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Topic: French Tarock


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In the News (Wed 3 Dec 08)

  
  Tarocchi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The game is nowadays known in many variations, first basic rules appear in the manuscript of Martiano da Tortona (before 1425; translated text), the next are known from the year 1637.
In tarot decks made for playing the game (as opposed to those made for divination or other esoteric uses), the four Latin suits are replaced in many regions with the French suits of hearts, diamonds, clubs, and spades.
Variations of the game are still played in France, Germany, Italy, and especially in the countries on the area of the former Austro-Hungarian monarchy, for which even the name Tarockanien has been coined.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Tarocchi   (881 words)

  
 Tarot (game) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The game is sometimes referred to in English as French tarot; for example, the French name of the annual Montreal festival Festival International de Tarot de Montréal is officially translated into English as International French Tarot Festival of Montreal.
Each player is dealt his cards three at a time, and the dog is dealt one card at a time at anytime the dealer wishes except for the first and last card dealt, which can't be part of the dog.
(Compare the Austrian version, Tarock, in which this King-calling mechanism is used so that four-player play is two against two.) If the chief has all four kings, he calls a queen.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Tarot_(game)   (1040 words)

  
 Andy's Playing Cards - The Tarot And Other Early Cards - page II - Regional Tarots
During the 19th century, several fancy editions of the Tarock were issued; in most of these decks the traditional double illustrations of the trumps were replaced with city views.
The Cego Tarock may be considered a hybrid between the standard Tarock described above and the French Tarot.
F.X.Schmid's set recalls the French scheme: various themes, such as the ages of life, the seasons of the year, etc., are represented as indoors and outdoors scenes, or with male and female personages, and so on.
l-pollett.tripod.com /cards36.htm   (1384 words)

  
 Droggn 蒂罗尔塔罗牌戏
A curiosity on which I can throw no light is a 66-card French suited pack, having, besides the usual Tarocks and court cards, the numerals from 4 to 10 in the fl suits and from Ace to 7 in the red suits.
We were told that packs of this composition used to be available in the early years of this century.
Sometimes the fox will win a trick if the opponents underlead their pictures fearing that they will be trumped, or mistakenly hold them back when the fox is led, believing it to come from a long suit.
www.poker168.com /file/602.htm   (4454 words)

  
 Tarock
Tarock was one of the most popular card games played in the old Danube Monarchy, Austria-Hungary.
Le Monde, "The World", the pictures have no relations to these names), and that the suits used are the regular French ones (clubs, spades, hearts and diamonds) instead of the original swords, batons, cups and coins.
Below are a few examples of that card (in Austria called "Sküs" from the French word "Excuse") taken from various "Industrie & Glück" (which is a very common pattern) Tarock, Cego Tarock and French Tarot decks.
hem1.passagen.se /bernvill/tarock.htm   (259 words)

  
 French Tarot Phoenix Club (F.T.P.C.) - Welcome   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
French Tarot as you could have suspected is French and offers very little English information on-line.
If you are interested in the reconstruction of 17th century French Tarot, based on the work of Michael Dummett then check out this Early French Tarot.
Although only in French at this time, the most promising attempt to promote French Tarot in the USA is our friend Théo Chino who is responsible for TarotUSA and who organizes games in New York, NY.
torak.com /web/tarot   (383 words)

  
 French Tarot
French Tarot is also played in the French speaking parts of...
French suited Tarot cards were first introduced in Germany and Austria in the second half of the eighteenth century as a...
French psychic specializing in spiritual and tarot readings- World renowned Eurpean Renaud direct from france, kasamba Psychic chat,keen tarot readings~ English and French Languages ~ psychics around the world...
www.which-tarot.com /69/french-tarot.html   (903 words)

  
 Tarockania   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
There are 54 cards in one pack, consisting of 32 suit cards (hearts, diamonds, clubs, spades) and 22 tarocks (1 to 21 plus the highest card in the game called Sküs).
First you have to sort out 14 cards, ie tarock II and III, hearts and diamonds Two, Three and Four and clubs and spades Seven, Eight and Nine.
So, the forehand says, "I call tarock twenty" ("rufen" = to call) to indicate that the player with tarock XX is his partner.
www.webit.at /bk/tarock.html   (1638 words)

