|
Skat is mostly played in the north and west of Germany, where the modern
preference is for French-suited cards (clubs, spades, hearts, diamonds) of
traditional German design, with K for König, D for Dame, and B for
Bube. The traditional black-red suit distinctions are retained, but those
illustrated below are in four colours, a fairly recent innovation promoted
by the originators of "Synchron" cards for playing duplicate Skat. Green for
spades corresponds to the colour of the equivalent German suit of leaves,
yellow for diamonds to that of the equivalent German suit of bells, with
red for hearts being common to both.

Many German players still prefer the traditional German pack with suits of
acorns (Eicheln), leaves (Laub or Grün), hearts (Herz or Rot), and bells,
specifically hawk-bells (Schellen). The court cards are K for König,
O for Obermann (Over or senior officer), and U for Unter (Under or junior
officer). There are several different regional patterns of German-suited
cards, most of which include a Daus (Deuce) instead of an Ace.
Illustrated below are the principal cards of one of several regional patterns.
(Although the apparent Ace of acorns bears the index A for As, the fact that
it depicts two acorns in each half shows that it is historically a Deuce.)

Attempts have been made to combine the two suit systems so that players
from different regions competing in national tournaments could hold their
cards in such a way as to reveal whichever system they were more comfortable
with. Two examples of so-called "Congress Cards" are shown below. Those with
a diagonal division were produced by C L Wüst of Frankfurt-am-Main around
1887. On the right are Altenburger Kongreßkarte from about 1927. Such
cards have never proved popular, and it remains to be seen whether the
four-colour suit reconciliation attempt will survive.



|