Minchiate


Minchiate, also known as Germini or Tarocchi fiorentini, is an early 16th-century card game, originating in Florence, Italy. It is no longer widely played. The term can also refer to the special deck of 97 playing cards used in the game. The deck is similar to the conventional tarot cards, but contains an expanded suit of trumps. The game was similar to but more complex than tarocchi. The minchiate represents a Florentine variant on the original game.

History

Florence is one of the contenders for the birthplace of tarot. The earliest reference to tarot cards, then known as trionfi, is dated to 1440 when a notary in Florence recorded the transfer of two decks to Sigismondo Pandolfo Malatesta.
The word minchiate comes from a dialect word meaning "nonsense" or "trifle", derived from mencla, the vulgar form of mentula, a Latin word for "phallus". The word minchione is attested in Italian as meaning "fool", and minchionare means "to laugh at" someone. The intended meaning may be "the game of the fool", considering that the card "The Fool", also called "The Excuse", features prominently in the game play of all tarot games. In tarocchini, sminchiate is a signal used to communicate to a teammate.
The earliest reference to minchiate is found in a 1466 letter by Luigi Pulci to Lorenzo de' Medici. This game was believed to be played by a 78-card deck as evidenced by the Rosenwald sheets, uncut sheets of Florentine tarots dated from 1480 to 1500. There are two other differences from 97-card minchiate. First, in 97-card minchiate the sequence for some of the lower trumps goes from lowest to highest: Fortitude, Justice, Wheel, and Chariot. In the Rosenwald ordering it is Justice, Fortitude, Chariot, and Wheel.
Second, the Rosenwald sheets contains the Popess as the second trump, which is not found in the 97-card deck. In a Florentine song written around 1500, the trumps in a tarot deck were listed as almost exactly as the Rosenwald sheets, with the exception of the missing Popess which likely means that this card was dropped from the deck by that time. The song also ranks the other trumps as Fortitude, Justice, Chariot, and Wheel, which suggests it is a transitional stage from the Rosenwald sheets to the 97-card deck's order.
97-card minchiate was first known as germini, after the Gemini card, the highest of the newly introduced trumps. The earliest record of germini dates to 1506. This deck was created by inserting the 20 new trumps as a single block between trump 15 and The Star, which is now trump 36. The new deck proved so much more popular, that the 77-card deck ceased production and the older name of minchiate was transferred over to the larger deck during the 17th century.
The game spread from Florence to the rest of Italy and France during the 1600s. In Sicily, it was called gallerini. In Liguria it was known as ganellini. The rules used in these regions are lost, except for cryptic references that they were quite different from the Florentine game. All surviving rules are derived from the type played in the Grand Duchy of Tuscany and the Papal States.
By the 18th century, minchiate had overtaken the original game of tarot in popularity in Italy. Paolo Minucci published a commentary on the game in 1676. The game is described in detail by Romain Merlin in Origine des cartes à jouer, published in Paris in 1869. It was also known in Germany during the late 18th century. The game was still played in Genoa in the 1930s, but its popularity declined in the late 19th and early 20th century.

Deck

The minchiate deck differs from other tarot decks in several features. The first and most obvious difference is that the trumps have almost doubled in number; there are 40 trumps in the minchiate, in addition to the unnumbered card the Madman, The Fool or the excuse. Minchiate uses Roman numerals for its trumps. Due to the large number of trumps, players generally called them by their number with the exception of the arie.
Suit
EnglishSwordsCupsCoinsClubs
ItalianSpadeCoppeDenariBastoni
SpanishEspadasCopasOrosBastos

Minchiate decks come in two standard patterns, earlier and later, which coexisted for almost two centuries. Earlier Minchiate dates from the early 16th century or even the late 15th century. As seen in the table below, there are the four standard Latin suits of swords, clubs, coins, and cups. These contain pip cards from ace to ten, and four face cards: a jack, a knight, a queen, and a king.
In the minchiate deck, in the suits of cups and coins, the "knaves" or "pages" have been replaced by "maids". The knights, mounted figures in the tarot of Marseilles and similar designs, are centaurs or sphinxes in many minchiate decks. The suits follow the Portuguese pattern, with the exception of the clubs which are depicted as batons which follows from the northern Italian suit-system. This pattern died out around 1900.
12345678910JackKnightQueenKing
Clubs
Coins
Cups
Swords