  
 Games played with French Suited Tarot Cards
French suited Tarot cards were first introduced in Germany and Austria in the second half of the eighteenth century as a more convenient substitute for the Italian suited Tarot cards that had been used until then.
French Tarot is played with the full 78 card pack.
Tarok is played in southern Bukovina (the region around Suceava) with the same 54 card pack that is used in Austria: the trumps have Roman numbers and the fool is the highest trump.
www.pagat.com /class/ftarot.html   (854 words)

  
 [No title]
The tarock deck is smaller, the difference being fewer cards are included from the ordinary suits.
A tarock may not be led unless one has been already played in the current game, or if there is no other choice.
A player unable to follow suit is still obliged to play a tarock, but the tarocks are not trumps.
www.radix.net /~erewhon/rules/tarock.html   (2497 words)

  
 "Tax Preparation Online, 13 Chapter Filing, Business Hosting, Day Care Accounting Software, Website Optimization ...</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> There is in fact a long history of non-francophones using <b>French</b> language Tarots, such as the Tarot de Marseille or the Swiss 1JJ Tarot, and of actually using gaming terms with <b>French</b> etymology. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> In a broad sense, <b>"Tarock"</b> is the German word for "Tarot." "Französisches <b>Tarock"</b> is the term used by German writers when discussing the <b>French</b> Tarot game. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> However it is most often used to describe a particular type of <b>"Tarock"</b> game which is most conventional in Austria and Southern Germany: one in which the Fool/Excuse functions as Trump 22 and the deck is reduced to 54 cards.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.angelfire.com /games5/atga/FAQ.html</font>   (339 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><u>Tarot as Cosmograph</u>   <i>(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)</i></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Conver, Nicolas: a <b>French</b> cardmaker whose 1760 Tarot of Marseilles is taken as a classic example of the pattern. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> French-suited tarot: beginning in the 18th century, cardmakers began to produce tarot decks using the new <b>French</b> suit system (clubs, hearts, spades, diamonds). </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Viéville, Jacques: the maker of a <b>French</b> tarot deck (c.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.tarothermit.com /glossary.htm</font>   (2525 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><a href="http://www.wicce.com/pinozac2000.html">Wicce's Tarot Collection</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Remember that <b>tarock</b> decks have the cards done in such a way that there are two images back to back on the face of the card, one reversed, so half the card is always correct whether the card comes up reversed or upright. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> This is the type of Fool imagery (the <b>tarock</b> style, I mean) which led to the modern-day Joker in bridge and poker decks. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Images here are *not* half and half, but seem to be sketched in *around* the suit items which are arranged playing-card style all over the card and then the sketching seems to have been filled in after that.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.wicce.com /pinozac2000.html</font>   (762 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><a href="http://jducoeur.org/game-hist/wicksontarot.html">[No title]</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> These rules were not included in Michael Dummett's "The Game of Tarot", because they were discovered by Depaulis two years after the 1980 publication of the book and thus were unknown to Dummett at the time of printing. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> I should confess my knowledge of the <b>French</b> language is largely limited to the terminology used in the modern <b>French</b> game of Tarot and I have made extensive use of the Internet translation utility Babelfish. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> This earlier attempt was marred by a few errors which resulted from my lack of proficiency in the <b>French</b> language combined with incorrectly copying a portion of the original document.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>jducoeur.org /game-hist/wicksontarot.html</font>   (1477 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><u>Andy's Playing Cards - Germany and Central Europe - page 1</u>   <i>(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)</i></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> The Hearts are very similar to the ones found in international decks, but one of their halves is shaded, and also the other three signs share the same feature. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> <b>"French</b> pattern", is slightly earlier than the other one, having been created during the first half of the 19th century, according to the graphic guidelines of the transitional style known as Biedermeier (c.1815-1840) that acted as a bridge between Neoclassicism and Romanticism. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Such an attractive look gave reason for its great success: the Rhineland pattern soon spread to several neighbour countries, among which Denmark, the Netherlands, Poland, where most editions maintained the German indices "B", "D" and "K", while the original number of cards was often increased to 52, with jokers too added to the deck.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>a_pollett.tripod.com /cards7.htm</font>   (1574 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><u>Tarocchi - Biocrawler</u>   <i>(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)</i></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> New: Biocrawler.com now with the option to add inline videos. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Tarocchi, also known as <b>tarock</b>, is a trick-taking game, and one of the oldest card games known. