Viennese Tappen
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Tapp Tarock (german: Tapp-Tarock), also called Viennese Tappen (german: Wiener Tappen), Tappen or Tapper, is a three-player
tarot card game Tarot games are card games played with tarot decks, that is, decks with numbered permanent trumps parallel to the suit cards. The games and decks which English-speakers call by the French name Tarot are called Tarocchi in the original Italian, ...
which traditionally uses the 54-card
Industrie und Glück ''Industrie und Glück'' (Early Modern German for "Diligence and Fortune") is a pattern of French suited playing cards used to play tarock. The name originates from an inscription found on the second trump card. This deck was developed during t ...
deck. Before the ''
Anschluss The (, or , ), also known as the (, en, Annexation of Austria), was the annexation of the Federal State of Austria into the German Reich on 13 March 1938. The idea of an (a united Austria and Germany that would form a " Greater Germany ...
'' (1938), it was the preferred card game of
Viennese Viennese may refer to: * Vienna, the capital of Austria * Viennese people, List of people from Vienna * Viennese German, the German dialect spoken in Vienna * Music of Vienna, musical styles in the city * Viennese Waltz, genre of ballroom dance * V ...
coffee houses, for example, the ''Literatencafés'' and ''
Café Central Café Central is a traditional Viennese café located at Herrengasse 14 in the Innere Stadt first district of Vienna, Austria. The café occupies the ground floor of the former Bank and Stockmarket Building, today called the Palais Ferstel after i ...
''. Even today Tapp Tarock is played sporadically. The exact date when it appeared is not possible to identify; some sources suggest it may have been developed in
Austria Austria, , bar, Östareich officially the Republic of Austria, is a country in the southern part of Central Europe, lying in the Eastern Alps. It is a federation of nine states, one of which is the capital, Vienna, the most populous ...
in the early 19th century,Kastner and Folkvord (2005) but its mention in caricature operas in 1800 and 1806 suggest it was well known even by then and must have arisen in the late 18th century. The oldest description of the actual rules is dated to 1821.Mayr and Sedlaczek (2001), pp. 105–110 Tapp Tarock is considered a good entry level game before players attempt more complex Tarock forms like Cego,
Illustrated Tarock Illustrated Tarock (german: Illustriertes Tarock) or Illustrated Dreiertarock is an Austrian card game that has been described as the "queen" of all three-handed Tarock games played with the 54-card pack. It was thought by Mayr and Sedlaczek to ...
or
Königrufen Königrufen or Königsrufen (German: "Call the King") is a four-player, trick-taking card game of the Tarot card games, tarot family, played in Austria and Southern Tyrol, with variants for two, three and six players. As with other regional tarot ...
.


