Nodde Tudor Card Game A&S Fair A.S. 50 (2016) Mwynwen Ysginidd called Strawberry
Nodde Tudor Card Game A&S Fair A.S. 50 (2016) Mwynwen Ysginidd called Strawberry
Nodde; a card game of strategy
and luck, played during Tudor times by 2 to 4 players.
If one more person walks up to me while I am playing Cribbage with my lord
and tells me it isn’t period, I am going to scream. I know that it is just out of period and based on a period game. [Cribbage was invented in the early
1600s by Sir John Suckling, an English courtier, poet, gamester and gambler. He
was a lousy gambler and wanted an upper hand against others. He died broke. Not
that I am teaching the history of Cribbage here, the believed exact date of its
creation is the year of 1606. Cribbage of any form is 17th
century; there is no evidence for its existence prior to the 1600's.] Then I ask if you hand stitched your garb as a comparison to them telling me
about what is and is not period. I don’t tell them that because I am more
polite than that, but I would enjoy doing so. However, I do tell them playing
cards is period, so we sit here playing a game we enjoy. A love of Cribbage and
searching for a game that doesn’t require gambling drove me to research the
game of Nodde.
Use
your own judgement about whether YOU
consider Nodde as period for you, because
the earliest reference to the game in
the Oxford English Dictionary dates from 1589.[6] It
is definitely Tudor, but some feel that is post-medieval, and therefore not
period for them. However, by the SCA cutoff date, it is period.
I have some friends who are teetotaling and don’t gamble and I love
them and want to enjoy a game with them that doesn’t upset their sensibilities.
Also, as a dyslexic, I work hard to read and add and have become extremely high
functioning. Math and card games go hand and hand and help me to keep in
practice. Since math is a use it or lose skill, practice is important. Now, my lord and I play Nodde with a period
deck. I like it better because we can play a whole game inside a half hour
instead of 2 to 3 hours with cribbage.
As for my persona, Mwynwen Ysginidd (Name translates to red headed
women, Tailor), is a free Welsh woman born at the end of Henry VII’s time. She is
the wife of an Irish sailor (her mother could think no better curse to wish on
an Irish man than her daughter with her redheaded temperament). She is a brewer
and has a pub that she whiles away her days while her lord is out at sea, and
who enjoys games of chance and strategy that she learns from the patrons, who
are mostly sailors. As such, I decided my fifty year goal and project was to make
my SCA kit more period. To this end, I made a gaming set that consists of a
wooden box with a sliding lid, a deck of cards, a set of dice, & a t-totum.
I also learned more Tudor period games to play with these items. As such, I am
working of a book of games to go with this set. For all these reasons, I
researched and learned Nodde.
A knowledge of cribbage was helpful with redacting, learning, playing
and teaching this game to my Nodde partner, Fintan MacAldin (Husband). Unlike a
trick taking game, such as Tarot, and Vying style games, such as knock 31 and
modernly, Poker, it has a unique scoring system and game play that combines
many aspects together.
As today with games, the rules were taught by oral traditions. Today we
call rules that are different from the accepted set HOUSE RULES. It was the same then, and as such, there are regional differences. My primary sources for my redaction of rules were from a
book that was written by a Frenchman and published for the English. I have also
an Italian book source that has a different variant of the game. The rules are
mostly the same, only scoring from 25 and 31 in play, and hand really changes.
I have seen also where Nodde Knave has been scored for the Elderhand instead of
the dealer. I respect all variations of the game and have redacted from the
source that would best suit my Persona.
The Game of
Nodde: as Redacted By Lady Mwynwen Ysginidd Called Strawberry from Willughby, Francis,
“A Volume of Plaies”
Object: To peg (score) 31 or greater before your opponent
Equipment used to play: deck of 52 cards, Nodde board or tally board/sheet
Noddy is played with a 52 card deck (French, Italian and
English used these) A=1,2=2, piped suited cards are valued as many pips show,
Knave, Queen, King, are valued at 10 each. The board is two tracks of holes
that pegs for scoring will fit. (Though score could be kept on a tally) there
are 30 holes for scoring for each player then one more shared hole for the
winners peg. A board could have but doesn’t require to extra holes in each
track for the starting pegs to rest before scoring starts. The players always
moves the hindmost peg and counts from the foremost peg.
How to play: Two to four players.
