The History of Playing Cards
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- čas přidán 18. 11. 2023
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THANK YOU to Mr. Beat for lending his voice to this video! / iammrbeat
The 52-card deck is a pretty universally known object. Every household in America (and I would presume most countries in the world) has one or two decks lying around their house. They’re used for magic, fortune telling, and most commonly for playing games. But this deck, with four suits of two colors, numbers one through ten, and three face cards per suit, seems normal to us. But where did it all come from? Let’s find out.
Sources:
A History of Playing Cards And a Bibliography of Cards And Gaming by Catherine Perry Hargrave and U.S. Playing Card Co.
A Concise History of Playing-cards by Simon Wintle www.wopc.co.uk/the-history-of...
The History of Playing Cards: The Evolution of the Modern Deck by Will Roya
playingcarddecks.com/blogs/al...
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For those of you who don't recognize the book of Judith, it's only considered part of the Bible if you're Catholic or Orthodox. Protestants usually don't include it in their Bible, or only do so as part of the Apocrypha.
Or the Ethiopian Church! All books are part of the Canon there
@@AnaIvanovic4evereven the childhood gospels?
@@teogonzalez7957 I'm not sure but I think not. They were written pretty late in Europe right? But all late Jewish books written during Persian and Selucid times like Enoch, Maccabies etc are canonical.
@AnaIvanovic4ever Technically the Coptic Church is Oriental Orthodox
@@AnaIvanovic4everMy Understanding is the Ethiopian Canon doesn’t include the Catholic/Orthodox books of Maccabees, preferring their own, completely different accounts of the same events, recorded originally in Ge’ez. But otherwise they include all the books from the Greek Septuagint/Latin Vulgate, including the ones the Orthodox and Catholics no longer consider canon and a bunch of other minor books. But yeah, there’s SO many other ancient books that didn’t make it into ANY canon, even the Ethiopian…usually for good reason.
The three suits of the Chinese money cards makes me think they're the inspiration to the Mahjong suits. Which also said to represent coins, string of coins and myriad of coins equating to circles, bamboo and character suits respectively.
They are indeed. Mahjong is the direct local descendant of the money cards, and their evolution is why we know so much about the money cards despite paper playing cards of that original style not surviving to the modern day
German 52 card decks actually have 3 jokers, and most German games also use them. So, no throwing away here 😊
The old German suits (acorn etc.) are also still very common esp. in the south and the east. They are typically used for a 32 cards deck starting at 7 to play THE German pub card game called Skat (a bit like bridge, but for 3 players).
I wouldn't say that Skat is at least somewhat similar to Bridge. The only things similar is the team aspect (even though it's temporary truces) and "trading" at the start. It's closer to Preferance than anything, and even then it's loosely similar. Skat is very unique!
Japanese Hanafuda cards actually don’t descend directly from Chinese money cards-though their local versions of Mahjong do-They descend from komatsufuda, local copies of Portuguese playing cards imported at the end of the Sengoku Jidai. They were banned under the Tokugawa shogunate, hence their radical redesign from 4 suits of 12 cards (1 thru 9, Female Knave, Knight, King) each to 12 suits of 4 cards each, with no foreign or gambling-related symbolism to avoid the ban.
It's also quits possible that "spades" came from "spade" (spah-deh) in italian, which means "sword"
And spades does correspond to the suit of swords
Always a highlight in my feed to see an upload from this channel. Love these interesting obscure topics
Love your vids, always happy to see another one pop up, thanks!
I love your channel !!
great documentary on the playing cards !!
Really interesting video! We in Greece call those symbols with some inspiration from the past. We have swords for clubs, goblets or cups for hearts, we use spade and for the diamonds we use the french carreau refering to its diamond shape.
6:35 diomands? is that a typo or ye olde spelling? However, Charlemagne is definitely misspelled "Charlamange."
Good video. I didn't know about the face card names. I wonder if the Chinese myriads represented or were named after specific people too.
Charlemange is when he was having dinner
@@metallsnubben lmao I was afraid he might have a skin condition
No ye olde spellings here. Just misspellings. I swear there are always misspellings in my videos, no matter how many times I check haha
I wonder if the Joker cards were inspired or derived from the Fool card from Tarot decks? Also if they were meant to add on to the other card designs to fill up a whole sheet of card stock for economy of printing and trimming purposes?
Discovered your channel back when you released your coat of arms video. Wanted to see what happened in the meantime and must say I love what you do :)
I like this channel.
Keep it up. 👍
Interesting and informative
It's so amazing!
This channel is Generally underrated. Great video though.
Chalices, Scimitars, Coins, Polo sticks
Me, who's familiar with Tarrot: _Oh._
A lot of history missing - no mention of the trumps (tarots) of tarot deck (which probably inspired the jokers), no mention of how jacks and knights used to be used simultaneously....
All in all, a pretty good video though
Doubt that the major arcana actually inspired jokers. Sure, maybe the design, but for a very long time there was no jokers in most card games.
