the Italian suits. In England, the French
suits were eventually used, although the earliest decks had the
Italian suits [Chatto, link not provided].
Also in the 15th century, Europeans changed the court cards to
represent European royalty and attendants, originally "king",
"chevalier" (knight), and "knave" (or "servant"). In a German pack
from the 1440s, Queens replace Kings in two of the suits as the
highest card. Fifty-six-card decks containing a King, Queen,
Knight, and Valet (from the French tarot court) were common.
Court
cards designed in the 16th century in the manufacturing centre of
Rouen
became the standard design in England, while a
Parisian design became standard in France. Both the Parisian
and Rouennais court cards were named after historical and
mythological heroes and heroines. The Parisian names have become
more common in modern use, even with cards of Rouennais
design.
Paris court card names
| Modern |
Traditional |
| King of Spades |
David |
| King of Hearts |
Charles (possibly Charlemagne, or Charles VII, where Rachel would then
be the pseudonym of his mistress, Agnès
Sorel) |
| King of Diamonds |
Julius Caesar |
| King of Clubs |
Alexander the Great |
| Queen of Spades |
Pallas |
| Queen of Hearts |
Judith |
| Queen of Diamonds |
Rachel (either biblical, historical (see
Charles above), or mythical as a corruption of the Celtic Ragnel, relating to Lancelot below) |
| Queen of Clubs |
Argine (possibly an anagram of
regina, which is Latin for queen, or
perhaps Argea, wife of Polybus and mother of Argus) |
| Knave of Spades |
Ogier the Dane/Holger Danske (a
knight of Charlemagne) |
| Knave of Hearts |
La Hire (comrade-in-arms to Joan of Arc,
and member of Charles VII's
court) |
| Knave of Diamonds |
Hector |
| Knave of Clubs |
Judas Maccabeus, or Lancelot |
Later design changes
In early games the kings were
always the highest card in
their suit. However, as early as the late 14th century special
significance began to be placed on the nominally lowest card, now
called the
Ace, so that it sometimes became the
highest card and the Two, or Deuce, the lowest. This concept may
have been hastened in the late 18th century by the
French Revolution, where games began being
played "ace high" as a symbol of lower classes rising in power
above the royalty. The term "Ace" itself comes from a dicing term
in
Anglo-Norman language,
which is itself derived from the Latin
as (the smallest
unit of coinage). Another dicing term,
trey (3), sometimes
shows up in playing card games.
Corner and edge indices enabled people to hold their cards close
together in a fan with one hand (instead of the two hands
previously used). For cards with Latin suits the first pack known
is a deck printed by Infirerra and dated 1693 (International
Playing Cards Society Journal 30-1 page 34), but were commonly used
only at the end of 18th century. Indices in the Anglo-American deck
were used from 1875, when the New York Consolidated Card Company
patented the Squeezers, the first cards with indices that had a
large diffusion. However, the first deck with this innovation was
the Saladee's Patent, printed by Samuel Hart in 1864.
Before this time, the lowest court card in an English deck was
officially termed the
Knave, but its abbreviation ("Kn")
was too similar to the King ("K") and thus this term did not
translate well to indices. However, from the 1600s on the Knave had
often been termed the
Jack, a term borrowed from the game
All Fours where the Knave of trumps has
this name. All Fours was considered a game of the lower classes, so
the use of the term Jack at one time was considered vulgar. The use
of indices, however, encouraged a formal change from Knave to
Jack in English decks. In decks
for non-English languages, this conflict does not exist; the
French tarot deck for instance labels
its lowest court card the "Valet", which is the "squire" to the
Knight card (not seen in 52-card decks) as the Queen is paired with
the King.
This was followed by the innovation of reversible court cards.
