Popular European children's game | |
Origin | Germany |
---|---|
Alternative name | Schwarzer Peter |
Type | Shedding |
Players | 3 or more |
Age range | 6+ |
Cards | 31 or 37 |
Deck | Special or standard packs |
Play | Clockwise |
Playing time | 5-10 minutes |
Chance | Easy |
Related games | |
Old Maid, Vieux Garçon |
Black Peter is the English name of the European game of Schwarzer Peter which originated in Germany where, along with Quartett , it is one of the most common children's card games. Old Maid is similar in concept to Black Peter and may derive from it.
The name Black Peter may be derived from the robber Johann Peter Petri, a contemporary and accomplice of Johannes Bückler, the notorious German highwayman known as Schinderhannes. Petri also went under the nickname of "Old Black Peter" (der alte Schwarzpeter) or just "Black Peter" (Schwarzer Peter) and is supposed to have invented the game while in prison, sometime after 1811. [1] [2]
Other sources name the game after another notorious bandit, Peter Nikoll (1771–1817), from Mecklenburg in north Germany who was also nicknamed Black Peter. [3] However, the game may be older and simply have been renamed.
The game was certainly known by 1821 when it is briefly described in a play by von Voss in which the player left holding the Black Peter lost. [4]
The game is known as zwartepieten ("playing Black Pete"), pijkezotjagen ("Chasing the jack of spades") or simply as Zwarte Piet in the Netherlands and as Asinello ("little donkey") in Italy. In Sweden the game is called Svarte Petter, in Finland Musta Pekka, in Denmark Sorteper, in Croatia Crni Petar, [5] or Krampus, [6] and in Greek as "mu(n)tzuris" (μου(ν)τζούρης, "smudged, smutted"). [7] in Poland Piotruś ("Peter"), in Iceland Svarti Pétur ("Black Peter") and in Czech Republic Černý Petr.
The origin of Black Peter is unclear, although legend has it that it was invented in gaol by the notorious criminal, Black Peter, in 1811. [1] Its rules are recorded as early as 1821 in Das Neue Königliche L'Hombre, [8] some years before those of the English game of Old Maid or Old Bachelor whose earliest rules appeared in 1835, [9] and the French game of Vieux Garçon ("Old Boy"), first recorded in 1853. [10] It is probably much older and once a simple gambling game in which the aim was to determine a loser who had to pay for the next round of drinks (cf. drinking game). [11] An article in an 1862 issue of Deutsches Magazin says that Black Peter was originally a subgame of the student drinking game of Quodlibet which, however, is not attested before 1845. [12]
The game employs a pack of 32 French cards, Black Peter being, in the earliest rules, the Jack of Spades, the other black Jack having been removed. [lower-alpha 1] The player who is last in and left holding Black Peter is the loser and may originally have had to pay for the next round.
Black Peter has long been a popular children's game and numerous proprietary packs have been produced aimed at the children's market. The earliest known of such bespoke cards appeared around 1840 in a trilingual format. Over the course of the years the images changed, reflecting the culture and social norms of the period. [13] In older packs, the Black Peter was typically a blackface caricature of a black man; other packs use a variety of different images such as chimney sweeps, black crows or black cats.
Special Black Peter packs usually consist of 31 or 37 cards: the 'Black Peter' and 15 or 18 pairs of cards. [14] Instead of proprietary playing cards, a pack of traditional French cards may be used with a Joker as the Black Peter, or one card removed to make a particular pair incomplete.
Any number of players can participate in the game, but at least two. The cards are shuffled and fully dealt out to the players. If players find pairs in their hands, they must discard those cards immediately.
Now the card drawing begins: the youngest child, or the child holding the most cards, or the player to the left of the dealer, draws a card from the player to the left and adds it to the hand. If that player can form a pair with this new card, it must be discarded. Then it is the turn of the player on the left to play in the same way. In this way, the game continues until all pairs are discarded and one player is left with Black Peter as the only card. This player is Black Peter and receives the agreed penalty, such as a black dot on the forehead, nose or cheek. [15]
The German saying "jemandem den Schwarzen Peter zuschieben" ("to pass the Black Peter to someone") means to pass the buck, to blame or to dump something inconvenient such as an unwelcome problem or responsibility on another person. [16]
A Bavarian version of the game is played with a traditional Bavarian pattern pack of 32 cards. One of the Obers is removed – not the Ober of Hearts (illustrated) – and, after shuffling, each player receives 4 cards, the rest are stacked face down in the middle of the table. The dealer draws a card, unseen, from the player to the right. If the dealer now has a pair (e.g. two 7s or two Kings) they are laid away and two more cards drawn from the stock to replace them. The turn passes to the player to the dealer's left who draws a card from the dealer. This continues clockwise with players drawing a card, laying down any pairs and refreshing their hands to bring them back to 4 cards. If it becomes clear that no-one has any pairs, the next player draws an extra card from stock to get the game going again. The player left holding the Ober of Hearts, the Schinderhansl, loses. The game is named after the notorious German highwayman, Schinderhannes. [17]
Pig is a simple, collecting card game of early 20th century American origin suitable for three to thirteen players that is played with a 52-card French-suited pack. It has two very similar and well known variants – donkey and spoons. It is often classed as a children's game. It may be descended from an old game called vive l'amour.
Old Maid is a 19th-century American card game for two or more players, probably deriving from an ancient European gambling game in which the loser pays for the drinks.
