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  2. Italian playing cards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_playing_cards

    As Latin-suited cards, Italian and Spanish suited cards use swords (spade), cups (coppe), coins (denari), and clubs (bastoni). All Italian suited decks have three face cards per suit: the fante (Knave), cavallo (Knight), and re (King), unless it is a tarocchi deck in which case a donna or regina (Queen) is inserted between the cavallo and re.

  3. Scopa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scopa

    A set of 40 "Napoletane" cards.The rows depict the suits Denari, Coppe, Bastoni, and Spade.. A deck of Italian cards consist of 40 cards, divided into four suits. Neapolitan, Piacentine, Triestine, and Sicilian cards are divided into Coppe (Cups), Ori or Denari (Golds or Coins), Spada (Swords) and Bastoni (Clubs) or Mazzi (Clubs in Sicilian), while Piemontesi, Milanesi and Toscane cards use ...

  4. Spanish-suited playing cards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish-suited_playing_cards

    Castilian pattern introduced by Heraclio Fournier. Spanish-suited playing cards or Spanish-suited cards have four suits, and a deck is usually made up of 40 or 48 cards (or even 50 by including two jokers). It is categorized as a Latin-suited deck and has strong similarities with the Portuguese-suited deck, Italian-suited deck and some to the ...

  5. Briscola - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Briscola

    Briscola (Italian:; Lombard: brìscula; Sicilian: brìscula; Neapolitan: brìscula) is one of Italy's most popular games, together with Scopa and Tressette.A little-changed descendant of Brusquembille, the ancestor of briscan and bezique, [1] Briscola is a Mediterranean trick-taking ace–ten card game for two to six players, played with a standard Italian 40-card deck.

  6. Playing card suit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Playing_card_suit

    The four French-suited playing cards suits used in the English-speaking world: diamonds (♦), clubs (♣), hearts (♥) and spades (♠) Traditional Spanish suits – clubs, swords, cups and coins – are found in Hispanic America, Italy and parts of France as well as Spain. This article contains suit card Unicode characters.

  7. Bestia (game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bestia_(game)

    Bestia is played with a pack of 40 Spanish-suited Italian playing cards, for example of the Piacentine, Neapolitan or Sicilian pattern. The cards rank in descending order in each suit as follows: Ace , 3, Re (king), Cavallo (knight), Fante or Donna (jack), 7, 6, 5, 4, 2.