This
invention is attributed to a French card maker of Agen, main city
in the Lot-et-Garonne
department, that in 1745 had this idea. But
the French government, which controlled the design of playing
cards, prohibited the printing of cards with this innovation. In
central Europe (trappola cards), Italy (tarocchino bolognese) and
in Spain the innovation was adopted during the second half of 18th
century. In Great Britain the deck with reversible court cards was
patented in 1799 by Edmund Ludlow and Ann Wilcox. The
Anglo-American pack with this design was printed around 1802 by
Thomas Wheeler. Reversible court cards meant that players would not
be tempted to turn upside-down court cards right side up. Before
this, other players could often get a hint of what other players'
hands contained by watching them reverse their cards. This
innovation required abandoning some of the design elements of the
earlier full-length courts.
During the French Revolution, the traditional design of Kings,
Queens, and Jacks became Liberties, Equalities, and Fraternities.
The radical French government of 1793 and 1794 saw themselves as
toppling the old regime and a good revolutionary would not play
with Kings or Queens, but with the ideals of the revolution at
hand. This would ultimately be reversed in 1805 with the rise of
Napoleon.
The
joker is an
American
invention. It was devised for the game of
Euchre, which spread from Europe to America
beginning shortly after the
American Revolutionary War and
was very popular by the mid-1800s. In Euchre, the highest trump
card is the Jack of the trump suit, called the
right
bower; the second-highest trump, the
left bower, is
the Jack of the suit of the same color as trumps. The joker was
invented c. 1870 as a third trump, the
best bower, which
ranked higher than the other two
bowers. The name of the
card is believed to derive from
juker, a variant name for
Euchre.Beal, George.
Playing cards and their story. 1975.
New York: Arco Publishing Comoany Inc. p. 58
In the 19th century, a type of card known as a
transformation playing card
became popular in Europe and America. In these cards, an artist
incorporated the pips of the non-face cards into an artistic
design.
Symbolism
Popular legend holds that the composition of a deck of cards has
religious, metaphysical, or astronomical significance. The context
for these stories is sometimes given to suggest that the
interpretation is a joke, generally being the purported explanation
given by someone caught with a deck of cards in order to suggest
that their intended purpose was not
gambling.
Today
Anglo-American
The primary deck of fifty-two playing cards in use today includes
thirteen ranks of each of the four French
suits, diamonds ( ), spades ( ), hearts ( ) and
clubs ( ), with reversible Rouennais "court" or
face cards (some modern face card designs,
however, have done away with the traditional reversible figures).
Each suit includes an
ace, depicting a single
symbol of its suit; a king, queen, and jack, each depicted with a
symbol of its suit; and ranks two through ten, with each card
depicting that many symbols (
pips) of its suit. Two
(sometimes one or four) Jokers, often distinguishable with one
being more colorful than the other but not belonging to any of the
suits, are included in commercial decks but many games require one
or both to be removed before play. Modern playing cards carry index
labels on opposite corners (rarely, all four corners) to facilitate
identifying the cards when they overlap and so that they appear
identical for players on opposite sides.
The fanciful design and manufacturer's logo commonly displayed on
the
Ace of Spades began under the
reign of
James I of England, who
passed a law requiring an insignia on that card as proof of payment
of a
tax on local manufacture of cards.
Until
August 4, 1960, decks of playing cards printed and sold in the
United
Kingdom
were liable for taxable duty and the Ace of Spades
carried an indication of the name of the printer and the fact that
taxation had been paid on the cards. The packs were also
sealed with a government
duty wrapper.
Though specific design elements of the court cards are rarely used
in game play and many differ between designs, a few are notable.
