Friday, July 14, 2017

Quintille & Tredrille


                                   
     Card Party in the Home of Elis Schroderheim - Pehr Hilleström (1732-1816) Stockholm                       
David Parlett in his work A History of Card Games - (1991) says that Quintille was first mentioned in France as far back as 1680 by Mme de Sevigne. It was based on a Spanish game known as Cinquillo or Cinquento. It was a version of the three handed game of Ombre to be played by five people .

In the game of Quintille it was almost impossible for one player to win a Solo game against four opponents, so the idea of an alliance or partnership formed by calling the holder of a non-trump King was born. In Quintille the entire pack of 40 cards was dealt out among five players so each held a hand of eight cards. To win Sacardo or game 5 tricks were required. The Remise was 4 tricks, and Codille was 3 tricks or less.

Quadrille arose when players applied the principle of of play used in Quintille to a new version of the game of Ombre played by four with a 40 card pack. As all cards were dealt out, each player now held 10 cards. To win Sacardo 6 tricks were now required, a Remise was 5 tricks, and Codille was 4 tricks or less.

The oddest development of all, once Quadrille had become popular, was to apply the same principle of play to a game played by three which was called Tredrille. Richard Seymour refers to this with some scorn as the Irishism of Quadrille by three, or Tredrille

There are some people who will play this branch of Ombre by dealing out ten cards apiece between Three and this in dowright Irish phraeseology they call Three-handed Quadrille; which in plain English is Four-handed Ombre played by Three persons. But this silly manner deserves our ridicule than any other notice.

Why anyone wanting to play a three handed game would not simply revert to the classic game of Ombre is very difficult to understand. People however often chose to play Tredrille, and did so by stripping the pack to 30 cards. 

The French author Mons. Martin writing in 1764 recommended Tredrille only as a makeshift in case three players were awaiting a fourth to make up a party at Quadrille. 

Martin offers two different schemes for reducing the pack to 30 cards, one involving four suits, and the other preserving only three suits.

Tredrille with Four Suits:
Red Suits A K Q J 2 3 7 ( 2 x 7 =  14 cards in total)
Black Suits - A K Q J 7 6 5 2 ( 2 x 8 =  16 cards in total)

This scheme gives a deck of 30 cards in total, which means when all cards are dealt out, each player will have 10 cards, exactly as in Quadrille. The Trump suits will have an identical number of cards

Red Trumps  -     Spadille Manille Basto Punto K Q J 2 3   (9 cards)
Black Suits - Spadille Manille Basto K Q J 7 6 5           (9 cards)

Red non-Trump - K Q J A 2 3 7
Black non-Trump - K Q J 7 6 5 2

Martin says that in this version, the only calls played are Mediateur and Sans Prendre.
The game is played over 16 Tours, 12 single and 4 double.
The declarer stakes six fish before each deal, and all other payements are as in Quadrille.


Tredrille with Three Suits
Spades - A K Q J 7 6 5 4 3 2
Clubs - A K Q J 7 6 5 4 3 2
Hearts - A K Q J 7 *  5 4 3 2
Diamonds - K

i.e  - Throw out all of the Diamond suit except K♦︎, and discard the 6♥︎  as well.

Hearts - Spadille Manille Basto Punto K Q J 2 3 4 5 7    (12 cards)
Diamonds - Spadille Manille (K♦︎) Basto                              (3 cards)
Spades - Spadille Manille Basto K Q J 7 6 5 4 3              (11 cards)
Clubs - Spadille Manille Basto K Q J 7 6 5 4 3              (11 cards)


Martin says that the suit of Diamonds is treated as a first Favourite suit, and that a second  Favourite suit is cut at random because this form of Tredrille is always played with two Favourite suits. 
The calls of Mediateur and Sans Prendre are the only calls used.
If hombre has all four Kings and all four Queens, then they may still call Mediateur  by exchanging the King of Diamonds for any non trump Knave.
As before, all other payments follow the pattern of Quadrille.

