Poker has a long and indistinct history.
Some hold that it originated in Persia as it closely resembles a game called
As Nas and may have been brought to the United States via Persian sailors
in New Orleans. This game was played with 25 cards with 5 different suits.
This game was played similarly to modern Five Card Stud with many of the
hand combinations such as three of a kind. It seems likely that the name
“Poker” descended from the French poque, which originally came from the
German pochen, ‘to knock’.
The game was reportedly played in
New Orleans around the late 1820’s, with a deck of 20 cards and players
betting on the value of their hands. The earliest known form of Poker was
played with a 20-card pack (A-K-Q-J-10) evenly dealt amongst four players.
There was no draw, and bets are made on a narrow range of combinations:
one pair, two pair, triplets, and ‘full’ - so called because it is the
only combination in which all five cards are active - and four of a kind.
Unlike classic Poker, in which the top hand (royal flush) can be tied in
another suit, the original top hand consisting of four Aces, or four Kings
and an Ace, was absolutely unbeatable. The spread of the game after this
seems to have been facilitated by the practice of gambling on Mississippi
riverboats.
Soon after this the deck was expanded
to the present day 52 cards and the flush was introduced. The additional
cards were introduced mostly to allow more players. The game was expanded
and developed further during the Civil War, with many of the variants of
the game being introduced then, including Five Card Stud. Poker was initially
played with only one round of betting with all five cards dealt face down
and no draw cards, very similar to today’s Five Card Stud game.
Professional gamblers later added
variations and rule changes in order to increase the profitability of the
game. Wild cards and bluffing became common occurrences and the draw was
added around 1850, allowing yet another round of betting. Many of the features
of modern Poker, such as the draw and some versions of different hands,
as well as the straight and the flush originated in the earlier forms of
the British game Brag or Bragg. Brag’s modern form differs greatly from
modern day poker, however.
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