The Jack of Spades, Jack of Hearts, and King of Diamonds are drawn
in profile, while the rest of the courts are shown in full face;
these cards are commonly called "one-eyed". When deciding which
cards are to be made wild in some games, the phrase "acey, deucey,
one-eyed jack" (or "deuces, aces,
one-eyed faces") is sometimes used, which means that
aces, twos, and the one-eyed jacks are all wild. The
King of Hearts is the only King with no mustache, and is also
typically shown with a
sword behind his head,
making him appear to be stabbing himself. This leads to the
nickname "suicide king". The axe held by the King of Diamonds is
behind his head with the blade facing toward him. He is
traditionally armed with an axe while the other three kings are
armed with swords, and thus the King of Diamonds is sometimes
referred to as "the man with the axe" because of this. This is the
basis of the trump "
one-eyed jacks and
the man with the axe". The Jack of Diamonds is sometimes known as
"laughing boy". The
Ace of Spades,
unique in its large, ornate spade, is sometimes said to be the
death card, and in some games is used as a trump card. The
Queen of Spades usually holds a
scepter and is sometimes known as "the bedpost
queen", though more often she is called "Black Lady". In many
decks, the Queen of Clubs holds a flower. She is thus known as the
"flower Queen", (though in many playing cards from Germany and
Sweden she is depicted with a fan) though this design element is
among the most variable; the standard Bicycle Poker deck depicts
all Queens with a flower styled according to their suit.

Card games are frequently standard
features on computers.
There are theories about who the court cards represent. For
example, the Queen of Hearts is believed by some to be a
representation of
Elizabeth of
York—the
Queen consort of
King Henry VII of England, or it is
sometimes believed to be a representation of
Anne Boleyn, the second wife of Henry VIII. The
United States Playing Card Company suggests that, in the past, the
King of Hearts was
Charlemagne, the King
of Diamonds was
Julius Caesar, the
King of Clubs was
Alexander the
Great, and the King of Spades was the Biblical
King David (see
King ). However the Kings, Queens, and
Jacks of standard Anglo-American cards today do not represent
anyone in particular.
They stem from designs produced in Rouen
before 1516,
and, by 1540–67, these Rouen designs show well executed pictures in
the court cards with the typical court costumes of the time.
In these early cards, the Jack of Spades, Jack of Hearts, and King
of Diamonds are shown from the rear, with their heads turned back
over the shoulder so that they are seen in profile; however, the
Rouen cards were so badly copied in England that the current
designs are gross distortions of the originals.
Other oddities such as the lack of a moustache on the King of
Hearts also have little significance. The King of Hearts did
originally have a moustache, but it was lost by poor copying of the
original design. Similarly, the objects carried by the court cards
have no significance. They merely differentiate one court card from
another and have also become distorted over time.
The most common sizes for playing cards are poker size (2½in ×
3½in; 63 mm × 88 mm, or B8 size according to
ISO 216) and bridge size (2¼in × 3½in, approx.
56 mm × 88 mm), the latter being narrower, and thus more
suitable for games such as
bridge in
which a large number of cards must be held concealed in a player's
hand. Interestingly, in most casino poker games, the bridge-sized
card is used; the use of less material means that a bridge deck is
slightly cheaper to make, and a casino may use many thousands of
decks per day so the minute per-deck savings add up.k Other sizes
are also available, such as a smaller size (usually 1¾in × 2⅝in,
approx. 44 mm × 66 mm) for
solitaire, tall narrow designs (usually 1¼in ×
3in) for travel and larger ones for card tricks. The weight of an
average B8-sized playing card is 0.063 oz (1.8g), a deck 3.3 oz
(94g).
Some decks include additional design elements.
Casino blackjack decks may
include markings intended for a machine to check the ranks of
cards, or shifts in rank location to allow a manual check via
inlaid mirror. Many casino decks and solitaire decks have four
indices instead of the usual two. Many decks have large indices,
largely for use in
stud poker games,
where being able to read cards from a distance is a benefit and
hand sizes are small. Some decks use
four colors for the suits in order to make
it easier to tell them apart: the most common set of colors is
black (spades ), red (hearts ), blue (diamonds ) and green (clubs
). Another common color set is borrowed from the German suits and
uses green Spades and yellow Diamonds (as the comparable German
suits are Leaves and Bells respectively; see below) with red Hearts
and black Clubs.
