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Karnöffel

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Karnöffel is a trick-taking card game which probably came from the upper-German language area in Europe in the first quarter of the 15th century. It first appeared listed in a municipal ordinance of Nördlingen , Bavaria, in 1426 among the games that could be lawfully played at the annual city fête . This makes the game the oldest identifiable European card game in the history of playing cards with a continuous tradition of play down to the present day.

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4-414: The earliest substantial reference to Karnöffel is a poem by Meissner , written in or before 1450. Historically karnöffeln meant "to cudgel, thrash or flog", but in medieval times, a Karnöffel was also the word for an inguinal hernia . Karnöffel had a suit , the ' chosen suit ', in which some cards had a higher priority than cards in other suits, which indicates that it might be a possible precursor to

8-640: Is no detailed record of the early rules for Karnöffel. It is known that it was played with a 48-card, German-suited pack , that there was one chosen suit and that the cards of the chosen suit probably ranked as follows: U, 6, D, 3, 4 and 5. The chosen Six was known as the Pope, the Unter as the Karnöffel and the other beaters of the chosen suit were Emperors ( Kaiser ). The chosen 7 was the Devil and had no value except when led. By

12-427: The trump suit of Tarot . The earliest forms of Karnöffel utilized a deck of 48 cards, Aces having been removed from German and Swiss playing cards during the 14th or early 15th century. Karnöffel has a number of descendants that are still played today including Swiss Kaisern or Kaiserjass , Schleswigian Knüffeln and Bruus , Danish Brus , Icelandic Brús , Gotlandic Bräus and Greenlandic Voormsi . There

16-465: The late 18th century, there was a 36-card variant of Karnöffel. 36- and 48-card variants are still played today. The rules here are taken from a reconstruction by von Leyden and Dummett , based on von Leyden's discovery of the little-known Swiss game of Kaisern or Kaiserspiel which appeared to have similar characteristics to the original Karnöffel. Karnöffel was played by four players in two teams of two. The partners sat opposite one another. There

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