Other early Notes
about Playing Cards (- ca. 1420)
The following list was extracted with
permission of the author from Michael J. Hurst's
Collected Fragments of Tarot History
Added comments by ourselves are in
GREEN
1371 Catalonia, Spain.
The earliest reference to cards in Europe, "it first appears as naip in
a Catalan document of 1371." This reference from Parlett seems not to
be repeated in any of the other sources examined, and comes from a 1989
article in the Journal of the International Playing Card Society, by
Luis Monreal, which post-dates most of the other sources used for this
list. (P 36.) This apparently appeared in the Diccionari de rims
commissioned by Peter IV, King of Aragon. (Ortalli, 175.)
1377 Basel, Switzerland.
Dominican Johannes von Rheinfelden
authored the essay Tractatus de moribus et
disciplina humanae conversationis, although this dating is suspect.
1377 Paris, France
Ordinance prohibiting "card-play in contexts clearly directed at the
working classes". A similar ordinance from 1369 did not mention cards.
(P 35, 37; GD 10.)
1379 Viterbo, Italy
Cola di Covelluzzo’s Viterbo Chronicle reports, "In the year 1379 there
was brought to Viterbo the game of cards, which in the Saracen language
is called nayb." In fifteenth-century Italy, in France, and in Spain
from 1371 to this day, cards were referred to as naibi, nahipi, naips,
naipes, naibbe, naibbi. (GT 11, 43-44; K I:32; P 36.)
1379 Brabant, Belgium
Account-book of the duke of Brabant, Wenceslaus of Luxembourg and his
wife Johanna, "describes a fete held at Brussels in 1379 at which cards
were played." There is also an entry noting the purchase of a deck of
cards, quartspel mette copen. (K I:24; GT 10, 65; P 37; B 64.)
1380
Nürnberg, Germany
Card playing with small money is allowed by a statute. NSW
(web
page)
Rainer Müller
gives the date 1381 and details:
"rennen mit pferden (horse-racing), schiessen mit armbrusten
(crossbow-shooting), carten (playing cards), schofzogel (= chess),
pretspil (boardgame = backgommon ?) und kugeln (Bocchia ?)" is allowed
at the "Hallerwiese".
1380 P Barcelona, Spain
Inventory including reference to "a game of cards comprising forty-four
pieces". (K II:1.)
1381 Marseilles, France
"A certain Jacques Jean (son of a Marseilles merchant) bound for
Alexandria, Egypt, pledged to his friends Honorat d'Abe and Micolas
Miol, before a notary, not to gamble or play games of chance on his
journey: primarily taxilli (the greatly condemned dice), but also
scaqui (i.e. chess which actually enjoyed a good reputation) and
nahipi. The pledge to forsake gambling was a well-known obligation in
Mediaeval juridical practice, especially as far as dice were concerned.
But here the novelty was the inclusion of cards among the unacceptable
games." (Ortalli 176; K I:24; B 45.)
1384 Nuremberg, Germany
A manuscript notes the "widespread adoption of the new game throughout
Europe". Dummett reports this, noting that he was unable to confirm it.
(GT 11; B 29.)
1392 P France.
Account book for King Charles VI, "Given to Jacquemin Gringonneur,
painter, for three packs of cards, gilt and colored, and variously
ornamented, for the amusement of the king, fifty-six sols of Paris."
These are not the so-called Gringonneur cards, aka Charles VI cards,
which are a late fifteenth-century Ferrarese Tarot deck. These three
decks might be better compared to the 1440 Tortona deck. (K I:24; GT
65-66; P 37.)
1393 Florence, Italy
Chronicle di Giovani Morelli "contains a warning against the use of
dice by children. Morelli describes naibi as a kind of game, and from
the context it appears it was one which only children played, possibly
for instructive purposes." (K I:24.) Ortalli refers to Morelli's
"Ricordi – memoirs written between 1393 and 1421". (Ortalli 181.)
Compare this with the 1424 Ferrara reference to acquiring decks for
children, and the 1516 entry.
1395 Bologna, Italy
"A certain Federico of German origin, suspected of pushing counterfeit
coins in Bologna in 1395, also sold cartas figuratas et pictas ad
imagines et figuras sanctorum." (Ortalli 197.)
1396 Paris France
"At the French court a hawker or maker of cases, Guion Groslet appears
in the account books of 1396 for having sold an estuy for the cards of
Queen Isabelle of Bavaria (Charles VI's wife)." (Ortalli 178.)
c.1400 Mamluk, Egypt
"The future Sultan al-Malik al-Mu’ayyud is recorded to have won a large
sum of money in a game of cards in about the year 1400". (GT 42.)
c.1400 P Mamluk, Egypt
A nearly complete deck (47 cards) from this provenance was found in the
Topkapi Sarayi Museum in Istanbul, Turkey. As reconstructed, it was a
52-card deck "virtually identical with the Italian variety of the
Latin-suited pack". (P 40; K I:53, 56; H 19.)
1402 Ulm, Germany
Cardmaker (kartenmacher) mentioned as profession in registry. (Betts,
109.)
1403 Aragon, Spain
The King of Aragon, Martin el Humano, requested some playing cards, un
joch de naips. (Ortalli 178.)
1408
Orleans, France
Inventory of the Duke and Duchess of Orleans, listing "ung jeu de
quartes sarrasines and unes quartes de Lombardie (‘one pack of Saracen
cards; one cards of Lombardy’)". (GT 42.)
1408
Paris, France.
Court records describe con artists using cards in a simple scam "with a
psychological resemblance to Three-card Monte." (Giobbi; P 73.)
1414 Barcelona, Spain
Multiple inventories referring to Moorish cards: "j joch de nayps
moreschs" and "j joch de nahyps moreschs", both meaning "1 pack of
Moorish playing cards". (GT 42.)
1414 Nürnberg
From 1414 - 1500 in Nürnberg 38 card producers are counted. NSV (web
page)
c.1415 Bologna, Italy.
A portrait of Prince Fibbia, dating from the later seventeenth century,
bears an inscription identifying him as "inventor of the game of
Tarocchino in Bologna". This apparently legendary attribution appears
to be a Fibbia family tradition, intended to explain their arms on some
Bolognese cards by attributing the game to Prince Francesco
Antelminelli Castracani Fibbia (1360 - 1419). (K I:32 -33, II:2, GT
66-67.)
1418 Augsburg, Germany.
Cardmaker (kartenmacher) mentioned as profession in registry. (Betts,
109.)
References:
Beal, George. Playing-Cards and Their Story. David & Charles Ltd.,
1975. (B)
Kaplan, Stuart. The Encyclopedia of Tarot. U.S. Games Systems Inc.,
1978. (K I)
Dummett, Michael. The Game of Tarot. Duckworth, 1980. (GT)
Parlett, David. The Oxford Guide to Card Games. Oxford University
Press, 1990. (P)
Ortalli, Gherardo. "The Prince and the playing cards. The Este family
and the role of the courts at the time of the Kartenspiel-Invasion",
Ludica 2: Annali di storia e civiltà del gioco. Fondazione
Bennetton Studi Ricerche, 1996.
Hoffmann, Detlef. The Playing Card: An Illustrated History. New York
Graphic Society, 1973. (H)
Kaplan, Stuart. The Encyclopedia of Tarot: Volume II. U.S. Games
Systems Inc., 1986. (K II)
Betts, Timothy. Tarot and the Millennium. New Perspective Media, 1998.
(Betts)
Giobbi, Roberto. Brian Ochab’s History of Cards. (Giobbi) web page
essays the history of cards from a magician’s point of view.
http://brianochab.com/history_of_cards.html.
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