When giving the full written name of a specific card, the rank is
given first followed bythe suit, e.g., "Ace of Spades". Shorthand
notation may list the rank first "A♠" (as is typical when
discussing
poker) or list the suit first (as
is typical in listing several cards in bridge) "♠AKQ". Tens may be
either abbreviated to T or written as 10.
Piquet
The
piquet deck is a subset of the
French-suited 52-card deck, with all values from 2 through 6 in
each suit removed. The resulting 32-card deck is notable for its
use in a variety of games; a trick-taking game from the 1300s,
Piquet, gave the deck its most common name,
and the game of
Belote, currently the most
popular card game in France, also uses this deck. West German
players adopted the deck for the game of
Skat
(the traditional Skat deck uses German suits; see below). Two of
these decks are used in the game of
Bezique.
Pinochle/Doppelkopf
The game of
Pinochle, which evolved from
the French game
Bezique, uses a deck
composed of two copies of each Anglo-American card with values from
9 through King and Ace. A deck with the same composition, but
different card art, is available in Europe for the very popular
German game of
Doppelkopf, which derived
from the game
Sheepshead and is related
to
Skat.
Tarot
The 78-card
Tarot deck, and subsets of it, are
used for a variety of European trick-taking games. The Tarot is
distinguished from most other decks by the use of a separate trump
suit of 21 cards, and one Fool, whose role varies according to the
specific game. Additionally, it differs from the 52-card deck in
the use of one additional court card in each suit, the Cavalier or
Knight. In Europe, the deck is known primarily as a playing card
deck; in the Americas, the deck is primarily known for its use in
cartomancy; the trumps and fool
comprising the
Major Arcana while the
56 suited cards make up the
Minor
Arcana.
The
origins of the tarot deck are thought to be Italian
, with the oldest surviving examples dating from the
mid 1400s in Milan, and using the traditional Latin suits of Swords, Cups, Coins and Staves
(representing the four main classes of feudal society; military,
clergy, mercantile trade, and agriculture). It is generally
thought that the tarot was invented between 1411 and 1425 by adding
trump cards to a deck format that was already popular in Italy as
of this period, having been introduced from North Africa in the mid
1300's. The deck spread from Italy to Germanic countries, where the
Latin suits evolved into the suits of Leaves (or Shields), Hearts
(or Roses), Bells, and Acorns, and a combination of Latin and
Germanic suit pictures and names resulted in the
internationally-recognized French suits of Spades, Hearts, Diamonds
and Clubs. It was a simplification of this French-suited tarot deck
by removing the trumps that resulted in the English deck,
popularized by British colonization and the gentleman's game Brag.
The English deck would eventually become the
internationally-recognized 52-card deck.
The trumps originally represented characters and ideals of
increasing power, from the Magician and High Priestess of the 1 and
2 of trumps to the Sun, Judgement and the World at the high end.
Allegorical meanings for each card existed as of the earliest days
of the deck, but it wasn't until the late 1700s's that the works of
Antoine Court de Gebelin
made decks based on the
Tarot de
Marseille popular for
divinatory
purposes.
From this point, the evolution of decks for cartomancy and for
gaming diverged; the "reading tarots" based on the symbolic designs
of the
Tarot de Marseille (which
were modified slightly to produce the widely-known
Rider-Waite deck) kept the older style of
full-length character art, specific character meanings for the 21
trumps, and the use of the Latin suits (although most of the
reading tarots in use today derive from the French Tarot de
Marseille). On the other hand, "playing tarots", especially those
of France and the Germanic regions, had by the end of the 1800s
evolved into a form more resembling the modern playing card deck,
with corner indices and easily-identifiable number and court cards.
The use of the traditional characters cards for the trumps was
largely discarded in favor of more whimsical scenes. The
Tarot Nouveau is an example of the current
style of playing tarot, though the artwork and design of this deck
can be traced back to the 1890s. The Italian and Spanish Tarocchi
decks, however, have largely kept the traditional character
identifications of each trump, as well as the Latin suits, though
these decks are used almost exclusively for gaming. Tarocco
Bolognese and Tarocco Piedmontese are examples of Italian-suited
playing tarot decks.
