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Tapp Tarock

Tapp Tarock (German: Tapp-Tarock), also called Viennese Tappen (German: Wiener Tappen), Tappen or Tapper, is a three-player tarot card game which traditionally uses the 54-card Industrie und Glück deck. Before the Anschluss (1938), it was the preferred card game of Viennese coffee houses, for example, the Literatencafés and Café Central. 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 in the early 19th century,[2] 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.[3][4] The oldest description of the actual rules is dated to 1821.[5] Tapp Tarock is considered a good entry level game before players attempt more complex Tarock forms like Cego, Illustrated Tarock or Königrufen.[6]

Tapp Tarock
A trick-taking game of the Tarot game family.
OriginAustria
TypeTrick-taking
Players3
SkillsTactics, Strategy
Cards54
DeckTarot; traditionally, Industrie und Glück
Rank (high→low)Trumps: Sküs, XXI-I
K Q C J 10 9 8 7
K Q C J 1 2 3 4 [1]
PlayAnti-clockwise
Playing time20 min/deal
ChanceModerate
Related games
Dreierles • Dreiertarock • Illustrated Tarock • Point Tarock

Name edit

Tapp is the name of the face-down stack of cards in the middle of the table – in other games known as the talon or stock. The names of other card games are also derived from it, including Tappu or Tappä for the Swiss Tarock variant of Troggu, as well as the Austrian Stubaital valley game of Dobbm 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.[7] 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,[8] Dreierl[5] or Dreierles, names which are prevalent to this day in Baden-Württemberg.[7] In the late 19th century the name Zeco was also used.[9] 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.

History edit

Tapp Tarock is recorded as early as 1800 in Amor und Psyche, an opera by Ludwig Abeille, where the character Jupiter refers to Tarocktappen.[4] It is also mentioned in 1806 in another opera (as Tarocktappen)[3] and in an anthology of letters (as Taroktappen),[10] 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.[11][12]

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, in Austria.[13] In Troggu, 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, 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. However, a 1920 source suggests that the Tapper bid may have lingered on into the early 20th century, although by then "it was hardly ever played".[14]

By 1838, Tapp Tarock had become sufficiently popular in south Germany that Tap-Taroc packs were being advertised by C. Diehl of Darmstadt.[15] Likewise in 1872, Tap-Tarock cards were being sold in Karlsruhe alongside Tarock, Whist and Piquet packs.[16] 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, more complicated variants such as Illustrated Tarock were developed and, today, Dreiertarock 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, alongside 78-card packs for Gross Taroc.[17]

Cards edit

The game is played with the 54-card Industrie und Glück Tarot pack. This includes 22 trumps numbered with Roman numerals except for the highest trump, the Sküs (Fool).[a] The second highest trump, the XXI, is called the Mond, while the lowest trump I, is the Pagat. The Sküs, Mond, and Pagat are together known as the Trull or honours and are worth 5 points each. The other trumps are worth 1 point each.

Each of the four plain suits comprises four courtsking, queen, cavalier and jack – and four pip cards. They rank as follows:

The kings are worth 5 points, queens 4, knights 3, jacks 2, and pip cards 1.

Rules edit

The following rules for modern Tapp Tarock are based on Mayr and Sedlaczek (2001):[18]

Preliminaries edit

Seating and first dealer may be determined by lot. Deal and play are anticlockwise.

Dealing edit

The dealer shuffles and offers the cards to the left for cutting. After the cut, the dealer places the top six cards face down on the table in two crosswise packets of three; this is the talon. Next, the dealer distributes 16 cards to each player, anticlockwise, in packets of four and beginning with forehand (to the right). If the cutter 'knocks', the dealer deals each player sixteen cards in one packet.

Bidding edit

Forehand opens the bidding which rotates anticlockwise. There are four legal positive bids which, in ascending order, are:

  • Dreier ("Three-er")
  • Unterer ("Lower")
  • Oberer ("Upper")
  • Solo.

