Saunigl
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Saunigl or Saunigeln was a 19th-century Austrian card game of the shedding type in which the last player left with cards was the Saunigel and risked suffering a beating by the first player out. It may be related to modern Fingerkloppe in which losers also receive a physical punishment, albeit on a lesser scale.
The world Saunigel in the Austrian dialect is recorded as early as 1784 and meant "sow hedgehog",[1][a] but was also a pejorative term for a "dirty person" as well as a card game in which the last player left holding cards in hand was called the Saunigl.[3]
The game is mentioned during the 19th century in Viennese publications but also in a Carinthian dictionary and dialect dictionary for the region south of the Enns.[4][3]
History
The game is recorded as early as 1814 in a Viennese play where a poor poet is likened to a Saunigl player, suggesting the game would have been well known at the time.[5] In Doctor Faust's Mantel (Müller 1819), Fledermaus says "We have work to do, we're playing Saunigl."[6] It is also recorded in the German translation of Jacques Offenbach's operetta Les Deux Aveugles where Jeržabek says he can play Preferance, Mariagel, Saunigl, Black Peter and Macao. Despite losing a large sum in Tarok, he ventures to play again. [7]
In 1870, Saunigeln is described alongside Schanzeln, Zwicken, Brantln, Mauschln and Schmaraggln as a popular card game in southern Germany, played with German-suited cards.[8][b]
Play
Poem
In the 1860 poem The Playing of Cards (Das Kartenspielen) by J. B. Moser, there is the following description of Saunigl:[9]
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Bei jenem Spiel, das's Kind, was kaum recht laufen kann, schon kennt, Refrain: Drum glaub ich auch etc. |
In that game – which even a child who can barely walk already knows – Refrain: I think so too, etc. |