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aek100 novibet


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Rank of playing card

Jack cards of all four suits in the English pattern

A Jack or Knave, in some games referred 💸 to as a Bower, in Tarot card games as a Valet, is a playing card which, in traditional French and 💸 English decks, pictures a man in the traditional or historic aristocratic or courtier dress, generally associated with Europe of the 💸 16th or 17th century. The usual rank of a jack is between the ten and the queen.

History [ edit ]

Knave 💸 of coins from the oldest known European deck ( c. 1390–1410 )

The earliest predecessor of the knave was the thānī 💸 nā'ib (second or under-deputy) in the Mamluk card deck. This was the lowest of the three court cards and like 💸 all court cards was depicted through abstract art or calligraphy. When brought over to Italy and Spain, the thānī nā'ib 💸 was made into an infantry soldier or page ranking below the knight card. In France, where the card was called 💸 the valet, the queen was inserted between the king and knight. The knight was subsequently dropped out of non-Tarot decks 💸 leaving the valet directly under the queen. The king-queen-valet format then made its way into England.

A 17th century Knave of 💸 Spades

As early as the mid-16th century the card was known in England as the knave which originally meant 'boy or 💸 young man', as its German equivalent, Knabe, still does. In the context of a royal household it meant a male 💸 servant without a specific role or skill; not a cook, gardener, coachman, etc. The French word valet means the same 💸 thing. Knave became a derogatory word because royal households had so many of these young men who went swaggering around 💸 the streets picking fights, molesting girls and generally making nuisances of themselves. It evolved to mean 'young manservant or henchman'.[1]

The 💸 word 'Jack' was in common usage in the 16th and 17th centuries to mean any generic man or fellow, as 💸 in Jack-of-all-trades (one who is good at many things), Jack-in-the-box (a child's toy), or Jack-in-the-Pulpit (a plant).

The term became more 💸 entrenched in card play when, in 1864,[2] American cardmaker Samuel Hart published a deck using "J" instead of "Kn" to 💸 designate the lowest-ranking court card. The knave card had been called a jack as part of the terminology of the 💸 game All Fours since the 17th century, but this usage was considered common or low class. However, because the card 💸 abbreviation for knave was so close to that of the king ("Kn" versus "K"), the two were easily confused. This 💸 confusion was even more pronounced after the markings indicating suits and rankings were moved to the corners of the card, 💸 a move which enabled players to "fan" a hand of cards without obscuring the individual suits and ranks. The earliest 💸 deck known of this type is from 1693, but such positioning did not become widespread until reintroduced by Hart in 💸 1864, together with the knave-to-jack change. Books of card games published in the third quarter of the 19th century still 💸 referred to the "knave". Note the exclamation by Estella in Charles Dickens's novel Great Expectations: "He calls the knaves, jacks, 💸 this boy!" Knave was the proper term and it was considered uncouth to call them 'Jacks'. Nevertheless, in a few 💸 European countries, the equivalent of the name 'knave' for this card continues to the present. For example, in Denmark, it 💸 is the Knægt, symbol B (for Bonde); in Sweden, the knekt, symbol Kn.

The German nickname of Bauer ("farmer" or "peasant") 💸 often used for the Jacks, appears in English as the loanword, Bower, used for the top trumps (usually Jacks) in 💸 games of the euchre family as well as some games of German origin where the Jacks play a significant role, 💸 e.g. Reunion.

Representations [ edit ]

In the English pattern,[3] the jack and the other face cards represent no one in particular,[4] 💸 in contrast to the historical French practice, in which each court card is said to represent a particular historical or 💸 mythological personage. The valets in the Paris pattern have traditionally been associated with such figures as Ogier the Dane (a 💸 knight of Charlemagne and legendary hero of the chansons de geste) for the jack of spades;[5] La Hire (French warrior) 💸 for the Jack of Hearts; Hector (mythological hero of the Iliad) for the jack of diamonds; and Lancelot or Judas 💸 Maccabeus for the jack of clubs.[6][7]

In some southern Italian decks, there are androgynous knaves that are sometimes referred to as 💸 maids. In the Sicilian Tarot deck, the knaves are unambiguously female and are also known as maids.[8] As this deck 💸 also includes queens, it is the only traditional set to survive into modern times with two ranks of female face 💸 cards. This pack may have been influenced by the obsolete Portuguese deck which also had female knaves. The modern Mexican 💸 pattern also has female knaves.[9]

Poetry [ edit ]

The figure of the jack has been used in many literary works throughout 💸 history. Among these is one by 17th-century English writer Samuel Rowlands. The Four Knaves is a series of Satirical Tracts, 💸 with Introduction and Notes by E. F. Rimbault, upon the subject of playing cards. His "The Knave of Clubbs: Tis 💸 Merry When Knaves Meet" was first published in 1600, then again in 1609 and 1611. In accordance with a promise 💸 at the end of this book, Rowlands went on with his series of Knaves, and in 1612 wrote "The Knave 💸 of Harts: Haile Fellowe, Well Meet", where his "Supplication to Card-Makers" appears,[10] thought to have been written to the English 💸 manufacturers who copied to the English decks the court figures created by the French. The Knave of Hearts appears as 💸 a thieving antagonist in the traditional children's poem The Queen of Hearts

Example cards [ edit ]

The cards shown here are 💸 from a Paris pattern deck (where the rank is known as the "valet"), and include the historical and mythological names 💸 associated with them. The English pattern of jacks can be seen in the photo at the top of the article.

Trickster 💸 figure [ edit ]

The jack, traditionally the lowest face card, has often been promoted to a higher or the highest 💸 position in the traditional ranking of cards, where the ace or king generally occupied the first rank. This is seen 💸 in the earliest known European card games, such as Karnöffel, as well as in more recent ones such as Euchre. 💸 Games with such promotion include:

See also [ edit ]

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