Forehand announces "pass" (ich passe) or "Dreier!" (ich spiele einen Dreier).[b] If forehand passes, subsequent players have the same options. Once a Dreier is bid, a later player must pass or overcall with the next higher bid, except that "Solo" may be bid at the first opportunity when it is a player's turn. A player whose has been overcalled may, when the turn rotates around again, may "hold" (halte ich) it, i.e. announce an intention to take over the higher contract from the later bidder. A player who has passed may not re-enter the bidding. The highest bidder becomes the declarer, noting that, if the highest bid was held, the holder is the declarer.[c]

In a Dreier, Unterer and Oberer, the declarer exposes both talon halves and may pick up either half before discarding three cards; these count to the declarer at the end. The discards may not include kings or Trull cards. Tarocks may only be discarded if the declarer has no option; in which case they must be shown to the defenders. The unused half of the talon is set aside, face down, and counts towards the defenders score at the end.[d]

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.

The game values of the different contracts are given below.

Announcements edit

The declarer may make either of two announcements before play begins. These increase risk because the defenders gain information, but they score 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). Value: 8 points.
  • Valat. The declarer undertakes to win every trick. Value: 24 points.

Play edit

Play is anticlockwise starting with forehand. Players must follow suit if able; otherwise must play a trump. Lacking both, the player may discard any card.

Scoring edit

Card points edit

The normal Tarock scoring scheme is used i.e. the cards taken in tricks (including any talon cards) are grouped in packets of three. If one or two are left over they should be low cards (Blatt) i.e. ie. pip cards or ordinary (non-Trull) Tarocks and are worth 13 point each. Each packet is scored and 2 card points deducted. The packet totals are added together to give the player(s) overall score. The declarer must score at least 35 23 = 36 points (rounded up) to win the game.

The Pagat Ultimo bonus is awarded as per the table to whoever takes it if it is played to the last trick. An announced Pagat Ultimo is only won if achieved; if the declarer loses it at any point, the defenders each score the bonus.

Game values and bonuses edit

The game values and bonus points are as follows:

Game values and bonuses in Tapp Tarock
Contracts Points Bonus types Meaning Unannounced Announced
Dreier 3 Köpfe ("heads") Two honours[e] in one's opening hand 1
Unterer 4 Tarock Trull All 3 honours[e] in one's opening hand 3
Oberer 5 Royal Trull All four Kings in one's opening hand 3
Solo 8 Pagat Ultimo Winning the last trick with the Pagat 4 8
Valat 12 Pagat Ultimo in Solo ditto in a Solo contract 8 16
Valat announced 24

The game value or bonus is paid by each defender to the declarer if the latter won it. Otherwise the declarer pays it to each defender.

Related games edit

There are many variants which are developments or elaborations of Tapp Tarock, the most common today being Dreiertarock and Illustrated Tarock which have more complex rules in bidding and contracts.

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Sküs is a corruption of Excuse, the French name for this card.
  2. ^ Passing is known as tappen after the lowest bid in the original game.
  3. ^ The modern bidding procedure is a multi-round one with 'delayed hold', in which bidding and holding rotate in strict order. Originally, bidding was a single round process with 'immediate hold'.
  4. ^ 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).[19] who goes on to state that "in some circles" the modern procedure is used. Today there is no difference in the procedure - the declarer may choose either packet - however, the game value is different in each case.[20] 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.[21] Alscher (2003) includes it as a variation which may be used to make the Unterer and Oberer contracts more difficult.[22] Bernhard Krüpl also records this variant.[23]
  5. ^ a b The 'honours' are the Sküs, Pagat and Tarock 21.