If play is with four players then it is played as teams of two. Team players
sit alternating with opponents. Teams peg on the same track.
The Deal: Choose a dealer however one chooses one. Starting with
clockwise from the dealer one card from the top of the deck is dealt face down
at a time around till the dealer; do this 3 times, so that each play has 3
cards in hand. The dealer then turns the next top card on the deck face up.
This cards suit is the Trump suit. If Trump is a Knave then Dealer pegs 2
(scores). If a player or dealer has the knave of the Trump suit in hand they
peg 1 (this is often referred to as his Heels in modern Cribbage). This is done
first. Before any other scoring is started.
Score Hand: Then each person declares their hand points from first
player to dealers left (This is the elder
player) scoring goes clockwise all the way to dealer without showing your
cards. Points are called before pegging
them. The trump card is included in scoring of every player’shand. The trump
card counts toward you hand while scoring.
Example: fifteen 2, fifteen
4, and pair for 6. This being to sets of cards that equal 15 and one pair being
a total score of 6. Now with three cards the combination could be 6,6,9 or
10,5,5. Both will equal that point call. If the trump card is a 3 this would be
of no point help to either player. Whereas a face card would be a 10 and give a
player who has 10,5,5 another 10. For another fifteen, 4 making the total score
pegged 10.
Play: Elder hand plays first by placing a card to table face up;
they announce the value of that card. The next player to the left plays a card
face up next to that card and announces the combined total of their card with
the previously played card. If at any time pairs three of a kind or four of a
kind, Runs, Flushes of three or more cards, combinations that equal 15, 25 or
31. Then points are pegged for that player who placed last card that cause
such. Runs can be built on as can flushes making the new point value of said collection
the score that shall be pegged for the player.
Running value of played cards are not to
exceed 31 of the player busts and calls ‘GO” to announce they can’t go, Play
proceeds to the next player in turn till 31 is reached or last payer able to
pay a playable card with in the 31 value has gone. That player pegs 1 for “GO” (this
is called the latter hand) or the player who reached “31” pegs 2. The rounded
ended, cards are then shuffled and passed to the next in line to deal.
Scoring, Pegging, Points:
Nodde Knave as Trump =
2
Trump Nodde Knave in hand =
1
2 or more cards totaling 15 =
2
3 or more cards totaling 25 =
4 (rule is regional I like it)
4 or more cards totaling 31 =
2
Pair =
2
Pair Royal =
6
Double Pair Royal =
12
Run of 3 =
2
Run of 4 =
4
Run of 5 = 6
15 in hand or play =
2
(25 in hand or play =
1 point per card) Regional
(31 in hand =
4) Regional
31 in play =
2
Card Values Pipped cards = 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10
Face
cards Knave = 10, Queen = 10, King = 10
Questions or indeterminable
and variations and creative interpretation:
The Ace always being low, and King high. Ace is always 1 And
may not be used to do wrap arounds as in
a run of A,K,Q.
Game can be adapted to use different decks as from period as
long as you can declare a Knave, I suggest removing the Trumps from a Tarot
deck to use it.
Whether the deck is reshuffled after each deal. Is never
stated in any directions I can find that a game of two players can get 7 fair
hands without shuffling the deck each deal. This does however change the Odds
on hands the chances of getting Nave Nodde decrease. But game play does move
faster if you skip reshuffling each set.
Who scores the 2 points on the Knave Nodde. Some score it to
the Elder Player some call it for the dealer it seems to be a reginal thing.
The scoring of 25 is a regional variation of Italy as far as
I can tell and players who learned to play from their rules use this variation
as well as 31 made in hand.
Who Deals. Cutting the deck were low or high card deals can
be done, as can the persons who deck it is can deal, whoever deal first it then
passes to the left in turn.
Score is pegged by the players themselves on the board by
moving the rear most peg the number of holes past the hole the forward most peg
is currently in.
Strategy: try to guess what cards can make up the players
score, so that you can play cards that would not help them, but might help you,
and also that can force them to play cards that could help you in scoring
points.
