Napoleon at St Helena
Screenshot of a game
Alternative namesBig Forty, Le Cadran, Forty Thieves, Roosevelt at San Juan
Named variantssee article
FamilyNapoleon at St Helena[1]
DeckDouble 52-card
Playing time20 min[2]
Odds of winning1 in 10[2]

Napoleon at St Helena is a 2-deck patience or solitaire card game for one player. It is quite difficult to win, and luck-of-the-draw is a significant factor. The emperor Napoleon often played patience during his final exile to the island of St Helena, and this is said to be the version he probably played.[3] Along with its variants, it is one of the most popular two-deck patiences or solitaires. The winning chances have been estimated as 1 in 10 games,[4] with success typically dependent on the player's ability to clear one or more columns.[5] The game is the progenitor of a large family of similar games, mostly with variations designed to make it easier to get out.

Alternative names include Le Cadran ("The Dial") and, in the US, Forty Thieves, Big Forty and Roosevelt at San Juan.

History

"Napoleon at St. Helena" is recorded as early as 1870 by Annie Henshaw who describes it as a "most excellent game which has the added charm of having been a favorite with Napoleon at St. Helena".[6] The game appears frequently in patience collections of the late 19th century. Lady Adelaide Cadogan (1874) calls it Le Cadran which reinforces a possible French origin.[7] In the 1920s, American sources started recording Big Forty and Forty Thieves as alternative names, along with the early variant forms known as Twenty-Four Card Tableau, Twenty-Eight Card Tableau, Thirty-Two Card Tableau and Thirty-Six Card Tableau.[a] In 1939, the alternative name of Roosevelt at San Juan is first recorded by Coops.[1] The game continues to feature in compilations of patiences and solitaires to the present day, "usually... under the name of Napoleon at St Helena". Arnold (2011) revives the name Le Cadran "to honour a different strand of history."[10]

Rules

The rules of Napoleon at St Helena are follows:[2][11]

Variants

Napoleon at St Helena forms the basis for several variant games, most of which make it easier to win. Common variations are: dealing the aces to the foundations at the start of the game, building the tableau down by alternating colour rather than by suit, and allowing cards built down on top of a tableau to be moved, as a sequence, together. Others include: allowing use of any card from the waste, dealing some of the tableau cards face down, and changing the number of tableau piles and/or the number of cards in each tableau.

Single-pack variants

Single-pack variants include the following games together with their key differences from Napoleon at St Helena:

Double-pack variants

Double-pack variants include the following games together with their odds of winning[b] and key differences from Napoleon at St Helena:

Triple-pack variant

There is also a triple-pack variant called Sixty Thieves in which twelve columns of five cards are dealt.

Related games

Other closely related games include Congress, Diplomat, Napoleon's Square, Corona, and Blockade. Busy Aces is a simpler game that is also part of the family.

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ For example, The Official Rules of Card Games (1922)[8] and The New Hoyle (1929).[9]
  2. ^ Based on Morehead & Mott-Smith (1949).[2]
  3. ^ Effectively a reserve.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Coops (1939), p. 13.
  2. ^ a b c d e Morehead & Mott-Smith (1949), p. 118.
  3. ^ Kansil (1999), p. 310.
  4. ^ Morehead (2001), p.203.
  5. ^ Galt (1999), p. 83.
  6. ^ Henshaw (1870), p. 10.
  7. ^ Cadogan (1874), pp. 3–4.
  8. ^ _ (1922), pp. 61–62.
  9. ^ _ pp. 272–274.
  10. ^ Arnold (2011), pp. 82–84.
  11. ^ Crépeau (2001), pp. 258–260.
  12. ^ a b Parlett (1979), p. 122.

Bibliography