giovedì 5 giugno 2014

History of Playing Cards, by William Andrew Chatto -

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.



____________________________________________________


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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