Quarante de Roi
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| An early point-trick game | |
Four Kings - the highest clique | |
| Origin | France |
|---|---|
| Alternative names | Quarante de Roi, Vierzig vom König |
| Type | Point-trick game |
| Players | 4 (2 x 2) |
| Cards | 32 |
| Deck | French-suited, Paris pattern |
| Play | Clockwise |
| Related games | |
| Manille, Tresette | |
Quarante de Roi ("Forty for Kings") or Quarante de Rois[1] is an historical French, point-trick, card game for four players in partnerships of two. The name comes from its highest scoring combination of four Kings which is worth 40 points.
The earliest mention of Quarante de Roi was published in 1772, but its point schedule and Ace ranking suggest greater antiquity.[1] An 1850 French source includes it in a list of games played in Lorraine between 1495 and 1601, although the reference cited mentions a game called Quarante-Trois or Quarantrois.[2]
The name of a set or clique used in the game may be a corruption of glique, a word used in the Metz dialogue in a game called Dix-Croix ("Ten-Cross"). This game had the same scoring scheme for the gliques as Quarante de Roi has for the cliques and they may have been the same game under different names. According to Le Duchat, the derivation of the term glique was the German word glück ("luck").[2] Alternatively it may be derived from gleich ("same") which is the German in several card games for a set. See also Gleek.