German
German
suits may
have different appearances. Many Eastern and Southern
Germans prefer decks with Hearts, Bells, Leaves, and Acorns (for
Hearts, Diamonds, Spades, and Clubs), as mentioned above.
In the
game Skat, East
German
players used the German deck, while players in
Western Germany mainly used the French deck. After the
reunification a compromise deck was created for official Skat
tournaments, with French symbols but German colors (green Spades
and yellow Diamonds).
Central European
The cards
of Hungary, Austria, Slovenia, the Czech Republic, Croatia, Slovakia, Western Romania, Transcarpathia in Ukraine, Vojvodina
in Serbia and
South Tyroluse the same suits
(Hearts, Bells, Leaves and Acorns) as the cards of Southern and
Eastern Germany. They usually have a deck of 32 or 36 cards. The
numbering includes VII, VIII, IX, X, Under, Over, King and Ace.
Some variations with 36 cards have also the number VI. The VI in
bells also has the function like a
joker in
some games and it's named
Welli or
Weli.
These cards are illustrated with a special picture series that was
born in the times before the 1848-49
revolutions in Hungary, when
revolutionary movements were awakening all over in Europe. The Aces
show the
four seasons: the Ace of
Hearts is Spring, the Ace of Bells is Summer, the Ace of Leaves is
Autumn and the Ace of Acorns is Winter.
The characters of the
Under and Over cards were taken from the drama William Tell, the legendary Swiss
freedom fighter, written by Friedrich
Schiller in 1804, which was shown at Kolozsvár
in 1827. It was long believed that the card was
invented in Vienna
at the Card
Painting Workshop of Ferdinand
Piatnik, however in 1974 the very first deck was found in an
English private collection, and it has shown the name of the
inventor and creator of deck as József Schneider, a Master Card
Painter at Pest, and the date of its creation
as 1837. Had he not chosen the Swiss characters of
Schiller's play, had he chosen Hungarian heroes or freedom
fighters, his deck of cards would never have made it into
distribution, due to the heavy censorship of
the government at the time. Interestingly,
although the characters on the cards are Swiss, these cards are
unknown in Switzerland.
Games that are played with this deck in Hungary include
Skat,
Ulti,
Snapszer (or 66),
Zsír aka Víg a hetes (Grease
or Sevens wild), Fire,
Preferansz,
Makaó,
Lórum,
Piros pacsi (Red paw) and
Piros papucs (Red slipper). This set of cards
is also used very often in the game of
Preferans.
In Croatia
and Slovenia
these cards are also commonly used for a game
called Belot (also popular in Bulgaria
and Armenia
). Explanations of these games can be found
at
The Card Games Website.
In Czech republic these cards are called
mariášky or
mariášové karty (both means
cards for mariáš), or sometimes
pikety.
The cards are used for almost all common card games in Czech lands,
including the most famous
mariáš,
and very popular games like
prší
or
Oko bere (slightly different Czech version of
Blackjack).
The most common game played in Western Romania (Transylvania and
Banat) is
Cruce, a variation of Snapszer, most
commonly played in 2 pairs, with team members facing each other,
hence the name (Cruce = Romanian for
Cross).
Switzerland
In Switzerland, the national game is
Jass. It
is played with decks of 36 cards. West of the
Brünig-Napf-Reuss line, a
French-style 36-card deck is used, with numbers from 6 to 10,
Jacks, Queens, Kings and Aces.
The same kind of deck is used in Graubünden
and in parts of Thurgau
.