Name

''Tapp'' is the name of the face-down stack of cards in the middle of the table – in other games known as the ''
talon Talon or talons may refer to: Science and technology * Talon (anatomy), the claw of a bird of prey * Brodifacoum, a rodenticide, also known as the brand Talon * TALON (database), a database maintained by the US Air Force * Talon, an anti-vehicle- ...
'' or ''stock''. The names of other card games are also derived from it, including ''
Tappu Troggu is a member of the tarot family of card games. Synonyms for the game's name are: Trogga, Tappu and Tappä. It is played in the area of Visp, Switzerland, in Upper Wallis, especially in St. Niklaus and Grächen. After Troccas, it is the sec ...
'' or ''
Tappä Troggu is a member of the tarot family of card games. Synonyms for the game's name are: Trogga, Tappu and Tappä. It is played in the area of Visp, Switzerland, in Upper Wallis, especially in St. Niklaus and Grächen. After Troccas, it is the ...
'' for the
Swiss Swiss may refer to: * the adjectival form of Switzerland * Swiss people Places * Swiss, Missouri * Swiss, North Carolina *Swiss, West Virginia * Swiss, Wisconsin Other uses *Swiss-system tournament, in various games and sports *Swiss Internation ...
Tarock variant of
Troggu Troggu is a member of the tarot family of card games. Synonyms for the game's name are: Trogga, Tappu and Tappä. It is played in the area of Visp, Switzerland, in Upper Wallis, especially in St. Niklaus and Grächen. After Troccas, it is the ...
, as well as the Austrian Stubaital valley game of
Dobbm Dobbm or Tappen is a card game played in the Stubai valley in Austria and is one of a family of games derived from the Tarot game of Grosstarock by adapting its rules to a regular, shortened pack of 36 cards. The ranking and point value of the ca ...
and the south German game of Tapp which was an attempt to play Tapp Tarock with ordinary cards. Other names for Tapp Tarock were Taroc(k)-Tapp(en), Taroc(k)tappen or just Tappen or Tapper. An older name or name of a predecessor game was Pagatjagen; a 42-card variant was Zwölfertarock and a variant with 40 cards was Einfaches Tarock.''Tarok
at portal.dnb.de. Retrieved 1 March 2021.
Because the announcement ''"ich tappe"'' ("I'll tapp") referred to the lowest level of the game which was soon dropped, it became fashionable to name the game after the next highest level, Dreiern, Dreierl or
Dreierles Dreierles is a three-handed, trick-taking Tarot card game that is popular in the German region of central Baden. It is very old and appears to be a south German cousin of Tapp Tarock, the oldest known 54-card Tarot game. Dreierles is played with ...
, names which are prevalent to this day in
Baden-Württemberg Baden-Württemberg (; ), commonly shortened to BW or BaWü, is a German state () in Southwest Germany, east of the Rhine, which forms the southern part of Germany's western border with France. With more than 11.07 million inhabitants across a ...
. In the late 19th century the name Zeco was also used.Ulmann (1887), pp. 19–39 That suggests a link with Cego, which refers to the ''Blind'', as the talon is known in that game. Tapp, also called Württemberg Tarock, is a south German game that is not a member of the true Tarock family but may have originated as an attempt to play a form of three-handed Tarock with a standard 36-card,
German-suited pack German-suited playing cards are a very common style of traditional playing card used in many parts of Central Europe characterised by 32- or 36-card packs with the suits of Acorns (''Eichel'' or ''Kreuz''), Leaves (''Grün'', ''Blatt'', ''Laub ...
.