References edit

  1. ^ Dummett, The Game of Tarot, pp. 440r
  2. ^ Kastner and Folkvord (2005)
  3. ^ a b Perinet (1806), p. 77.
  4. ^ a b Abeille (1800), p. 9.
  5. ^ a b Mayr and Sedlaczek (2001), pp. 105–110
  6. ^ Furr (2009), pp. 133-138.
  7. ^ a b Tarok' at portal.dnb.de. Retrieved 1 March 2021.
  8. ^ Sanders, Prof. Dr. Daniel (1885). Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache. Berlin: Abenheim. p. 551.
  9. ^ Ulmann (1887), pp. 19–39
  10. ^ Richter (1806), p. 19.
  11. ^ Dummett (1980), p. 439.
  12. ^ _ (1821).
  13. ^ Dummett (1980).
  14. ^ Cato (c. 1920), p. 21.
  15. ^ Allgemeine Zeitung München (1838), p. 2402.
  16. ^ Gehres, C.B. (1872). "Extrafeine Spielkarten" in Karlsruhe Tageblatt, 8 June 1872. p. 1278.
  17. ^ Der Schweizer Bote (1841), p. 504.
  18. ^ Mayr & Sedlaczek (2001). pp. 109–110.
  19. ^ Unger (1923), pp.8–9.
  20. ^ Parlett (2008), p. 369.
  21. ^ Dummett (1980), p. 455.
  22. ^ Alscher (2003), p. 169.
  23. ^ at web.archive.org. Retrieved 19 September 2020.

Bibliography edit

  • _ (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. ISBN 978-38546-0209-5
  • Cato, Otto (c. 1920). Tarok, Whist, Bridge und andere Kartenspiele. Part 2. Ravensburg: Otto Maier.
  • Dummett, Michael (1980). The Game of Tarot. London: Duckworths. ISBN 0-7156-1014-7.
  • 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). ISBN 978-3-89994-058-9
  • Mayr, Wolfgang and Robert Sedlaczek. Das Große Tarock-Buch. Vienna: Zsolnay (2001). ISBN 3-85223-462-X
  • Parlett, David (2008). The Penguin book of card games. London: Penguin. ISBN 978-0-141-03787-5.
  • 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 edit

  • Tapp Tarock rules from homer
  • Tarockvarianten with rules of Tapp Tarock (Piatnik variant)