Veldenz is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bernkastel-Wittlich district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It is the former main seat of the County of Veldenz, once a prominent principality to which belonged 120 villages and towns now in Rhineland-Palatinate and northern Alsace and Lorraine.
Cego is a Tarot card game for three or four players played mainly in and around the Black Forest region of Germany. It was probably derived from the three-player Badenese game of Dreierles when soldiers deployed from the Iberian Peninsula during the Napoleonic Wars and, based on a Spanish game they had encountered, introduced Cego's distinctive feature: a concealed hand, or blind. Cego has experienced a revival in recent years, being seen as part of the culture of the Black Forest and surrounding region. It has been called the national game of Baden and described as a "family classic".
Tippen, also known as Dreiblatt, Dreikart, Drei Karten, Dreekort, Kleinpréférence or Labet, is an historical German 3-card, plain-trick game which was popular as a gambling game for three or more players. The Danish version of the game was known as Trekort and more elaborate Swedish variants include Knack and Köpknack. It appears to be related to the English game of Three-Card Loo. It was banned as a gambling game in some places.
Binokel is a card game for two to eight players that originated in Switzerland as Binocle, but spread to the German state of Württemberg, where it is typically played with a Württemberg pattern pack. It is still popular in Württemberg, where it is usually played in groups of three or four as a family game rather than in the pubs. In three-hand games, each player competes for himself, while in four-hand games, known as Cross Binokel (Kreuzbinokel), two teams are formed with partners sitting opposite one another. The game was introduced to America by German immigrants in the first half of the 20th century, where it developed into the similar game of pinochle. Binocle was still played in Switzerland in 1994. In south Germany, the game is sometimes called by its Swabian name, Benoggl.
Grosstarock is an old three-handed card game of the Tarock family played with a full 78-card Tarot pack. It was probably introduced into the southern German states around 1720 but spread rapidly into Austria and northwards as far as the Netherlands and Scandinavia. It only survives today in Denmark where it is called Tarok.
Quodlibet is a traditional card game and drinking game associated with central European student fraternities that is played with William Tell pattern cards and in which the dealer is known as the 'beer king'. It is a compendium, trick-taking game for 4 players using a 32-card pack of German-suited playing cards. The Bavarian game of Rumpel is descended from Quodlibet.
Rumpel is a card game, that is native to the Danube region from Regensburg to Linz, but is played especially in the region of Hauzenberg in the German county of Passau in Bavaria. Mala describes a version with 8 or 12 contracts from a menu of 29 called Großer Rumpel. It is a descendant of the old Austrian student's game of Quodlibet.
Kein Stich is a card game, which is well known in the German-speaking parts of the world under various regional names such as Herzeln, King Louis, Kunterbunt ("Multicoloured"), Schwarze Sau, Fritz, Brumseln, Fünferspiel ("Fives"), Lieschen, Lizzy or Pensionisteln ("Pensioners").
Sticheln is an easy-to-learn, trick-taking, card game for 4 players that originated from Austria. It is an old game, being recorded as early as 1756 and its rules being first described in 1830. The name means "playing [for] tricks".
Officers' Schafkopf is a German point-trick card game for two players which is based on the rules of Schafkopf. The game is a good way to learn the trumps and suits for normal Schafkopf and to understand what cards one is allowed to play. It is similar in concept to Officers' Skat.
Bester Bube, also Fiefkort mit 'n besten Buren, is an historical German card game for 3–6 players played with a Piquet pack. It is one of the Rams group of card games characterised by allowing players to drop out of the current game if they think they will be unable to win any tricks or a minimum number of tricks. It may be an ancestor of Five-Card Loo.
Twenty-one, formerly known as vingt-un in Britain, France and America, is the name given to a family of popular card games of the gambling family, the progenitor of which is recorded in Spain in the early 17th century. The family includes the casino games of blackjack and pontoon as well as their domestic equivalents. Twenty-one rose to prominence in France in the 18th century and spread from there to Germany and Britain from whence it crossed to America. Known initially as vingt-un in all those countries, it developed into pontoon in Britain after the First World War and blackjack in Canada and the United States in the late 19th century, where the legalisation of gambling increased its popularity.
Spitzeln is an historical German card game for three players and a variant of German Solo.
Johann Peter Petri, nicknamed Old Black Peter or simply Black Peter, was a robber and accomplice of Schinderhannes, the notorious highwayman. The name of the card game, Black Peter may be derived from Petri or from another notorious bandit, Peter Nikoll, also known as Black Peter.
Taroc l'Hombre or Tarok-l'Hombre is an extinct card game of the European Tarot card game family for three players that was played with a full pack of 78 tarot cards, known as tarocs or taroks. It emerged in Italy around 1770 as Tarocc 'Ombre but later spread to Austria and Germany. It was a crucial development, with the important idea of bidding imported from l'Hombre, hence the name.
Vieux garçon is a card game played with a standard 52-card pack from which the jack of clubs is removed. It is a game for two to eight players. It is of the same family as old maid and Black Peter.
Onze et demie, also Onze et demi, is an historical German banking game for any number of players and a close relative of Vingt et un.
Peter Nikoll (1771–1817) was a bandit leader from Mecklenburg who was beheaded for his crimes. His nickname was Black Peter.
_ (1862). Deutsches Magazin, 2, 1.1862. pp. 299–301.