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> <b>Tarock</b> rules from the Stubaital (http://www.pagat.com/tarot/stubtar.html) (3-4 players)</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.biocrawler.com /encyclopedia/Tarocchi</font>   (352 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><u>Triomphes d'un jeu de tarot - Trumps of a tarock game.</u>   <i>(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)</i></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> [1930], 22 <b>tarocks</b> in chromolithography, I - XXI, fool, squre borders, round corners, stuck on a hard board with blank backs. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Fifth set of a <b>tarock</b> game which was used by a fortune-teller. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> On the back side of each trump is written in <b>French</b> with a ball-point the interpretation of the fortune-teller.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.anticbooks.com /_uk/catalogue/detail/Det_11431.html</font>   (78 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><a href="http://www.florilegium.org/files/ENTERTAINMENT/Tarot-Crd-Ruls-art.html">Tarot-Crd-Ruls-art</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> The original document is written in a very old dialect of the <b>French</b> language and even those actually fluent in modern <b>French</b> or even one who is knowledgeable of the older dialect may have difficulty following it as it is often imprecisely worded with apparently a number of errors. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> After this exchange, the discard card pile must not contain The Fool, any Kings, or any of the 21 Trump cards.(This arrangement also appears in the 3 player version of modern <b>French</b> Tarot and while this may be the earliest written rules of a Tarot game, it may not be the most common arrangement. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> In the modern <b>French</b> game for three players, thirteen Trumps are worth 10, fifteen are worth 20 and eighteen are worth 40.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.florilegium.org /files/ENTERTAINMENT/Tarot-Crd-Ruls-art.html</font>   (1920 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><a href="http://www.madram.bravehost.com/tarot/history.htm">Secrets of the Tarot - History</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> The German form is <b>tarock</b>, the <b>French</b> form is tarot. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Even if the etymology were known, it would probably not tell us much about the idea behind the cards, since it only came into use 100 years after they first appeared. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Some time before 1480, the <b>French</b> introduced cards with the now-familiar suits of hearts, clubs, spades, and diamonds.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.madram.bravehost.com /tarot/history.htm</font>   (1016 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><a href="http://homepage.mac.com/gregorym/iblog/C1982947117">Research_Tarot</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> None can be shown to go back to the tarot's origins, although the <b>French</b> tradition exemplified in the works of Eliphas Lévi predates the English tradition now familiar through the works of Waite and Crowley. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> The original Italian titles of the cards were in some cases different from the later <b>French</b> titles (and their English translations) that have become familiar to us through the Tarot de Marseille and its descendants. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Also, the ordering of the trumps varied considerably in Italy where the cards originated; it is not known which ordering is the earliest one.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>homepage.mac.com /gregorym/iblog/C1982947117</font>   (5844 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><u>Tarocchi Did You Mean tarocchi</u>   <i>(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)</i></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Image: Austrian-style 54-card <b>Tarock</b> hand: the Fool; six trumps; King, Queen, 1 of hearts. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Continents and countries in the world: Japan </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> <b>French</b> Version, guide de voyage dans le monde: Voyage et vacances</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.did-you-mean.com /Tarocchi.html</font>   (458 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><u>hist-games: IPCS Convention</u>   <i>(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)</i></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> During the more modern talks, I hung out with the "card playing" subgroup (largely instigated by John McLeod of course). </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> I learned 3 new card games: Alluette, Hungarian <b>Tarock</b>, and <b>French</b> <b>Tarock</b>. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> All in all, I had a good time, and meet a number of interesting people.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.pbm.com /pipermail/hist-games/1998/000327.html</font>   (378 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><u>TAROCK</u>   <i>(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)</i></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> This forum is for seeking <b>tarock</b> partners, exchange of experiences, and - main point - to discuss and vote about the rules, to find unifies Austrian <b>Tarock</b> Königrufen rules for a later Austrian championship. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Includes detailed instructions on how the game of <b>Tarock</b> is played in central Texas. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Rules, strategy and analysis to learn to play <b>French</b> tarot.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>u.webring.com /hub?ring=tarock</font>   (248 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><a href="http://www.rmashop.de/eng-rmashop/cardgames.htm">Online shopping,card games,german cards,french cards,poker</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> The category card games is divided into different choice criteria: german playing cards, <b>french</b> playing cards, rummy, canaster, bridge, poker, childrens playing cards, accessories. