FACTS AND SPECULATIONS
ON THE
ORIGIN AND HISTORY
OF
PLAYING CARDS.
BY
WILLIAM ANDREW CHATTO.
Hæc mihi charta nuces, hæc est mihi charta fritillus.—Martial.
With Cards I while my leisure hours away,
And cheat old Time; yet neither bet nor play.
LONDON:
JOHN RUSSELL SMITH,
OLD COMPTON STREET, SOHO SQUARE.
MDCCCXLVIII.
JOHN RUSSELL SMITH,
OLD COMPTON STREET, SOHO SQUARE.
MDCCCXLVIII.
____________________________________________________
CONTENTS.
PAGE | |
CHAPTER I. | |
Of the Origin and Name of Cards | 1 |
CHAPTER II. | |
Introduction of Cards into Europe | 60 |
CHAPTER III. | |
Progress of Card-Playing | 92 |
CHAPTER IV. | |
Of the different Kinds of Cards, and the Marks of the Suits | 189 |
CHAPTER V. | |
The Morality of Card-Playing | 279 |
Appendix | 331 |
Index |
__________________________________________________________________________
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
PAGE | |
The "Honours" of an eight-suit pack of Hindostanee Cards | 42 |
Specimens of Chinese Cards, of the kind called Tseen-wan-che-pae | 57-8 |
A Card Party, from an illustration in a manuscript of the Cité, apparently of the early part of the fifteenth century | 71 |
Copies of Old Stencilled Cards in the British Museum, apparently of a date not later than 1440 | 88-9 |
Fac-simile of one of Murner's Cards for teaching logic, 1509 | 105 |
Copies of Four Small Cards, from Marcolini's Sorti, 1540 | 117 |
Woodcut, "Thus of Old" and "Thus Now," from Samuel Ward's Woe to Drunkards, 1627 | 131 |
The Knaves of Hearts and Clubs; and the Knaves of Spades and Diamonds, from the Four Knaves, by Samuel Rowlands, 1610-13 | 133-6 |
Fac-similes of four Heraldic Cards, from a pack engraved in England about 1678 | 152 |
Fac-similes of the Signatures of Edmund Hoyle and Thomas Osborne | 170 |
Copy of a plate in Darly's Political and Satirical History, showing the Coat Cards for 1759 | 183 |
Copies of two of the painted cards, ascribed to Jacquemin Gringonneur, preserved in the Bibliothèque du Roi at Paris | 198 |
Copies of four French Cards, coloured,—the King of Diamonds; the Queen and King of Spades; and the King of Hearts,—of the latter part of the fifteenth century | 212 |
Copies of the Four Knaves, coloured,—Lancelot, Hogier, Roland, and Valery,—of the latter part of the fifteenth century. In the British Museum | 214 |
Copies of Eight Circular Cards belonging to a pack engraved on copper about 1480, with Hares, Parroquets, Pinks, and Columbines as the marks of the suit | 222 |
Four Cards of a pack engraved on copper, apparently about the end of the fifteenth century, with Swords, Clubs, Cups, and Pomegranates, as the marks of the suits. In the British Museum | 225 |
The Sevens of a pack of Tarots, with Swords, Cups, Batons, and Money as the marks of the suits | 227 |
The Second Coat Cards of the suits of Acorns and Leaves—in a German pack engraved on wood, 1511 | 236-7 |
The Sevens of a pack of German Cards, with Bells, Hearts, Leaves, and Acorns, as the marks of the suits | 238 |
Copies of Four Small German Cards, of the seventeenth century | 239 |
The Valets of a pack of French Cards, of the time of Henry IV | 250 |
The Chevaliers, or Valets, of a pack of Portuguese Cards, of the date 1693 | 252 |
Figure of "the real Spata," as shown in Baker's Eclectic Cards, 1813 | 261 |
Tail-piece, Cheating Time with Cards | 330 |
Cupid; from a cut relating to Prophecies and Fortune-telling, in Bagford's Collection, Harleian MSS. 5966 | 336 |
The Four of Cups, from an old card, in the same collection | 343 |
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Facts and Speculations on the Origin and History of Playing Cards, by William Andrew Chatto
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45584/45584-h/45584-h.htm
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