History
of Poker
Also
check
out
Fun
Poker
Facts!
There
seem to
be
differences
of
opinion
on the
origin
of
Poker.
Moreover,
there
seems to
be no
clear or
direct
early
ancestor
of the
game. It
is more
likely
that
Poker
derived
its
present
day form
from
elements
of many
different
games.
The
consensus
is that
because
of it's
basic
principal,
its
birth is
a very
old one.
Jonathan
H. Green
makes
one of
the
earliest
written
references
to Poker
in 1834.
In his
writing,
Green
mentions
rules to
what he
called
the
"cheating
game,"
which
was then
being
played
on
Mississippi
riverboats.
He soon
realized
that his
was the
first
such
reference
to the
game,
and
since it
was not
mentioned
in the
current
American
Hoyle,
he chose
to call
the game
Poker.
The game
he
described
was
played
with 20
cards,
using
only the
aces,
kings,
queens,
jacks
and
tens.
Two to
four
people
could
play,
and each
was
dealt
five
cards.
By the
time
Green
wrote
about
it,
poker
had
become
the
number
one
cheating
game on
the
Mississippi
boats,
receiving
even
more
action
than
Three-Card
Monte.
Most
people
taken by
Three-Card
Monte
thought
the
20-card
poker
seemed
more a
legitimate
game,
and they
came
back
time and
time
again.
It would
certainly
appear,
then,
that
Poker
was
developed
by the
card
sharks.
The
origin
of the
word
Poker is
also
well
debated.
Most of
the
dictionaries
and game
historians
say that
it comes
from an
eighteenth-century
French
game,
poque.
However,
there
are
other
references
to
pochspiel,
which is
a German
game. In
pochspiel,
there is
an
element
of
bluffing,
where
players
would
indicate
whether
they
wanted
to pass
or open
by
rapping
on the
table
and
saying,
"Ich
Poche!"
Some say
it may
even
have
derived
come the
Hindu
word,
pukka.
Yet
another
possible
explanation
for the
word
poker,
is that
it came
from a
version
of an
underworld
slang
word,
"poke,"
a term
used by
pickpockets.
Cardsharps
who used
the
20-card
cheating
game to
relieve
a sucker
from his
poke may
have
used
that
word
among
themselves,
adding
an r to
make it
"poker."
The
thought
was that
if the
sharps
used the
word
"poker"
in front
of their
victims,
those
wise to
the
underworld
slang
would
not
surmise
the
change.
There
are
those
who also
believe
that
"poke"
probably
came
from
"hocus-pocus",
a term
widely
used by
magicians.
The game
of Poker
later
evolved
to
include
32
cards,
and
eventually
the
modern
day deck
of 52,
not
counting
the two
Jokers.
The game
of Poker
has
evolved
through
the
years,
through
many
backroom
games to
the
present
day
casinos
around
the
world.
Its
history
is rich
with
famous
places
and
characters.
For
example,
during
the Wild
West
period
of
United
States
history,
a saloon
with a
Poker
table
could be
found in
just
about
every
town
from
coast to
coast.
Today,
Poker is
carefully
regulated
by
gambling
laws,
and
saloons
have
given
way to
casinos
and
cardrooms,
but
Poker is
played
more
than any
other
card
game in
the
world.
It has
grown
into a
sporting
event,
with
competitions
and
tournaments
all
around
the
world.
Tournaments
take
place
almost
every
week of
the year
somewhere
in the
world.
If you
compare
the
prizes
of major
sporting
events
around
the
world,
you will
find
that the
monetary
outcome
of any
given
event in
Poker
would
stack
up.
Poker
today is
one of
the
fastest
growing,
but
hardly
recognized
sporting
events.
The
pinnacle
of the
poker
world,
The
World
Series
of
Poker,
attracts
players
from all
over the
world
every
year to
compete
for
money
and
titles
as the
world's
top
Poker
players.
Poker
will
always
be
around
and will
continue
to grow
and
flourish
like so
many
other
past
times.
There
will
always
be a
game to
play,
money to
be won,
and
crowns
to be
worn.