Carl Friedrich Jäger
Löflund, 1831 - Ulm (Germany) - 774 pages
https://books.google.de/books?id=ddI_AQ ... en&f=false
Ulm has a lot of old playing card notes (1397 a prohibition, 1402 a "kartenmaler").
The text describes the attempt of the city laws to keep the expenses for wedding festivities small. So after-wedding festivities were prohibited for some time (a month), especially celebrated by the bride and her female friends. The women reacted with the invention of "Kart-Höfe" (playing-cards-courts), evenings, at which it was played and some sweets of all kinds were given to fill the gap of the usual celebrations. The city council reacted with limitations for the foods, which given at the days of these Karthöfe-days.
This is recorded for the year 1420.
p. 518
Weinhold ...
http://archive.org/stream/diedeutschenf ... g_djvu.txt
... says, that the expression and social institution "Karthöfe" was common in the circles of reichstädtische ladies.Im 15. und 16. Jahrhundert hatten
die reichsstädtischen Damen Spielkränzchen, sogenannte
Karthöfe; eine neuverheiratete musste sich bei ihren
Freundinnen und Verwandten dadurch vorstellen. Auch
die Karthöfe wurden unter die Luxusordnung gestellt ').
Wie leidenschaftlich durch diese Zeiten das Karten-
spiel unter den Frauen gepflegt ward, kann Fischarts
spöttische Bemerkung im Gargantua (c. 25) bezeugen :
„dann er must gespilt haben, Kart war sein Morgen-
gab, wie der Äugspurgisehen Weiber''.