The origin of playing cards is, like many things, buried in the dark of history passed down. The first playing cards presumably emerged in the old Pharaohs’ Egypt. What they looked like, what they were made of, why and how they found their way into common peoples’ hands – all that is subject to legends and speculation. There is no ascertained knowledge.
From the Far
East via the Silk RoadThe origin of
playing cards is, like many things, buried in the dark of history passed down.
The first playing cards presumably emerged in the old Pharaohs’ Egypt. What they
looked like, what they were made of, why and how they found their way into
common peoples’ hands – all that is subject to legends and speculation. There is
no ascertained knowledge.
Chinese sources
dating back before the Christian Era give an account of cards painted with
figures and symbols. Those were used for mystical purposes rather than pastimes.
They supposedly
inspired the simultaneous development and gradual spread of playing cards in
China, Korea, and India.These cards
traveled from the Far East via the Silk Road to the Islamic caliphate on the
Iberian Peninsula. The caliphate had a vast cultural influence on the Western
World up until the 15th century. Travelers brought the cards from the peninsula
to the rest of Europe.The exact
processes have not been passed down. All we know is, neither cultural nor
geographic borders were ever able to stop mutual creative enrichment.Card Games as a
Sin?One day the
leaders of western Europe were alarmed by the novel playing cards. It is telling
of the time that the first written mentions of this phenomenon revolve around
prohibition and banishment. The first detailed description of playing cards
dates back to 1370. A monk of the Dominican Order wrote it in the city of
Freiburg im Breisgau, in today’s far south-west of Germany. Three years prior, a
court in Bern, Switzerland, banned and vilified a deck of cards as a “prayer
book of the devil.”
Decks of cards,
some precious ones, are passed down from the 15th century. They were often
painted by significant artists of their time. Before the invention of the
printing press, each card game was one of a kind. The resulting costs made the
vice and virtue of card games accessible mainly for the well-to-do. For example,
a guild of card painters was founded in Nuremberg, whose excellent reputation
lasts until today.
From
Exclusivity to Staple Goods
The invention
of woodcut, later of chalcography, and soon after of the printing press, made
producing larger volumes of playing cards gradually easier and cheaper.
Particularly
the German and French printers spurred each other. By the end of the 15th
century, Lyon blossomed out as one of the most important centers for card game
production. That is the main reason for today’s prominence of the French playing
cards.
Back then, the
four suits Trèfle (Clubs), Pique (Spades), Coeur (Hearts), and Carreau
(Diamonds) were established in Lyon. By the end of the 15th century, pip cards –
Two to Ten – replaced former face cards showing people of the royal court. The
remaining face cards were Jack, Queen, and King. The Joker is probably referring
to the fool from Tarot, another game spreading at the time.
Card games were
initially played in courtly salons. In the following centuries, the French,
especially, came up with numerous modifications and new games which are nowadays
played in exclusive, privy groups. The modern games – Skat, Whist, Bridge, and
Rummy – emerged in the 19th century.
Rummy’s Origin
– Mexico?A new game came
about in Mexico. Conquian – a card game for two players – was initially played
with Spanish, later with French playing cards. Some sources place the emergence
of Conquian in the 17th century. The basic rules of the game are similar to the
rules of modern Rummy. But first, Conquian traveled northwards to the USA. In
1909, Elwood Baker from New York, a member of the Knickerbocker Whist Club
established his version of Rummy, which is also referred to as Rummy Bo.
The word rummy
is associated with rum, which was often the stake. In American English, it also
means peculiar, weird, alcoholized.
Rummy’s rules
are fluid. It was designed for two, though you can play it with several people.
One or two decks of French playing cards are used. Rummy’s vital elements are
combining cards, melding combinations, variations of knocking, drawing, and
laying off.
All of these
are included in one way or another in the modern German Rummy, also called Rommé.
You can play it here at the Rummy Palace! The predominantly played version in
Great Britain and the USA still is Rummy.
Modern German
RummyThe German
Rommé has different names all over Europe: In Austria, it is referred to as
Rummy, locally also Jolly. In France, it is called Rami. Another member of the
Rummy family, besides Rummy, Rummy Bo, and all their variations, is Canasta. You
can play it at our Canasta Palace.
How did Rummy
find its way to Germany? When and where did it turn into the Rommé commonly
known in Germany today? These questions are idle – it is unknown.
But one thing
is for sure: German Rummy rapidly gained popularity. The German Skat Association
embraced the novelty and dedicated a department to the game. A set of rules was
developed, and in 2007 the first Rummy Championship was held in Germany. Since
then, Rummy tournaments have been a permanent feature of Skat tournaments held
by the German Skat Association. This trend can be noted on a global scale too.
No Limits for
your CreativityRummy is a
popular game in many families’ and friend groups’ everyday life. That has to do
with Rummy’s versatility: Rules can be modified to taste as well as familial or
regional traditions. Most variations concern:the number of
Jokers (four to eight)
the score
required for the first meld (30 to 42 points)the Ace’s score
in specific combinations of cardsknocking for
cardsthe conditions
to meet before swapping a Joker in groups of cardsAnother
variation is Robber’s Rummy. The catch: Melds can not only be added to but
entirely rearranged.This wide
variety shows that Rummy is nowadays one of the most popular card games with a
growing fanbase. Have a go and enjoy the game!