In
Central
Switzerland
, Zürich
, Schaffhausen
and Eastern Switzerland
, the prevalent deck consists of 36 playing cards
with the following suits: Roses, Bells, Acorns and Shields (in
German: Rosen, Schellen, Eichel und Schilten). The ranks of
the alternate deck, from low to high, are: 6, 7, 8, 9, Banner (10),
"Under", "Over", King and Ace.
Italian
A set of Carte Bergamasche

Example of a knight of money,
cavallo di denari (horse of coins).
From the Carte Piacentine.
Italian playing cards most commonly consist of a deck of 40 cards
(4 suits going 1 to 7 plus 3 face cards), and are used for playing
Italian regional games such as
Scopa or
Briscola. 52 (or more rarely 36) card sets
are also found in the north. Since these cards first appeared in
the late 14th century when each region in Italy was a separately
ruled province, there is no official Italian pattern. There are
sixteen official regional patterns in use in different parts of the
country (about one per
region).
These sixteen patterns are split amongst four regions:
- Northern Italian Suits - Triestine
, Trevigiane
, Trentine
, Primiera Bolognese
, Bergamasche
, Bresciane
- Spanish-like Suits - Napoletane
, Sarde, Romagnole
, Siciliane, Piacentine
.
- French Suits - Genovesi
, Lombarde or Milanesi
, Toscane, Piemontesi.
- German Suits - Salisburghesi
used in Alto
Adige/Südtirol
The suits are coins (sometimes suns or sunbursts)
(
Denari in Italian), swords
(
Spade), cups (
Coppe) and clubs
(sometimes batons
Bastoni), and each suit contains
an ace (or one), numbers two through seven, and three face cards.
The face cards are:
- Re (king), the highest valued — a man standing,
wearing a crown
- Cavallo (lit. horse) [italo-Spanish suits] - a man
sitting on a horse / or Donna (lit. woman from Latin
domina = mistress) [french suits] - a standing
woman with a crown
- Fante (lit. infantry soldier) - a younger figure
standing, without a crown
The Spanish-like-suit knave (
fante - the lowest face card)
is depicted as a woman, and is sometimes referred to as
donna like the next higher face card of the French-suit
deck; this, when coupled with the French usage, which puts a queen,
also called
donna (woman) in Italian and not
regina (queen), as the mid-valued face card, can very
occasionally lead to a swap of the value of the French-suit
donna (or more rarely of the international-card Queen) and
the knave (or jack).
Unlike Anglo-American cards, some Italian cards do not have any
numbers (or letters) identifying their value. The cards' value is
determined by identifying the face card or counting the number of
suit characters.
Spanish
The traditional
Spanish deck
(referred to as
baraja española in Spanish) uses Latin
suit symbols. Being a
Latin-suited
deck (like the Italian deck), it is organized into four
palos (suits) that closely match those of the
Italian-suited Tarot deck:
oros ("golds" or coins),
copas (beakers or cups),
espadas (swords) and
bastos (batons or clubs). Certain decks include two
"comodines" (
jokers) as
well.
The cards (
cartas in Spanish) are all numbered, but unlike
in the standard Anglo-French deck, the card numbered 10 is the
first of the court cards (instead of a card depicting ten
coins/cups/swords/batons); so each suit has only twelve cards. The
three court or face cards in each suit are as follows:
la
sota ("the knave" or jack, numbered 10 and equivalent to the
Anglo-French card J),
el caballo ("the horse", horseman,
knight or cavalier, numbered 11 and used instead of the
Anglo-French card Q; note the Tarot decks have both a queen and a
knight of each suit, while the Anglo-French deck uses the former,
and the Spanish deck uses the latter), and finally
el rey
("the king", numbered 12 and equivalent to the Anglo-French card
K). However, most Spanish games involve forty-card decks, with the
8s and 9s removed, similar to the standard Italian deck.
The box that goes around the figure has a mark to distinguish the
suit without showing all of your cards: The cups have one
interruption, the swords two, the clubs three, and the gold none.
This mark is called "la pinta" and gave rise to the expression: "le
conocí por la pinta" (I knew him by his markings).