Opinions of Tredrille varied. The character of Miss Ilex in Gryll Grange by Thomas Love Peacock says:

The variety of the game called tredrille — the Ombre of Pope’s Rape of the Lock — is a pleasant game for three. Pope had many opportunities of seeing it played, yet he has not described it correctly; and I do not know that this has been observed.

In fact Miss Ilex is confused, Pope was describing the 40 card game of Ombre in his famous poem The Rape of The Lock (1714), and not the 30 card game of Tredille.

The writer Horace Walpole tells an amusing anecdote against himself involving a game at Tredrille:

I was playing at eighteen-penny Tredrille with the Duchess of Newcastle and Lady Browne, and certainly not much interested in the game. I cannot recollect nor conceive what I was thinking of, but I pushed the cards gravely to the Duchess and said ‘Doctor you are to deal’. You may guess at their astonishment, and how much  it made us all laugh. 
(Letters - 27th September 1774 Strawberry Hill - to Hon. H.S. Conway).






Auction Quadrille




An interesting work called A New Treatise Upon Real Quadrille From The French of Mons. Martin’ was published in 1764 by G. Burnet of London. It is printed as a dual language work with verso pages in the original French, and the matching English translation in recto.

It is a very rare book with institutional copies to be found only in the British Library and the University of Missouri, but a scan is available in Google books.

The most interesting section is one chapter (VIII) on the rarely described version known as Auction Quadrille, or Quadrille à L’Enchaîre in French.

According to Mons. Martin, Auction Quadrille is played without any form of ‘Ask Leave’, no Mediateur, no Sans Prendre, and no Favourite trump suit.

Eldest hand has precedence, and the lowest allowable bid is in effect to take four tricks. If eldest hand says “I will play”, then that is taken as a bid of four tricks, and a younger hand must overcall  by explicitly naming a higher number e.g “I also for five tricks”. The next player may overcall by saying “And I for six tricks”, and rarely a fourth might say “and I for seven tricks”. Precedence goes to the elder hand if two players are prepared to play for the same number of tricks. N.B. no trump suit is stated at this point in the bidding.

The hombre only names their trump suit once the other three players have passed
Eldest hand leads to the first trick, and the normal rules of trick play at Quadrille apply.

Martin says “as most of these games are passed, they consist of 12 single rounds and 4 double ones, and six fishes are always put down..” (two for the game and four for the matadores - one apiece for Manille and Basto, and two for Spadille). A Tour or round was  a cycle of four deals, one by each player, so he was referring to  64 deals (16 x 4).

The basic settlement for winning your game by taking at least as many tricks as were bid for is along the lines of (n + 1)  fishes where ’n’  is  the number of tricks bid for, and (n + 3) where matadores are held e.g  4 tricks gain 5 fishes for a simple game, and 7 fishes with matadores.
These payments are exactly doubled in ‘Double Rounds’

A Vole wins a bonus of 20 fishes for bids of 4 to 6 tricks, and 40 fishes for bids of 7+ tricks.
The Vole premium is exactly doubled in ‘Double Rounds’.
An Announced Vole wins a premium of 200 fish.

The general scheme of payment for failing to make your bid is along the general lines of being beasted exactly the same amount you would have won along with these side payments
Reward/Consolation    -  One fish to each opponent.
Matadores -   One fish to each opponent if three are held.


Footnote
The game is played with the same 40 card deck used for Ombre and other forms of Quadrille and Quintille (remove 8.9.10 of each suit).
Red suits       - K.Q.J.A.2.3.4.5.6.7
Black suits     - K.Q.J.7.6.5.4.3.2

Red Trumps     -  Spadille. Manille. Basto. Punto.K.Q.J.2.3.4.5.6
Black Trumps  -   Spadille. Manille. Basto. K.Q.J.7.6.5.4.3

Where the Matador trumps are:
Spadille    -  A♠︎
Manille     -  Red 7/Black 2
Basto       -  A♣︎
Punto      -  A♥︎/♦︎