Origin | Italian |
---|---|
Type | card game |
Players | Np. |
Skills | Counting |
Cards | 52 |
Deck | Anglo-American |
Play | Clockwise |
Playing time | 10–15 min. |
Chance | Medium |
Related games | |
Baccarat, Lansquenet, Faro, Monte Bank |
Basset (French bassette, from the Italian bassetta), also known as barbacole and hocca, is a gambling game using cards, that was considered one of the most polite. It was intended for persons of the highest rank because of the great losses or gains that might be accrued by players.
According to DELI (Dizionario etimologico della lingua italiana), the word Basetta is first recorded in the first half of the 15th century. [1] The game Basset is described by a few authors as having been invented in 1593 by a noble Venetian named Pietro Cellini, [2] who was punished with exile in Corsica for his contrivance. [3] [4] It may have been devised out of the game of Hocca, Hoca or even Hoc, considered the precursor and an outlawed form of Italian roulette at which people lost considerable sums of money and also an early iteration of Biribi, which was brought into fashion by Cardinal Mazarin.
Basset was first introduced into France by Signior Justiniani, ambassador of Venice, in 1674. The game was very popular at the court of King Charles II, and even after 15 January 1691 when Louis XIV issued an order from the privy council, by which he expressly forbade not only the officers belonging to his army, but likewise all other persons of whatever sex or denomination to play at Hoca, Pharaoh, Barbacole and Basset. [5] The sums of money lost in France at this game were so considerable that the nobility were in danger of being undone after many persons of distinction were ruined. Later the law against gambling was tightened eluding which they disguised Basset under the name of "pour et contre", that is, "for and against".
By the constitution of Basset, large advantages were secured to the tailleur (the dealer / keeper of the bank) and so vast were their gains, that the privilege of keeping a bank at Basset, where the stakes were unlimited, was granted only to cadets or other members of great families. It was basically certain that a considerable fortune could be realised by the tailleur in a short time. The advantages of the dealer arise in many ways, but mainly from the temptations for adventurous players to increase their stakes on certain desperate chances, which rarely turn up, and which in the long run told largely in favour of the bank. Where licenses were otherwise conceded for keeping a public Basset table in France, the stakes were strictly limited to twelve pence.
Basset migrated to England in about 1677, introduced by a croupier called Morin, [6] but never caught on outside Court circles on account of its costliness and the heavy risks it entailed on the players. [7] Its heyday seems to have been in the early 18th century. It has no place in Cotton's 1674 The Complete Gamester, but rates a lengthy entry in the 1721 edition where the fierceness of the gambling is stressed. [8] It is there described as a "French Game", presumably because it was imported from France. The game's high stakes, along with its devastations, is the subject of Susanna Centlivre's 1705 comedy The Basset Table.
The English made Basset quite different from what it was in France where, by royal edict, the public at large were not allowed to play at more than a franc or ten-penny bank, – and the losses or gains could not bring desolation to a family. In England the punters (gamblers) could do as they liked, staking from one guinea to one hundred guineas and more, upon a card. After three or four years, many players had impoverished their families to such an extent that Parliament enacted a prohibition with severe penalties against both games.
However, it was "of so bewitching a nature," says our old writer, "by reason of the several multiplications and advantages which it seemingly offered to the unwary punter, that a great many like it so well that they would play at small game rather than give out; and rather than not play at all would punt at six-penny, three-penny, nay, a two-penny bank, – so much did the hope of winning the quinze-et-le-va and the trente-et-le-va intoxicate them."
The play in Basset resulted in, basically, a lottery. A player might occasionally win, but the big winner was the dealer (banker). The dealer had a number of privileges under the rules, including having the sole disposal of the first and last card; this gave them a significant edge. This was a truth so acknowledged in France that the king ordered, by public edict, that the privilege of a tallière (banker) should be allowed only to the chief cadets (sons of noblemen). His assumption was that whoever kept the bank must, in a very short time, acquire a considerable fortune.
The players sat round a table, the talliere (banker/dealer) in the midst of them, with the bank of gold before him, and the punters or players each having a book of 13 cards. Each laid down one, two, three, or more, as they pleased, with money upon them, as stakes. The talliere took the remaining pack in his hand and turned them up, with the bottom card appearing being called the fasse; he was then paid half the value of the stakes laid down by the punters upon any card of that sort (rank).
After the fasse was turned up, and the talliere and croupiere (bet collector, similar to a stickman) had looked round the cards on the table, and taken advantage of the money laid on them, the former proceeded with his deal; and the next card appearing, whether the king, queen, ace, or whatever it might be, won for the player (1–1 payout), the latter might receive it, or making paroli (parlay their bet), as before said, go on to sept-et-le-va (7–1 payout). The card after that won for the talliere, who took money from each player's card of that sort, and brought it into his bank, an obvious and prodigious advantage over the players.
The talliere, if the winning card was a king, and the next after it was a ten, said (showing the cards all round): 'King wins, ten loses,' paying the money to such cards and taking the money from those who lost, adding it to his bank. This done, he went on with the deal: 'Ace wins, five loses; 'Knave (Jack) wins, seven loses;' and so on, every other card alternately winning and losing, till all the pack was dealt but the last card. According to the rules of the game, the last card turned up was for the advantage of the talliere; although a player might have one of the same sort, still it was allowed to him as one of the dues of his office, he (the tallière) paid nothing on it.
