Card Games: Jass Group
These are ace-ten games in which the highest two trumps are the jack (worth 20 points) and the nine (worth 14 points). Jass games originated in the Netherlands and are now widespread in Europe. Notable examples are Klaverjassen in the Netherlands, Belote in France, and Clobyosh (also known as Clob or Bela) which is popular in the Jewish communities of many countries.
- Klaverjassen (Netherlands)
- Pandoeren (Netherlands)
- Boonaken (Netherlands)
- Staekske Rape (Netherlands)
- Bela / Clobyosh (international)
- Belote and its auction variant Coinche (France)
- Jo-Jotte (variant of Clobyosh with Bridge-like scoring, invented by Ely Culbertson)
- Klabberjaß (Germany)
- Alsós (Hungary)
- Kláber (Northern Serbia)
- Felsős, also known as Tartli (Hungary) or Tartl (Austria)
- Pilotta (Cyprus)
- Mpourloto (Greece)
- Baloot (Saudi Arabia and Kuwait)
Jass reached Switzerland in the 18th century and was so successful that it various forms of Jass became the dominant card games thoughout most of the country, to the extent that Swiss cards are known as Jass cards and the verb jassen means to play any game with these cards.
Jass games crossed the Atlantic with emigrants to North America, and several Jass games have become established there. Examples are Bieden and Tarabish in Canada and Clabber in Indiana.
- Clabber - Jass game with 24 cards, played in Evansville, Indiana.
A group of games descended from Jass is played on the Indian subcontinent and also in Indian communities abroad. Probably they came from the Netherlands via Sri Lanka, where they were introduced by Dutch traders in the 17th or 18th century. In these games the jack and nine are high in all four suits, not only trumps. Some of them have the point structure jack=30, nine=20, ace=11, ten=10, king=3, queen=2; in others it has been simplified to jack=3, nine=2, ace=1, ten=1.
- Three Nought Four
- Twenty Nine
- Twenty Eight
- Fifty Six
- Thunee (played in South Africa)
- Thuni (a related plain-trick game played in Nigeria)