Karnöffel


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.

Karnöffel

The earliest substantial reference to Karnöffel is a poem by Meissner, written in or before 1450. In medieval times, the word also meant inguinal hernia.
Karnöffel had a suit in which some cards had a higher priority than cards in other suits, which indicates that it might be a possible precursor to the trump suit of Tarot. Karnöffel utilizes a deck of 48 cards, Aces having been removed from German and Swiss playing cards during the 14th or early 15th century. The original game was played with German-suited cards; its present-day descendants are played with Swiss-suited or French-suited cards.
One derivative of the game using Swiss-suited cards still played around Stans and in the Engelberg valley in the canton of Nidwalden in Switzerland under the name Kaisern, Kaiserspiel or Kaiserjass, though it is not related to Jass. It is a five-card partnership game of which each deal is won by the first side to win three tricks.
Other living descendants, using 48 French-suited cards, are Knüffeln, played in Frisia in north Germany, and Styrivolt, played in the Faroe Islands.

Rules

The game was played with a 48-card pack with the following card ranking:

Players

It was played by four players in two teams of two; the partners sitting opposite one another.

Card powers

Playing

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