The Baraja have been widely considered to be part of the occult in
many Latin-American countries, yet they continue to be used widely
for card games and gambling, especially in Spain, which does not
use the Anglo-French deck. Among other places, the Baraja have
appeared in
One
Hundred Years of Solitude and other Hispanic and Latin
American literature.
The Spanish deck is used not only in Spain,
but also in other countries where Spain maintained an influence
(e.g., Mexico
, Argentina
and most of Hispanic
America, the Philippines
and Puerto Rico)
1. Among the games played with this deck are:
el mus (a very popular and
highly regarded vying game of Basque origin),
la brisca, la pocha, el tute (with
many variations), el guiñote,
la escoba del quince (a trick-taking game), el julepe, el cinquillo, las siete y media, la mona, el truc (or
truco), el cuajo (a matching game from the Philippines),
el jamón, el tonto, el hijoputa, el mentiroso, el cuco, las parejas
and las cuarenta (a fishing game, the national card game
of Equador
).
In Spain, games of Anglo-American origin such as poker and
blackjack are played with the international 52-card deck, which is
called a
baraja de poker.
East Asia
The
standard 52-card deck is commonly known as a "poker" deck in
Taiwan
, Japan
, China
, and
South
Korea
. Alternatively, a more common name in Japan
and Korea for the same deck is trump (トランプ torampu, 트럼프 teureompeu
respectively) which comes from the term
trump
card. These cards are most often used for
baccarat and
blackjack in
casinos, or deciding the order of play or challenge in games of
billiards. Poker itself and other western games are relatively
unknown; however, there do exist East Asian games using the poker
deck, such as
Daifugo and
Two-ten-jack. Home and online card games in
east Asia such as Koi-Koi and Go-Stop use a
Karuta, such as
hanafuda,
uta-garuta or
kabufuda deck in Japan, and the equivalent
hwatu deck in Korea.
Accessible playing cards
Playing cards have been adapted for use by the
visually impaired by the inclusion of
large-print and/or
braille characters as part of the card. Both
standard card decks and decks for specific games such as
UNO are commonly adapted. Large-print cards are
also commonly used by the elderly. In addition to increasing the
size of the suit symbol and the denomination text, large-print
cards commonly reduce the visual complexity of the images for
simpler identification. They may also omit the patterns of pips in
favor of one large pip to identify suit. Oversize cards are
sometimes used but are uncommon. These can assist with ease of
handling and to allow for larger text.
No universal standards for braille playing cards exist. There are
many national and producer variations. In most cases each card is
marked with two braille characters in the same location as the
normal corner markings. The two characters can appear in either
vertical (one character below another) or horizontal (two
characters side by side). In either case one character identifies
the card
suit and the other the card
denomination. 1 for
ace, 2 through 9 for the
numbered cards, X or the letter O for ten, J for
jack, Q
for
queen, K for
king. The suits are variously
marked using D for
diamond, S for
spade, C or X
for
club and H or K for
heart.
Playing card symbols in Unicode
The
Unicode standard defines 8 characters
for card suits in the
Miscellaneous Symbols block, from
U+2660 to U+2667:
| U+2660 dec: 9824 |
U+2661 dec: 9825 |
U+2662 dec: 9826 |
U+2663 dec: 9827 |
|
|
|
|
| BLACK SPADE SUIT |
WHITE HEART SUIT |
WHITE DIAMOND SUIT |
BLACK CLUB SUIT |
♠
♠
♠
|
♡
♡
|
♢
♢
|
♣
♣
♣
|
| U+2664 dec: 9828 |
U+2665 dec: 9829 |
U+2666 dec: 9830 |
U+2667 dec: 9831 |
|
|
|
|
| WHITE SPADE SUIT |
BLACK HEART SUIT |
BLACK DIAMOND SUIT |
WHITE CLUB SUIT |
|
♤
♤
|
♥
♥
♥
|
♦
♦
♦
|
♧
♧
|
There is also a proposal by
Michael
Everson, dated 2004-05-18 to encode the 52 cards of the
Anglo-American-French deck together with a character for "Playing
Card Back" and another for a joker.