One of the few surviving sources for the
rules of Noddy of from Willughby, Francis, A Volume of Plaies [7]
“at
Nodde they play with all the cards. They have 3 cards dealt them one by one,
and then the uppermost of the deck is turned with face up. 31 is up, to make up
which they reckon a pare, 2; a perryall, 6; a double perryall, 12:everie
fifteene, 2 (as a five and a ten, a six and a nine, a 7 &n eight, a trea,
foure & eight, & c.) In some places they reckon every twentiefive, 2(as
2 tens and a five, 3 eights & an ace, &c.); a sequens is 3, two; a
sequens of foure, foure: a sequence of five, 5 &c. (a sequens is 3 cards in
arithmeticall progression, as Knave, Queen & King; seven, eight, & nine
&c.); flush of 3, three; flush of 4, foure: flush of 5, five &c. Flush
of 3 is three of the same sute, flush of 4, four of the same suite &c.;
Nodde, turned up, 2; in ones hand, 1. Nodde is the Knave, which if it bee of
the same suite that is turned up is reckoned but 1, but when it is turned up is
2.
It is written in Middle English which
is mostly readable my me because the spelling is phonetic and as a dyslexic
this is how I read so reading it was easy, and the copy I have is an addition
with translation and glossary of obsolete words. So I can see the original
compare it with what the editor thinks it is and come to my own conclusions.
Glossary of terms:
Trump Suit- the suit that matches the one turned up on top of the deck
at the start of the Set
Set- The
round played in one deal. There are around 7 sets in a game (or match) of Nodde
Pegging- setting score to board (moving pegs) or tally
Perryall-(pronounced Pair Royal)-
3 of a kind. The score of this is based on the fact that you can make 3
distinct pairs the 3 cards which is worth 2 per pair = 6 points
Double Perryall-(pronounced Double
Pair Royal)- 4 of a kind The score
of this is based on the fact that you can make 4 distinct pairs the 4 cards
which is worth 2 per pair = 12 pionts
Noddy Knave- is the name given to the Knave
(or Jack) of the suit when he is turned up at the start of play, the basic term noddy, meaning
a fool or simpleton
Elder Hand- The player who sits after the dealer in the direction of
play is known as eldest hand (or in two-player games as elder hand).
Pegged- sealed into hole
Sources:
2. du Coeur, Justin:Redactor, “Game Report: Noddy,
and Early Cribbage” Date redacted: August 1996 http://jducoeur.com/game-hist/game-recon-noddy.html
3. Hanson, Marilee. "Tudor
Entertainment & Pastimes" <a
href="http://englishhistory.net/tudor/entertainment-pastimes/">http://englishhistory.net/tudor/entertainment-pastimes/</a>,
February 10, 2015
4.
Holme, Randle, “The Academy of Armory” (1688)
(Vol 2, ed Jeayes, Roxburgh Club, 1905) (BM C.101.h.2) Contains brief and inadequate descriptions of: Picket, Gleke, Cribbidge, Ruffe & Honors and Whisk, Bone Ace, Put and the High Game, Lanterloo, Noddy and Cribbidge-Noddy, Penneech, Post and Pair - all mostly cribbed from Cotton, though with one or two additional comments of interest, and a list of other card games.
(Vol 2, ed Jeayes, Roxburgh Club, 1905) (BM C.101.h.2) Contains brief and inadequate descriptions of: Picket, Gleke, Cribbidge, Ruffe & Honors and Whisk, Bone Ace, Put and the High Game, Lanterloo, Noddy and Cribbidge-Noddy, Penneech, Post and Pair - all mostly cribbed from Cotton, though with one or two additional comments of interest, and a list of other card games.
5.
Parlett, David, “Historic Card Games-
Timeless classics and treasures now forgotten” http://www.davpar.eu/
6.
Parlett,
David, “Oxford Dictionary of Card Games”,
p. 173,(1992)
ISBN 0-19-869173-4
7.
Willughby, Francis, “A Volume of Plaies” (ms. ca. 1665-70) published as
Francis Willughby's Book of Games (2003)
(Plaies = games for playing, not plays for performing.) Manuscript of the Middleton Collection, Hallward Library, University of Nottingham. A redaction by Jeff Forgeng, Dorothy Johnston, and David Cram was published in October 2003 by Ashgate Press under the title Francis Willughby's Book of Games" (ISBN 1 85928 460 4).
Francis Willughby's Book of Games (2003)
(Plaies = games for playing, not plays for performing.) Manuscript of the Middleton Collection, Hallward Library, University of Nottingham. A redaction by Jeff Forgeng, Dorothy Johnston, and David Cram was published in October 2003 by Ashgate Press under the title Francis Willughby's Book of Games" (ISBN 1 85928 460 4).
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