There's a family of card games using the tarot cards, the tarok games. They are very old games of european origin. They have special rules for The Fool card, so you could say that it was the first joker.
But for the rest of the games? Karnoffel didn't use them, Piquet doesn't, Skat doesn't, Whist doesn't. Euchre was one of the first modern games to use them, being designated as the second-highest and highest cards of the trump suit.
If anything, the major arcana inspired the trump suits in modern games! Before Whist (that's around 17th century I believe?), there was no trumps in most card games. Again, only Tarok had it. And it was the major arcana that was trump!
One evidence of that being the case is the card game Piquet, created during the lifetime (maybe a little more) of Jeanne d'Arc, 15th century. No trumps there, all suits equal.
And a bit of personal opinion: Piquet is a difficult game, hard to do the hand estimations there. Spades, Bezique or Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde are better suited for 2 player experience.
Halk-bell???
It's hawk-bell...
Thats awesome
Very interesting
I always throw the Joker cards away. The next deck I get I'll keep them and learn to play old maid. I think Jokers are in that game too.
Most people use them for two things: wild cards in poker and similar games, and replacement cards by writing the missing or damaged card on it.
@@litigioussociety4249 In Swedish it's pretty common to use the word joker for anything that would be called a "wild card" in English actually, including both literal cards in games (whether or not it's a classic card deck) and wild cards in sports (like a team that qualifies in a "lucky loser" way or getting a perfect score or whatever could be called a "jokerlag")
The way we play old maid is simply taking 3 queens out, the remaining being the "old maid". Much more flavorful that way 😁
Very good video. Where I can download or buy these beautiful siits of different playing cards of world. Give the link in the comments, if you don't mind
Ha! Since childhood I have called the suits: hearts, clovers, shovels & diamonds!
Nice 👍🏻
interesting! Knave reminds me of the old German word for boy: Knabe
Where did you find the information on the specific Kings and Queens? I had heard about this before, but have not been able to verify it. I'd be very curious to see a reputable source for that.
I found the info on the Wikipedia page for those playing cards, but I don’t think it’s very reliable
It does not sound reliable to me, at all. No info given about who decided on the figures of history or why.
These names are written on all french decks. Looking in the online archives on the french national library, I can see a deck from 1740 with these names already on the cards, but another deck from 1664 has different names on it (Helene as queen of diamonds, Cyrus as king of diamonds...)
@@Pio2001 Thank you so much! Out of curiosity, is that on modern cards as well? Whilst Germany generally uses french style decks, I have never seen that here.
@@niklasbrandt7415 Yes, they are written in small characters. You can see a standard french deck in the french wikipedia, article "Jeu de cartes français" : fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeu_de_cartes_fran%C3%A7ais
All decks look like this. We had a dozen of them in my grandparents house, used to play various games. The first time I saw an english deck I was like "what the heck are these ?... and why is it J, Q and K instead of V, D and R ???"
Where do you have more information about sponsoring videos?
Hi this is a very educational video and lika i said *very educational*
6:37... Diamonds misspelled
Cool toe workout, havent seen that anywhere
2024:fuchsia hearts,yellow diamonds,black spades and turquoise four leaf clovers
The diamond has thin black border
i feel like if they pit athena, godess of war, and a knight who fought alongside joan of arc, they could've joan of arc as one of the queens. i know theres not realky anything i can do about it but i feel like its a but of a missed opportunity😭😭
we always used joker cards to replace missing or damaged cards.
Evolution of card suits
Three suits(China)
Coins,Wands,Myriads
The Myriads suit was abandoned
Four suits(Italy)
Coins split with Cups
Wands split with Swords
Updated(Germany)
Coins turned into Bells
Wands turned into Acorns
Swords turned into Shields
Cups turned into Roses
Later Roses became Hearts and Shields became Leaves
Current suits(UK)
Spades,Hearts,Clovers and Diams
Four color variation
Black,Red,Aqua blue,Yellow
Extra suit(2020s):Gold stars(green in four color deck)
There is a mystery map of the cards it gives every birthday a. Card and tells your personality and tells the future its Accurate
Is there any significance to the face cards looking left/right?
symmetry so when you throw the cards on the table they can be understood from both sides
Modern euchre doesn't use the Jokers 😂
First comment:
This is a great explanation
La Hire wishes to kill something 😅
Good
I collect jokers.
The USA collects them as well, they are stored on capital hill.
I love playing euka for money 🤗
You forgot about the ace
Wait, euchre uses the jokers?
The very first variation does, at the very least. Euchre is the first game to use jokers, being added to the trump suit as the second-highest and highest card in there
Diamond *
Why is the Ace of Spades printed differently from other Aces?
So that the printing house, those who made the cards, could be identified without the deck of cards. Tradition stems back to 18th century England. It's mostly a western thing, it seems, as most european card packs have Ace of Spades same as all other aces
People who don't understand how cards games make sense as an avenue for fortune telling should reconsider what a 'game' even is in the first place.
sure
First comment:
This is a great explanation