The Republic of Lucca produced their own version of Minchiate decks which were very similar to the ones used in nearby Florence but with several graphical differences. Kings are seated under arches, knights are humans riding horses, all knaves are male, and the Fool is playing with a dog. This pattern died out in the eighteenth century.
The Later Minchiate pattern appeared around the early 18th century as a luxury edition. In this version, the eight highest trumps lose their red backgrounds. Around 1820, this pattern was redesigned to give it a flatter, plainer appearance with changes to a quarter of the trump and court cards while restoring the red background to the high trumps. This pattern survived in Liguria until the 1930s.
The trumps of the minchiate deck, and their corresponding Tarot of Marseilles and the de Poilly cards are:
Card numberImageItalian nameEnglish translationcorresponding de Poilly cardcorresponding tarot of Marseilles card
Il mattoThe madmanMomusLe Mat
IPapa uno; l'Uno; il Papino; GanellinoPope oneI Le Bateleur
IIPapa due; l'ImperatricePope two; The EmpressIII L'impératrice
IIIPapa tre; l'ImperatorePope three; The EmperorIIII L'empereur
IIIIPapa quattro; il PapaPope four; The PopeV Le Pape
VPapa cinque; L'amorePope five; Love2 l'Amour
VI L'amoureux
VIla TemperanzaTemperanceXIIII Temperance
VIIla FortezzaFortitude9 La ForceXI La Force
VIIIla GiustiziaJustice7 La JusticeVIII La Justice
IXla Ruota della FortunaWheel of Fortune10 La FortuneX La Roue de Fortune
Xil CarroChariotVII Le Chariot
XIIl gobbo; il tempoHunchback; time11 Les Ages, la Vieilesse,,, VIIII L'Ermite
XIIL'impiccato; il traditoreThe hanged man; the traitorXII Le Pendu
XIIIla MorteDeathXIII
XIVIl Diavolo; il demonioThe DevilXV Le Diable
XVla Casa del diavoloThe house of the Devil,,,, XVI La Maison Dieu
XVIla SperanzaHope8 l'Esperence
XVIIla PrudenzaPrudence5 La Prudence
XVIIIla FedeFaith
XVIIIIla CaritàCharity6 La Charité
XX to XXIIIil Fuoco, l'Acqua, la Terra, l'AriaThe four elements: fire, water, earth, air20 Element le Feu, 22 Element l'Eau, 21 Element Terre, 23 Element l'Aire
XXIIII to XXXVla Bilancia, la Vergine, lo Scorpione, l'Ariete, il Capricorno, il Sagittario, il Cancro, i Pesci, l'Acquario, il Leone, il Toro, i GemelliThe zodiac 26 Septembre, 28 Aoust, 27 Octobre, 33 Mars, 24 Decembre, 25 Novembre, 30 Juin, 34 Fevrier, 35 Janvier, 29 Juillet, 32 Avril, 31 May
La stella, la Luna, il SoleThe star, the moon, the sun36 Les Etoiles, 37 La Lune, 38 Le SoleilXVII L'étoile, XVIII La Lune, XVIIII Le Soleil
il Mondothe World39 Le MondeXXI Le Monde
Le trombeThe trumpets40 Le RenomméXX Le Jugement

By comparing the Rosenwald sheet with 16th century trump lists, the Popess was likely dropped in the late 15th century which shifted every trump above the first down one rank. The Empress, Emperor, and Pope became the new II, III, and IIII respectively, the latter now wearing a secular crown as opposed to a papal tiara.
Since the five lowest trumps were collectively known as the papi, Love was added to this group after its demotion. The identification of middle papi was largely forgotten for centuries as players generally called cards by their number French writer Romain Merlin is the only source that called trumps II, III, and IIII the Grand Duke, Western Emperor, and Eastern Emperor.
Justice, Fortitude, and Temperance were three classical "cardinal virtues" depicted in the more familiar tarot trumps. The minchiate supplies the remaining cardinal virtue — Prudence — and inserts them with the three theological virtues, Faith, Hope and Charity. The only other deck to have the theological virtues was the Cary-Yale deck. This is the only deck to include all seven virtues.
Minchiate is a southern tarot pattern so it shares many qualities with the Bolognese and Sicilian tarots as opposed to the western patterns like the tarot of Marseilles. While the Tower is called The House of God in the Marseilles tarot, it is called the House of the Devil or Hellmouth in the minchiate deck and it depicts a nude woman fleeing a burning building. The Moon depicts an astrologer studying the moon instead of the tarot of Marseilles howling dogs and lobster.
The card corresponding to the Hermit is often called Time, or the Hunchback. It depicts an elderly man on crutches with an hourglass in the background. Like other southern decks, the final card in the series is not the World, but Judgement. The minchiate completes the series by adding all the zodiac signs, in random order, and the four classical elements.
The eight highest ranking trumps have a red background while the top five are unnumbered. A 98th card was made for some decks. It is a trump with a red background and is also unnumbered like the arie. It depicts a nude woman running in a wheel, probably representing Fortuna. While 98-card decks were mentioned as being played in Sicily during the early 18th century, only a few examples from Genoa survive. It is uncertain how this card ranked and how it affected the versicole sequences in the game. Also unknown is how it relates to the 98-card version of de Poilly's Minchiate described below.