top of page
Search


The Liechtenstein Five Suit Pattern
We mentioned in a previous post the mayfly life of the 1938 five suit bridge suits —Leaves, Crowns, Castles, & Eagle—that seem to have vanished as quickly as it arrived, lost to all but collectors. The reason for settling on 4 suits in card packs has been variously attributed to the number of the season (the four corners of the earths orbit), the four temperaments, the four elements to name a few. But on the way to four-suit modernity there were as many as 9 suits (in EG Ganj

Newt
Nov 242 min read
Â
Â
Â


Quintract, or 5-Suit Bridge: a rediscovered experiment
"What will replace bridge" was a question that was constantly asked in the early 20th century, having evolved from Whist in Constantinople in the 1860s, and after being picked up along with cigarettes by the British in the Crimean war, arrived in the London clubs at the turn of the 19th century. * Answers included variously Reym (post here ), Grand, Manx, Ba-ka-lee, Tout-a-tout, and Buccaneer to name only a few. Various rules for scoring and bidding had come and gone in th

Newt
Nov 2118 min read
Â
Â
Â


Tujeon: Korea's card tradition
This is a new version of the traditional Korean playing cards tujeon (íˆ¬ì „, 鬪牋) —literally "fighting tablets" — in modern international style. It is an 8 suit, 10 cards-per-suit, pack, with a suit for each of the 8 cardinal points of the compass. In each suit there are 9 numbered cards and one General card that is of a different, but associated kind. Man/King; Fish/Dragon; Crow/Phoenix; Pheasant/Falcon; Roe-Deer/Lion; Rabbit/Eagle; Horse/Wagon; Star/North Star The Tujeon trad

Newt
Oct 243 min read
Â
Â
Â
bottom of page