tapp, tarock, german, tapp, tarock, also, called, viennese, tappen, german, wiener, tappen, tappen, tapper, three, player, tarot, card, game, which, traditionally, uses, card, industrie, glück, deck, before, anschluss, 1938, preferred, card, game, viennese, co. Tapp Tarock German Tapp Tarock also called Viennese Tappen German Wiener Tappen Tappen or Tapper is a three player tarot card game which traditionally uses the 54 card Industrie und Gluck deck Before the Anschluss 1938 it was the preferred card game of Viennese coffee houses for example the Literatencafes and Cafe Central 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 in the early 19th century 2 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 3 4 The oldest description of the actual rules is dated to 1821 5 Tapp Tarock is considered a good entry level game before players attempt more complex Tarock forms like Cego Illustrated Tarock or Konigrufen 6 Tapp TarockA trick taking game of the Tarot game family OriginAustriaTypeTrick takingPlayers3SkillsTactics StrategyCards54DeckTarot traditionally Industrie und GluckRank high low Trumps Skus XXI I K Q C J 10 9 8 7 K Q C J 1 2 3 4 1 PlayAnti clockwisePlaying time20 min dealChanceModerateRelated gamesDreierles Dreiertarock Illustrated Tarock Point Tarock Contents 1 Name 2 History 3 Cards 4 Rules 4 1 Preliminaries 4 2 Dealing 4 3 Bidding 4 4 Announcements 4 5 Play 4 6 Scoring 4 6 1 Card points 4 6 2 Game values and bonuses 5 Related games 6 Footnotes 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksName editTapp is the name of the face down stack of cards in the middle of the table in other games known as the talon or stock The names of other card games are also derived from it including Tappu or Tappa for the Swiss Tarock variant of Troggu as well as the Austrian Stubaital valley game of Dobbm 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 Zwolfertarock and a variant with 40 cards was Einfaches Tarock 7 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 8 Dreierl 5 or Dreierles names which are prevalent to this day in Baden Wurttemberg 7 In the late 19th century the name Zeco was also used 9 That suggests a link with Cego which refers to the Blind as the talon is known in that game Tapp also called Wurttemberg 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 History editTapp Tarock is recorded as early as 1800 in Amor und Psyche an opera by Ludwig Abeille where the character Jupiter refers to Tarocktappen 4 It is also mentioned in 1806 in another opera as Tarocktappen 3 and in an anthology of letters as Taroktappen 10 both published in Vienna The first description of its rules however appears in Theoretisch praktische Anweisung zur grundlichen Erlernung des beliebten Tarok Tappen Spiels published in Vienna in 1821 11 12 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 Skus 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 Skus was completed according to the tarot expert Michael Dummett in Austria 13 In Troggu 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 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 However a 1920 source suggests that the Tapper bid may have lingered on into the early 20th century although by then it was hardly ever played 14 By 1838 Tapp Tarock had become sufficiently popular in south Germany that Tap Taroc packs were being advertised by C Diehl of Darmstadt 15 Likewise in 1872 Tap Tarock cards were being sold in Karlsruhe alongside Tarock Whist and Piquet packs 16 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 more complicated variants such as Illustrated Tarock were developed and today Dreiertarock 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 alongside 78 card packs for Gross Taroc 17 Cards editThe game is played with the 54 card Industrie und Gluck Tarot pack This includes 22 trumps numbered with Roman numerals except for the highest trump the Skus Fool a The second highest trump the XXI is called the Mond while the lowest trump I is the Pagat The Skus Mond and Pagat are together known as the Trull or honours and are worth 5 points each The other trumps are worth 1 point each Each of the four plain suits comprises four courts king queen cavalier and jack and four pip cards They rank as follows Black suits K gt Q gt C gt J gt 10 gt 9 gt 8 gt 7 Red suits K gt Q gt C gt J gt 1 gt 2 gt 3 gt 4The kings are worth 5 points queens 4 knights 3 jacks 2 and pip cards 1 Rules editThe following rules for modern Tapp Tarock are based on Mayr and Sedlaczek 2001 18 Preliminaries edit Seating and first dealer may be determined by lot Deal and play are anticlockwise Dealing edit The dealer shuffles and offers the cards to the left for cutting After the cut the dealer places the top six cards face down on the table in two crosswise packets of three this is the talon Next the dealer distributes 16 cards to each player anticlockwise in packets of four and beginning with forehand to the right If the cutter knocks the dealer deals each player sixteen cards in one packet Bidding edit Forehand opens the bidding which rotates anticlockwise There are four legal positive bids which in ascending order are Dreier Three er Unterer Lower Oberer Upper Solo Forehand announces pass ich passe or Dreier ich spiele einen Dreier b If forehand passes subsequent players have the same options Once a Dreier is bid a later player must pass or overcall with the next higher bid except that Solo may be bid at the first opportunity when it is a player s turn A player whose has been overcalled may when the turn