The bold player who was lucky and adventurous, and could push on his couch with a considerable stake to sept-et-le-va (7–1 payout), quinze-et-le-va (15–1 payout), trente-et-le-va (30–1 payout), etc., must in a wonderful manner have multiplied his couch, or first stake up to soissante-et-le-va (60-1 payout); but this was seldom done; and the loss of the players, by the very nature of the game, invariably exceeded that of the bank; in fact, this game was altogether in favour of the bank; and yet it is evident that, in spite of this obvious conviction, the game must have been one of the most tempting and fascinating that was ever invented.
Suppose ten, or any other card wins for the punter, if another ten comes up just after in the winning card's place, it does not win for him, but for the bank, but if it comes up three or four cards after that, it wins for the punter. For example, if ace or any other card wins at first, and afterwards come up again in the next winning card's place, it does not go for the punters, but by a term they have for that part of the game is said to retire, till the next opportunity, because by the rule of the game it must go for the bank before the punter. But then in return of this, and subtly to gain the esteem of all the young adventurers who are apt to let their money briskly, if the same card happens to come in the next losing place (tie), it does not lose, because it has not gone for the punter but also retires without paying the bank, having won a couch, which the talliere saves, and should have paid. [9]
Of course there were frauds practiced at Basset by the talliere, or banker, in addition to his prescriptive advantages. The cards might be dealt so as not to allow the punter any winning throughout the pack; and it was in the power of the dealer to let the punter have as many winnings as he thought convenient.
By 1870 the game as described in England used a mixture of French and English words and spellings: [10]
The Compleat Gamester states that a masse is only permitted on winning cards. However, in Act IV of Susanna Centlivre's 1705 comedy The Basset Table (in which the characters are playing Basset), losing cards are not removed from the table and players are seemingly permitted to masse a further couch on them (as in Faro). In practice, with the paroli system, this grants a large advantage to the punters.
This example is per the rules in The Compleat Gamester as described in the 5th edition (1725). [11]
John removes all cards of the hearts suit from another deck to create his book of hearts. He decides to place seven cards from his book onto the table, placing 2 chips upon the ten, eight, jack, and two, and placing 3 chips on the ace, king, and seven. This ends the card placing phase for John and all other punters at the table. The tallière shuffles and reveals the fasse: an eight. John, having 2 chips on the eight, pays 1 chip to the tallière. The tallière proceeds with drawing: "Nine wins, king loses". John's couch of 3 chips on the king go to the tallière and his king returns to his book. Having not placed a nine, the winning card has no effect on John. Next drawn: "Seven wins, queen loses". John decides to paroli his couch's win on the seven, crooking the corner (or to avoid damaging the cards places a token, like a die or other small object on a corner) to display his intention. Next drawn: "Ten wins, two loses". John loses his 2 chips on the two, but wins on the ten. Instead of paroli on the ten, John takes his couch's winnings (doubled to 4 chips, making up for the 2 lost on the two) and decides to masse by placing a new couch of 3 chips on the ten. Next draw: "Eight wins, nine loses". John decides to paroli the eight, marking as such. The tallière then draws another eight in the "winning" position and a six in the losing position. Because the eight appeared twice in a row as the winning card, it instead loses and John pays the tallière. Next draw: "Ace wins, jack loses", John loses his 2 chips on the jack but wins on the ace. John decides to paroli the ace in the hopes of recouping lost chips. The tallière then draws a seven as both the winning and losing card. Because they match, no wagers are changed and play continues, John keeps his seven and its paroli. Next draw: "Jack wins, seven loses". Having no jack in play anymore (lost earlier), this win doesn't affect John or the other punters. However, he loses his seven he had paroli with the 3 chips he originally wagered. Next draw: "Ace wins, jack loses". Instead of accepting the sept-et-le-va he's won, he decides to push his luck further and paroli again, marking another corner on his card. Next draw: "Six wins, queen loses", not affecting John. Next draw: "Ace wins, ten loses". John loses the 3 chips he had masse on the ten, but once again wins with the ace. He decides to accept the quinze-et-le-va payout of 45 chips (having bet 3, multiplied by 15). John decides to keep the ace in play (no longer a paroli) with a masse of 4 chips. John now only has a single card in place: his couch on the ace with 4 chips. Play continues until the final (single) card is revealed to be an ace. As this was the last card, nothing happens, neither winning nor losing for any punters. Having started the last round wagering 17 chips, John lost 16 and won 47 by the end of the round. The tallière shuffles the deck. John may leave or remove his ace, reclaiming his 4 chips or not. Punters who have paroli leftover from the last round, however, must leave these in place unaltered until the next round reveals whether they win or lose. Punters place new cards with wagers and the tallière begins again from the fasse.
Basset has been the object of mathematical calculations. [12] Abraham de Moivre estimated the loss of the punter under any circumstance of cards remaining in the stock when he lays his stake, and of any number of times that his card is repeated in the stock. [12] [13] De Moivre created a table showing the several losses of the punter in whatsoever circumstances he may happen to be. [14] From this table it appears:
Steinmetz, Andrew (1870) "Chapter X: Piquet, Basset, Faro, Hazard, Passe-dix, Put, Cross and Pile, Thimble-rig" The Gaming Table: Its Votaries and Victims: In all times and countries, especially in England and in France Vol. II, Tinsley Brothers, London, OCLC 5963855; online at Project Gutenberg