History

Tapp Tarock is recorded as early as 1800 in ''
Amor und Psyche ''Amor und Psyche'' is an opera (''singspiel'') in four acts composed by Ludwig Abeille to a German ''libretto'' by Franz Carl Hiemer (1768–1822). Based on the story of Cupid and Psyche, the opera premiered on January 18, 1800, at the Hoftheate ...
'', an opera by
Ludwig Abeille Johann Christian Ludwig (Louis) Abeille (20 February 1761 in Bayreuth – 2 March 1838 in Stuttgart) was a German pianist, organist, conductor, music teacher and composer. Life His father was baronial valet and his mother was Christine Louise ...
, where the character Jupiter refers to ''Tarocktappen''. It is also mentioned in 1806 in another opera (as ''Tarocktappen'') and in an anthology of letters (as ''Taroktappen''), both published in Vienna. The first description of its rules, however, appears in ''Theoretisch-praktische Anweisung zur gründlichen Erlernung des beliebten Tarok-Tappen Spiels'', published in Vienna in 1821. Tapp Tarock is probably the oldest tarock variant in which four basic features of tarock are found together: * the shortening of the 78-card tarot deck to the current 54 cards * the conversion from Italian suits to French suits * the conversion of The Fool or ''Sküs'' (Excuse) to simply being the 22nd and highest trump * the bonus of winning the final trick with trump 1 (''Pagat Ultimo'') The conversion of the Sküs was completed, according to the tarot expert
Michael Dummett Sir Michael Anthony Eardley Dummett (27 June 1925 – 27 December 2011) was an English academic described as "among the most significant British philosophers of the last century and a leading campaigner for racial tolerance and equality." He wa ...
, in Austria. In
Troggu Troggu is a member of the tarot family of card games. Synonyms for the game's name are: Trogga, Tappu and Tappä. It is played in the area of Visp, Switzerland, in Upper Wallis, especially in St. Niklaus and Grächen. After Troccas, it is the ...
, the older Swiss tarot game, the Fool can function as the highest trump or as the excuse. The introduction of the ''Pagat Ultimo'', according to card game historian John McLeod, is believed to have come from the ancient Italian game of
Trappola Trappola is an early 16th-century Venetian trick-taking card game which spread to most parts of Central Europe and survived, in various forms and under various names like Trapulka, Bulka and Hundertspiel until perhaps the middle of the 20th centu ...
, which was widely played in Austria as the variant Hundertspiel. The original 1821 rules only had 3 positive bids: ''Tapper'', ''Dreier'' and ''Solo''. ''Tapper'' was the lowest bid – announced by saying "I'll tap" (''ich tappe'') or just tapping on the table – and originally entitled the declarer to exchange with all six cards of the talon and count the discards to his total at the end. By the time the rules had been printed, a ''Tapper'' was usually not played out; the declarer simply received the game points for it and the deal passed to the next player in turn. By 1838, Tapp Tarock had become sufficiently popular in south Germany that ''Tap-Taroc'' packs were being advertised by C. Diehl of Darmstadt. Likewise in 1872, ''Tap-Tarock'' cards were being sold in Karlsruhe alongside Tarock,
Whist Whist is a classic English trick-taking card game which was widely played in the 18th and 19th centuries. Although the rules are simple, there is scope for strategic play. History Whist is a descendant of the 16th-century game of ''trump'' ...
and
Piquet Piquet (; ) is an early 16th-century plain-trick card game for two players that became France's national game. David Parlett calls it a "classic game of relatively great antiquity... still one of the most skill-rewarding card games for two" but ...
packs.Gehres, C.B. (1872). "Extrafeine Spielkarten" i
''Karlsruhe Tageblatt''
8 June 1872. p. 1278.
Dummett believed that the game continued to be played in Germany until the end of the 19th century and certainly in continued to be recorded in German and Austria compendia throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. After the
Second World War World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great powers—forming two opposin ...
, more complicated variants such as
Illustrated Tarock Illustrated Tarock (german: Illustriertes Tarock) or Illustrated Dreiertarock is an Austrian card game that has been described as the "queen" of all three-handed Tarock games played with the 54-card pack. It was thought by Mayr and Sedlaczek to ...
were developed and, today,
Dreiertarock Dreiertarock is a 3-handed card game of the Austrian Tarock family. Although less popular than it once was, it is still played in Austria, especially in Carinthia, and in neighboring Slovenia. In 2013, it was one of five variants of Tarock game c ...
is its tournament equivalent. Tapp Tarock may have experienced a brief vogue in Switzerland for, by 1841, 54-card packs for ''Tap-Taroc'' were being produced by F.G. Halbmeyer of
Aarau Aarau (, ) is a List of towns in Switzerland, town, a Municipalities of Switzerland, municipality, and the capital of the northern Swiss Cantons of Switzerland, canton of Aargau. The List of towns in Switzerland, town is also the capital of the dis ...
, alongside 78-card packs for
Gross Taroc Grosstarock (german: 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 List of states in the Holy Roman Empire, German states around 1720 but spre ...
.


