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LOSING LODAMA Gargantuan ancestor of Hearts |
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| © 2012 by David Parlett | ||
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Losing Lodam (variously spelt) is an old English forerunner of the penalty-trick family of card games nowadays represented by Hearts. It is first recorded at the end of the 16th century and must have been current throughout the 17th, though its surprising and unfortunate absence from Cotton's Compleat Gamester suggests that it may have passed its heyday by 1674. Cotton's omission, coupled with the plethora of undetailed passing references to it, would have left the game tantalisingly unrecoverable were it not for the recent discovery and publication of an adequate account in Francis Willughby's Book of Games, c.1670, on which the description below is of necessity entirely based. Penalty-trick games - which is what I call those in which you aim to avoid winning tricks containing penalty cards - probably go back to the 15th century, though early examples are not clearly identifiable. A reference to Perde o Vinci in the Steele document of 1450-8 recalls modern Italian Perdivinci, a negative variety of Tressette; but its literal meaning "win-or-lose" could denote a betting game as elementary as heads and tails. The nearest Cardano gets to a negative game is a Lowball version of Primiera (Primero). More promising is an entry in Rabelais' list of Gargantuan games for Coquimbert, qui gaigne perd - "the winner loses" - a telling title undoubtedly counterparted by the Spanish Gana Pierde often recorded in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. (Modern French card-game books still include Qui perd gagne as a children's trick-avoidance game without frills or complications.) Another penalty-trick game appearing at about the same time is Reversis, which may have been of Italian origin. An English contemporary and probable equivalent of Coquimbert is Lodam, or Losing Lodam, mentioned in (for instance) Taylor's Motto of 1621. Its affiliations are apparent both from Cotgrave's French-English dictionary of 1611, where Coquimbert is identified as a card game called "loosing-lodam", and from Urquhart's translation of Rabelais, where it is rendered "at losing, load him". The latter may suggest the practice of throwing penalty cards on a trick being won by somebody else. But then, again, it may not. References to Lodam cited by the Oxford English Dictionary start with that of 1591 (below). They continue with a line from a satirical tract entitled The True History of Pope Joan and dated to 1599; but according to Taylor, p.306, quoting Samuel Weller Singer's Researches into the History of Playing Cards (1816), the tract was first printed in 1559. Taylor gives this longer extract: A certain prince of ours did compare them [the Jesuits] unto a game at cardes, in which the gamesters like Loadam playe, and bring them for the last that are of most price, to beat down the adverse party... Other OED references include the following. (Note the variety of spellings.) At primero, at trump... and at lodam. |
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LOSING LODAM
2. Description by David Parlett based on Willughby's Book of Plaies (c.1665) |
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LOSING LODAM
3. Notes |
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1. As Willughby says, "Alwaies when some
are out the rest have more cards dealt them". This means the number dealt
to each may increase to 20 or more when only two remain, which seems
somewhat inconvenient. (Return 1.)
2. Willughby does not state whether the Ten ranks between Ace and King or between Jack and Nine, but the order in which he specifies their values is Ace, Ten, King, etc., and it makes more sense for the Ten to rank high in view of the trading rule. (Return 2.) 3. Willughby seems to state that even a player who has lost all his lives may challenge, but does not specify how the challenger is penalised if mistaken. (Return 3.) 4. Willughby observes, reasonably enough, that the loader you want to get rid of will be unguarded, but does not make a rule of it. Conceivably, a situation might arise where you might wish to lose a guarded loader. (Return 4.) |
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