Question about 52 cards and 52 weeks
Posted: 28 Mar 2024, 08:23
I got a question about "story of a soldier in a church reading the playing cards as a book of devotion, associating each card with some religious personages or events" ....
I remember a legend with a real "first source" (? I remember late 18th century , somehow connected to military with possibly a French scenario, it was a defence against an attack on playing card use). The 52 playing cards were related to a religious connection to the god-creation of 52 weeks in a year. There was a human name related to the story..
I attempted some search, but not successful. I saw it maybe 15 years ago. Any ideas?
Added ...
https://www.allworship.com/deck-cards/
,,,, this is a modernized version of the story without a note of the real source
https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/deck-of-cards/
gives some details ....
The History of Playing Cards: With Anecdotes of Their Use in Conjuring, Fortune-telling, and Card-sharping
by Edward Samuel Taylor
Hotten, 1865 - 530 pages
https://books.google.de/books?redir_esc ... er&f=false
at page 442 The name of the soldier is in this version Richard Middleton.
At page 444 ...
.... we find notes to the earlier French versions.
The 1778 version is (author is Louis Bras-de-Fer) ...
Explication morale du jeu de cartes: anecdote curieuse et intéressante, sous le nom de Louis Bras-de-Fer, engagé au service du roi
1778 - 24 pages
https://books.google.de/books?id=DSMCAA ... &q&f=false
I remember a legend with a real "first source" (? I remember late 18th century , somehow connected to military with possibly a French scenario, it was a defence against an attack on playing card use). The 52 playing cards were related to a religious connection to the god-creation of 52 weeks in a year. There was a human name related to the story..
I attempted some search, but not successful. I saw it maybe 15 years ago. Any ideas?
Added ...
https://www.allworship.com/deck-cards/
,,,, this is a modernized version of the story without a note of the real source
https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/deck-of-cards/
gives some details ....
The 1865 book should be ...Moreover, a broadsheet titled "The Soldier's Prayer-Book" which recounts the same story as the 1948 song "Deck of Cards" appears in an 1865 book about the history of playing cards. French versions of the tale were printed in 1778 and 1809.
The History of Playing Cards: With Anecdotes of Their Use in Conjuring, Fortune-telling, and Card-sharping
by Edward Samuel Taylor
Hotten, 1865 - 530 pages
https://books.google.de/books?redir_esc ... er&f=false
at page 442 The name of the soldier is in this version Richard Middleton.
At page 444 ...
.... we find notes to the earlier French versions.
The 1778 version is (author is Louis Bras-de-Fer) ...
Explication morale du jeu de cartes: anecdote curieuse et intéressante, sous le nom de Louis Bras-de-Fer, engagé au service du roi
1778 - 24 pages
https://books.google.de/books?id=DSMCAA ... &q&f=false