Production techniques
The typical production process for a new deck starts with the
choice between the most suitable material:
cardboard or
plastic.
Cards are printed on unique sheets that undergo a varnishing
procedure in order to enhance the brightness and glow of the colors
printed on the cards, as well as to increase their
durability.
In today’s market, some high-quality products are available. There
are some specific treatments on card surfaces, such as
calendering and linen finishing, that guarantee
performance for either professional or domestic use.
The cards are printed on sheets, which are cut and arranged in
bands (vertical stripes) before undergoing a cutting operation that
cuts out the individual cards. After assembling the new decks, they
pass through the corner-rounding process that will confer the final
outline: the typical rectangular playing-card shape.
Finally, each deck is wrapped in
cellophane, inserted in its case and is ready for
the final distribution.
See also
Notes
- "it is also now rather well-established that dominoes and
playing-cards were originally Chinese developments from dice."
- "Numbered dice, anciently widespread, were on a related line of
development which gave rise to dominoes and playing-cards
(+9th-century China)."
- Lo (2000), p. 390.
- Singer, p. 4
- International Playing Cards Society Journal, 30-3, page
139
- [1]
- [2]
- Olmert, Michael (1996). Milton's Teeth and Ovid's Umbrella:
Curiouser & Curiouser Adventures in History, p.135. Simon
& Schuster, New York. ISBN 0684801647.
- Early Card
painters and Printers in Germany, Austria and Flandern (14th and
15th century)
- [3]
- International Playing Cards Society Journal XXVII-5 p. 186 and
International Playing Cards Society Journal 31-1 p. 22
- US Playing Card Co. - A Brief History of Playing
Cards (archive.org mirror)
- Urban Legends Reference Pages article
- Stamp Act
1765 imposed a tax on playing cards.
- Games « A cache of random trivia
- Andy's Playing Cards - Shapes, Sizes and
Colors
- [4]
References
- "it is also now rather well-established that dominoes and
playing-cards were originally Chinese developments from dice."
- "Numbered dice, anciently widespread, were on a related line of
development which gave rise to dominoes and playing-cards
(+9th-century China)."
- Lo (2000), p. 390.
- Singer, p. 4
- International Playing Cards Society Journal, 30-3, page
139
- [1]
- [2]
- Olmert, Michael (1996). Milton's Teeth and Ovid's Umbrella:
Curiouser & Curiouser Adventures in History, p.135. Simon
& Schuster, New York. ISBN 0684801647.
- Early Card
painters and Printers in Germany, Austria and Flandern (14th and
15th century)
- [3]
- International Playing Cards Society Journal XXVII-5 p. 186 and
International Playing Cards Society Journal 31-1 p. 22
- US Playing Card Co. - A Brief History of Playing
Cards (archive.org mirror)
- Urban Legends Reference Pages article
- Stamp Act
1765 imposed a tax on playing cards.
- Games « A cache of random trivia
- Andy's Playing Cards - Shapes, Sizes and
Colors
- [4]
- Lo, Andrew. "The Game of Leaves: An Inquiry into the Origin of
Chinese Playing Cards," Bulletin of the School of Oriental and
African Studies, University of London, Vol. 63, No. 3 (2000):
389-406.
- Roman du Roy Meliadus de Leonnoys (British Library MS Add.
12228, fol. 313v), c. 1352
- An Introduction to a History of Woodcut, Arthur M. Hind,
Houghton Mifflin Co. 1935 (in USA), reprinted Dover Publications,
1963 ISBN 0-486-20952-0
- Prints and Printmaking, Antony Griffiths, British Museum Press
(in UK),2nd edn, 1996 ISBN 0-7141-2608-X
External links