rotates around again may hold halte ich it i e announce an intention to take over the higher contract from the later bidder A player who has passed may not re enter the bidding The highest bidder becomes the declarer noting that if the highest bid was held the holder is the declarer c In a Dreier Unterer and Oberer the declarer exposes both talon halves and may pick up either half before discarding three cards these count to the declarer at the end The discards may not include kings or Trull cards Tarocks may only be discarded if the declarer has no option in which case they must be shown to the defenders The unused half of the talon is set aside face down and counts towards the defenders score at the end d 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 The game values of the different contracts are given below Announcements edit The declarer may make either of two announcements before play begins These increase risk because the defenders gain information but they score 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 Value 8 points Valat The declarer undertakes to win every trick Value 24 points Play edit Play is anticlockwise starting with forehand Players must follow suit if able otherwise must play a trump Lacking both the player may discard any card Scoring edit Card points edit The normal Tarock scoring scheme is used i e the cards taken in tricks including any talon cards are grouped in packets of three If one or two are left over they should be low cards Blatt i e ie pip cards or ordinary non Trull Tarocks and are worth 1 3 point each Each packet is scored and 2 card points deducted The packet totals are added together to give the player s overall score The declarer must score at least 35 2 3 36 points rounded up to win the game The Pagat Ultimo bonus is awarded as per the table to whoever takes it if it is played to the last trick An announced Pagat Ultimo is only won if achieved if the declarer loses it at any point the defenders each score the bonus Game values and bonuses edit The game values and bonus points are as follows Game values and bonuses in Tapp TarockContracts Points Bonus types Meaning Unannounced AnnouncedDreier 3 Kopfe heads Two honours e in one s opening hand 1 Unterer 4 Tarock Trull All 3 honours e in one s opening hand 3 Oberer 5 Royal Trull All four Kings in one s opening hand 3 Solo 8 Pagat Ultimo Winning the last trick with the Pagat 4 8Valat 12 Pagat Ultimo in Solo ditto in a Solo contract 8 16Valat announced 24 The game value or bonus is paid by each defender to the declarer if the latter won it Otherwise the declarer pays it to each defender Related games editThere are many variants which are developments or elaborations of Tapp Tarock the most common today being Dreiertarock and Illustrated Tarock which have more complex rules in bidding and contracts Footnotes edit Skus is a corruption of Excuse the French name for this card Passing is known as tappen after the lowest bid in the original game The modern bidding procedure is a multi round one with delayed hold in which bidding and holding rotate in strict order Originally bidding was a single round process with immediate hold 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 19 who goes on to state that in some circles the modern procedure is used Today there is no difference in the procedure the declarer may choose either packet however the game value is different in each case 20 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 21 Alscher 2003 includes it as a variation which may be used to make the Unterer and Oberer contracts more difficult 22 Bernhard Krupl also records this variant 23 a b The honours are the Skus Pagat and Tarock 21 References edit Dummett The Game of Tarot pp 440r Kastner and Folkvord 2005 a b Perinet 1806 p 77 a b Abeille 1800 p 9 a b Mayr and Sedlaczek 2001 pp 105 110 Furr 2009 pp 133 138 a b Tarok at portal dnb de Retrieved 1 March 2021 Sanders Prof Dr Daniel 1885 Worterbuch der deutschen Sprache Berlin Abenheim p 551 Ulmann 1887 pp 19 39 Richter 1806 p 19 Dummett 1980 p 439 1821 Dummett 1980 Cato c 1920 p 21 Allgemeine Zeitung Munchen 1838 p 2402 Gehres C B 1872 Extrafeine Spielkarten in Karlsruhe Tageblatt 8 June 1872 p 1278 Der Schweizer Bote 1841 p 504 Mayr amp Sedlaczek 2001 pp 109 110 Unger 1923 pp 8 9 Parlett 2008 p 369 Dummett 1980 p 455 Alscher 2003 p 169 Tarockania at web archive org Retrieved 19 September 2020 Bibliography edit 1821 Theoretisch praktische Anweisung zur grundlichen 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 Vergnugen ed by Alscher Obersteirische Druck und Verlagsges Leoben ISBN 978 38546 0209 5 Cato Otto c 1920 Tarok Whist Bridge und andere Kartenspiele Part 2 Ravensburg Otto Maier Dummett Michael 1980 The Game of Tarot London Duckworths ISBN 0 7156 1014 7 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 Enzyklopadie der Kartenspiele Baden Baden Humboldt 2005 ISBN 978 3 89994 058 9 Mayr Wolfgang and Robert Sedlaczek Das Grosse Tarock Buch Vienna Zsolnay 2001 ISBN 3 85223 462 X Parlett David 2008 The Penguin book of card games London Penguin ISBN 978 0 141 03787 5 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 editTapp tarock rules from Tarockania archived Tapp tarock rules at tarocchino com archived Tapp Tarock rules from homer Tarockvarianten with rules of Tapp Tarock Piatnik variant Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tapp Tarock amp oldid 1206275486, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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