THE STORY OF JASS
Cards have been played for 650 years. This is a Swiss tradition which is almost as old as Switzerland itself.
A game without frontiers.
The first mention we get of card-playing is its prohibition in Berne in 1367. Ten years later a Dominican known as Johannes von Rheinfelden describes the game of cards. Its main figures were four kings, of whom each held a different symbol. Every king had two marshals, one holding in his hand a sign upright (over) and the other a sign hanging (under). The four kings had ten numbered cards each, so that the game had 52 cards in all.
In 1389 the authorities in Schaffhausen also prohibited the playing of cards. It was thought that these games had some inherent power to unleash passion which could lead to recklessness and brawling and might plunge whole families into disaster.
When the reformers gained control of Schaffhausen in 1529, the puritan clergy took over the struggle against fanatical card-playing. Laws, prohibitions, fines, even banishment followed upon each other's heels. But they all availed nothing; the addiction to cards was stronger and produced ever new evil offshoots. This was the language of the ruling clergy, who incessantly attempted to deal with the "drinking, gorging, dancing und playing" with drastic metaphors such as "scraping out the barrel".
Innocents from the countryside.
Jass itself seems to have "immigrated" into Switzerland towards the end of the 18th century in the company of Swiss mercenaries returning from Holland. In Dutch the figure of the farmer as trump is known as "Jas" - and the "Nell", the second highest card, also comes from Holland. The first mention of the word "jass" comes from the village of Siblingen in Canton Schaffhausen. In this cattle-dealing village card-playing seems to have been particularly rampant, and the local priest, Balthasar Peyer, inveighed against it from the pulpit, crying out that "cards are often played right through the night on Sundays as well as on workdays". When none of his words were heeded, he reported a number of farmers, whom he had caught playing cards in the village hall, to the Council in Schaffhausen. The main accused, Max Tanner and Sebastian Weber, were called for questioning. They admitted that they had played a game "which is called Jass over a glass of wine, more than that they cannot be reproached for". The Council contended itself with "a severe caution in order to keep them away from card-playing".
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