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Offers from our range of items: Skat: Every fourth German plays cards and that for a very good reason -playing cards is exciting, convivial and fun, especially then playing the exceptionally robust original Altenburg playing cards. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Offers from our range of items: Skat: Every fourth German plays cards and that for a very good reason —playing cards is exciting, convivial and fun, especially then playing the exceptionally robust original Altenburg playing cards.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.rmashop.de /eng-rmashop/cardgames.htm</font>   (492 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><a href="http://www.tarock.net/russischest.htm">Russisches Tarock</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> (Sometimes called "Animal <b>Tarock"</b> as the <b>tarocks</b> have pictures of animals on them. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> This deck is a 78 card deck with Roman Numerals on the <b>tarocks</b>. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Before you complete your purchase, you can sort through your cart and remove cards at any time if you change your mind.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.tarock.net /russischest.htm</font>   (134 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><a href="http://www.tarocks-gordon-setter.de/news_e.html">NEWS</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> End of November 2004 the SGCI (International Gordon Setter Club) organized the 4th </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Brilli is very proud, girls, and we congratulate the <b>French</b> breeder of Prisca, Monsieur Navarro! </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Champion 2003 became Theo's father: Nerac du Grand Valy</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.tarocks-gordon-setter.de /news_e.html</font>   (250 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><a href="http://www.flippers.com/wurlitzr.html">German Wurlitzer jukeboxes models and troubleshooting page</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> 1975: Atlanta 3D, Baltic, Lyric, <b>Tarock</b>, Cabaret, Hideaway </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> 1980: X200E, X9, Carillon, Atlanta 200E, Atlanta 160, Lyric, <b>Tarock</b>, Cabarina, Hideaway </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> 1984: SL700, Diana, Fuego 3D, Caravelle, Tele-Disc, <b>Tarock</b>, Hideaway</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.flippers.com /wurlitzr.html</font>   (1858 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><u>tarock for PSYCHIC WEB Discover the Timeless Secrets of</u>   <i>(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)</i></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Your browser does not support inline frames or is currently configured not to display inline frames. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> is a very common pattern) <b>Tarock</b>, Cego <b>Tarock</b> and <b>French</b> Tarot decks... </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Just click any link below to see the complete <b>tarock</b> results.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.netcashforme.com /sorcery/psychicweb/tarock.htm</font>   (236 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><a href="http://aboutcardgames.com/data/259.html">T :: Tapp Tarock</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> T - Tapp <b>Tarock</b> - information about card games online </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> This three-handed Austrian <b>Tarock</b> game is not often played. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> A description can be found on Bernhard Krüpl's <b>Tarock</b> Page.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>aboutcardgames.com /data/259.html</font>   (68 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><a href="http://www.intercol.co.uk/acatalog/Tarot___Fortune_Telling.html">InterCol London TAROT & FORTUNE TELLING (38)</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> France J M Simon France Cartes Paris 'Bagatelle'. 1971. Game as well as Tarot or Fortune telling playing cards. Complete pack of 74 cards with standard <b>French</b> suits: 52 cards plus 21 numbered and illustrated playing cards with risqué images plus the Joker. 32-page booklet of instructions and rules in <b>French.</b> Excellent condition as new. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Austria Piatnik 'Ungarisches Ansichten-Tarock' 1992 Facsimile of the 1868 Hungarian <b>Tarock</b> pack of consisting of 22 Trump cards with double sided and named town and city views and 21 numeral cards plus title cards and 56 page explanatory booklet in German and Hungarian. Original box as new. </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> Austria Piatnik 'Wilhelm Tell <b>Tarock'</b> 1991. This is an excellent facsimile of the original produced 1850. In original box 54 cards complete. Good quality reroduction.</td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.intercol.co.uk /acatalog/Tarot___Fortune_Telling.html</font>   (990 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><body face="Arial"> <br> <table cellpadding=0> <tr> <td>  </td> <td> <table > <tr><td> </td><td colspan=2><a href="http://www.trifocus.net/~sparr/foo/pc_t.php.html">cdcovers.cc - World's Largest Cover Archive</a></td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> The Operational Art Of War Volume 1 <b>French</b> custom </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> The Sims Hot Date Expansion Pack Dvd <b>French</b> </td></tr> <tr><td valign=top><img style="margin-top:4px;" src=/images/a.gif></td><td></td><td> The Sims House Party Expansion Pack Dvd <b>French</b></td></tr> <tr><td></td><td colspan=2><font color=gray>www.trifocus.net /~sparr/foo/pc_t.php.html</font>   (383 words)</td></tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table><script language="JavaScript"> <!-- // This function displays the ad results. // It must be defined above the script that calls show_ads.js // to guarantee that it is defined when show_ads.js makes the call-back. function google_ad_request_done(google_ads) { // Proceed only if we have ads to display! if (google_ads.length < 1 ) return; 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