Cards

The game is played with the 54-card French suited
Industrie und Glück ''Industrie und Glück'' (Early Modern German for "Diligence and Fortune") is a pattern of French suited playing cards used to play tarock. The name originates from an inscription found on the second trump card. This deck was developed during t ...
deck. It includes 22 trumps numbered in Roman numerals with the exception of the highest, the ''Sküs''. The second highest trump, the XXI, is known as the ''Mond'' while the lowest trump, I, is called the ''Pagat''. The ''Sküs'', ''Mond'', and ''Pagat'' are together known as the ''
Trull Trull is a village, electoral ward and civil parish in Somerset, England, situated near Taunton. The parish which includes Dipford has a population of 2,288. History The name Trull is thought to derive from the word ''Trendle'' meaning circl ...
'' or 'honours' and are worth 5 points each. Other trumps are worth only 1 point. The 32 plain suit cards consist of four courts: king, queen, knight and jack, along with four pip cards. The cards rank as follows: *In black suits: king, queen, knight and jack 10, 9, 8 and 7 *In red suits: king, queen, knight and jack, 1, 2, 3 and 4. Kings are worth 5 points, queens 4, knights 3, jacks 2, and the pips 1. Like score counting in other tarot games, 2 points are subtracted from each trick taken. There are 70 card points in a round so to win at least 36 points are needed. Other than card points there are bonus points as described below.


Rules

The following rules for modern Tapp Tarock are based on Mayr and Sedlaczek (2001):


Preliminaries

The seating order and first dealer may be determined by lot. Dealing and play are anticlockwise.


Dealing

The dealer shuffles, offer the cards to his left for cutting. He places the top six cards face down to the table as the
talon Talon or talons may refer to: Science and technology * Talon (anatomy), the claw of a bird of prey * Brodifacoum, a rodenticide, also known as the brand Talon * TALON (database), a database maintained by the US Air Force * Talon, an anti-vehicle- ...
in two crosswise packets of three before dealing 16 cards to each player, anticlockwise, in packets of four and beginning with forehand (to his right). If the cutter 'knocks' the dealer deals each player a packet of sixteen cards in one go.


Bidding

Forehand now opens the bidding (''tappen'') which rotates anticlockwise. There are four legal positive bids which, in ascending order, are: ''Dreier'' ("Three-er"), ''Unterer'' ("Lower"), ''Oberer'' ("Upper") and ''Solo''. Forehand announces "pass" (''ich passe'') or "Dreier!" (''ich spiele einen Dreier''). Bidding must begin with a ''Dreier'' and subsequent players must pass or overcall with the next higher bid, unless a player thinks he has a strong enough hand to bid a ''Solo'' in which case he may bid "Solo" at the first opportunity when it is his turn. A player whose bid has been overcalled by a later player may, when his turn comes around again, "hold" (''ich halte'') it, i.e. announce the intention to play the same contract. Once a player has passed, he may not re-enter the bidding. The highest bidder becomes the declarer noting that, if the highest bid is held, positional priority applies and the one who held becomes the declarer. In a ''Dreier, Unterer'' and ''Oberer'', the declarer exposes both halves of the talon and may pick up either half. He then discards three cards which count to his tricks at the end. His discards may not include Kings or Trulls. He may only discard Tarocks if he has no option and must show them to the two defenders. The unused half of the talon is set aside face down again, counting towards the defenders score at the end of the deal. Parlett (2008) notes that the terms ''Dreier, Unterer'' and ''Oberer'' originally denoted which half of the talon the declarer could use: in a ''Dreier'' he could choose either; in an ''Unterer'' he had to take the lower three cards and in an ''Oberer'' he had to pick up the upper three cards. In the last two cases, the unused talon half went to the defenders, unseen until play ended. This is verified by Unger (1923).Unger (1923), pp.8–9. Today there is no difference in the procedure - the declarer may choose either packet - however, the game value is different in each case. Dummett (1980) notes that the older procedure was listed in the Piatnik leaflet on the rules of the game, but that it differed from the other descriptions he had come across. Alscher (2003) includes it as a variation which may be used to make the ''Unterer'' and ''Oberer'' contracts more difficult. Bernhard Krüpl also records this variant.''Tarockania''
at web.archive.org. Retrieved 19 September 2020.
In a ''Solo'', the declarer plays without the aid of the talon, which is set aside and counts towards to the defenders at the end of the deal. For the game values of the different contracts see
below Below may refer to: *Earth *Ground (disambiguation) *Soil *Floor *Bottom (disambiguation) Bottom may refer to: Anatomy and sex * Bottom (BDSM), the partner in a BDSM who takes the passive, receiving, or obedient role, to that of the top or ...
.


