Contra (card Game)
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Contra (card Game)
Kontraspiel, also called Contra, is a German 5-card plain-trick game for four individual players using 24 cards. Eldest hand has the first right to accept or make trumps. The Unters of Acorns and Leaves (the equivalent of the two black Jacks) are permanent highest trumps, the ''Wenzels''. Kontraspiel is similar to the Scandinavian game Polskpas and is recorded as early as 1811. History The earliest mention of Contra appears in a list of games in a 1755 poem. In 1773 it is described as one of the games played with "German cards" i.e. a 32-card German-suited pack, and, in 1786 it was reported that, along with Trischaken, it was a very popular game among the peasants in German-speaking lands.Cella, Johann Jakob''Freymüthige Aufsätze'' Vol. 3. Anspach: Benedikt Friedrich Haueisens, p. 161 The earliest rules appeared in the same 1773 source under a separate entry, but the first comprehensive account is given in Hammer's 1811 edition of ''Die deutschen Kartenspiele''. and then re ...
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Saxonian Deck - Acorns - Unter
Saxony (german: Sachsen ; Upper Saxon: ''Saggsn''; hsb, Sakska), officially the Free State of Saxony (german: Freistaat Sachsen, links=no ; Upper Saxon: ''Freischdaad Saggsn''; hsb, Swobodny stat Sakska, links=no), is a landlocked state of Germany, bordering the states of Brandenburg, Saxony-Anhalt, Thuringia, Bavaria, as well as the countries of Poland and the Czech Republic. Its capital is Dresden, and its largest city is Leipzig. Saxony is the tenth largest of Germany's sixteen states, with an area of , and the sixth most populous, with more than 4 million inhabitants. The term Saxony has been in use for more than a millennium. It was used for the medieval Duchy of Saxony, the Electorate of Saxony of the Holy Roman Empire, the Kingdom of Saxony, and twice for a republic. The first Free State of Saxony was established in 1918 as a constituent state of the Weimar Republic. After World War II, it was under Soviet occupation before it became part of the communist East Germ ...
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Polskpas
Polskpas, Polsk Pas, or Polskt Pass is a Scandinavian 5-card plain-trick game for four individual players using 24 cards. Eldest hand has the first right to accept or make trumps. As is typical for Schafkopf card games, which are normally point-trick games, the four Jacks are known as ''Wenzels'' and form permanent highest trumps. Polskpas is similar to the historical German game of Kontraspiel. History and etymology The game appears in a Danish game anthology in 1774 as ''Polsk Pas'', a Swedish game anthology from 1839, and in a Danish encyclopedia in 1924. An early literary reference to the game is a Swedish novel from 1753. Another early Danish literary reference to the game is from 1786. Although ''Polskpas'' (Danish) and ''Polskt Pass'' (Swedish) literally mean ''Polish passport'', it appears more likely that ''pas'' refers to the game feature which allows eldest hand to pass rather than being obliged to play with the turn-up suit under all circumstances. A somewhat later ...
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