Announcements

The declarer may now may either of two announcements before play begins. Announcements pose greater risk because the defenders gain prior information but awards more bonus points if the declarer succeeds. The possible announcements are: * ''Pagat Ultimo''. The declarer undertakes to win the last trick with the '' Pagat'' (Trump I). This earns 8 bonus points if successful. If the declarer fails, each defender scores 8 bonus points. * ''Valat''. The declarer undertakes to win every trick as per a "slam" in French tarot. Value: 24 points.


Game Play

Play is counterclockwise starting with the declarer. Each player must follow suit. If void of that suit, a trump must be played. If void of that suit and trumps, any card can be played but will not win the trick.


Scoring


Card points

Card points are totalled in the normal way for Tarock games i.e. the cards won are grouped in threes. Each packet of three cards is totted up and 2 card points subtracted. The totals are added to work out the score. A player must score at least 35 points + 2 ''Blatt'' to win i.e. 35 and 2/3, which is then rounded up to 36. See scoring in Königrufen.


Game values and bonuses

The game values and bonus points are as follows:


Related games

There are many variants which are developments or elaborations of Tapp Tarock, the most common today being
Dreiertarock Dreiertarock is a 3-handed card game of the Austrian Tarock family. Although less popular than it once was, it is still played in Austria, especially in Carinthia, and in neighboring Slovenia. In 2013, it was one of five variants of Tarock game c ...
and
Illustrated Tarock Illustrated Tarock (german: Illustriertes Tarock) or Illustrated Dreiertarock is an Austrian card game that has been described as the "queen" of all three-handed Tarock games played with the 54-card pack. It was thought by Mayr and Sedlaczek to ...
which have more complex rules in bidding and contracts.


Footnotes


References


Bibliography

* _ (1821)
''Theoretisch-praktische Anweisung zur gründlichen Erlernung des beliebten des Tarok-Tappen Spiels''
Carl Haas, Vienna and Prague. * Abeille, Ludwig (1800). ''Amor und Psyche''. A mythological caricature in 2 acts. * Alscher, Hans-Joachim (2003). "Tapp-Tarock" in ''Tarock: mein einziges Vergnügen'' ed. by Alscher. Obersteirische Druck- und Verlagsges., Leoben. * * Furr, Jerry Neill. "Illustrated Tapp" in ''Tarocchi: An introduction to the many games played with tarot cards.'' Philebus (2009). * Kastner, Hugo and Gerald Kador Folkvord. ''Die große Humboldt-Enzyklopädie der Kartenspiele''. Baden-Baden: Humboldt (2005). * Mayr, Wolfgang and
Robert Sedlaczek Robert Sedlaczek (born 1952) is an Austrian journalist, Germanist and non-fiction author.Das Große Tarock-Buch
'. Vienna: Zsolnay (2001). * * Perinet, Joachim (1806). ''Die neue Alzeste'', a caricature opera in knittel (doggerel) rhyme, in three parts. Wallishausser, Vienna. * Richter, Joseph I. (1806). ''Briefe eines Eipeldauers an seinen Herrn Vetter in Kakran'', Second Letter, Volume 7, Rehm'schen Buchhandlung, Vienna, p.19. * Ulmann, S (1887). ''Illustrirtes Wiener Tarockbuch''. Vienna, Pest, Leipzig: Hartleben. * Unger, Franz (1923). ''Kleines Lehrbuch des Tarockspiels''. Vienna: Piatnik.


External links



with rules of Tapp Tarock (Piatnik variant) {{Tarot and Tarock card games Tarock card games Three-player card games Austrian card games 18th-century card games