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Knave of Clubs: P.15012-R(3)

An image of Playing card

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Object information

Current Location: In storage

Titles

Knave of Clubs

Maker(s)

Printmaker: Beniere, Nicolas

Entities

Categories

Description

The Knave faces front, with head turned towards the left. He holds a pike aloft in his right hand and grips his waist with his left. He wears a plumed cap. The pip is located at upper right. A swan at lower left sits at one end of a curved scroll which extends behind the legs of the figure to the right and bears the name of the maker (the swan presumably also an attribute): 'NICOLAS . BENIERE'. The printed border is cropped along the right edge.

Legal notes

Given by Walter Morley Fletcher, 1907

Acquisition and important dates

Method of acquisition: Given (1907) by Fletcher, Walter Morley

Dating

17th Century#
Circa 1599 - Circa 1635

Note

Woodcut printed playing card of the Rouen pattern, built from four sheets of laid paper (the glue now only holding in one area). Coloured in red, black, golden brown, dark blue, light blue. Bears the name of the maker: 'NICOLAS . BENIERE' printed in uppercase roman letters on a scroll at the feet of the figure. From a group of eight playing-cards, one of two apparently identifiable but incomplete packs, 'each representing parts of more than one original pack of the same kind' (See Fletcher, 1907, p.455) which were found at Trinity College, Cambridge by Walter Morley Fletcher in the Summer of 1902 during repair work to staircase A, which led to Fletcher's rooms in the north-west corner of the Great Court (See P.15011-R(1)-(10) for the first pack discovered by Fletcher at Trinity). Fletcher published his findings in the journal of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society: 'On Some Old Playing-Cards Found in Trinity College', Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society, XI, no. 3 (Cambridge, 1907), pp. 454-464. In the article, Fletcher describes the group as: 'Ten cards of better make. Uniform in size 3 1/2 in. by 2 1/16 in. Each card of four sheets. Of Hearts, two kings, queen, and knave; of Spades, king, two knaves, and the ten; of Diamonds, none; of Clubs, the knave and eight. An old curatorial pencil annotation in the margin of the Fitzwilliam copy of the article indicates the fact that only one of the two Knaves of Spades listed and only the Knave of Clubs, and not the Eight of Clubs, came to the Museum, meaning that there are only eight cards and not ten in this group. A number of cards built from fewer than than four sheets and some blank sheets (two single sheets and two built from two sheets) indicate that the layered construction of the cards has deteriorated since Fletcher made his discovery at Trinity College in 1902. This card was reproduced in colour (along with the Knave of Hearts and Knave of Spades) as Plate XXXIII, facing p.456. Prior to the standardisation of European languages in the 18th century, the spellings of the names of early cardmakers could vary, which can lead to confusion, especially in the case of dynasties of cardmakers of the same name. Thus, the names 'Beniere', 'Besniere', 'Benieres', 'Besnieres' are generally accepted as denoting the same family of card makers who were working in Rouen between 1540 and 1650, several of whom, over the years, had the forename, 'Nicolas'/'Nicholas'. See Notes. Fletcher dates the cards to some point between 1599 and 1635, considering firstly that construction of Trinity's staircase A was completed around 1599 (which 'puts their date more probably in the 17th than in the 16th century') and secondly that William Crane, whose name was inscribed on the fragment of another card found in the staircase, was present at Trinity between 1628 and 1635. Fletcher also discusses the possibility that the cards are forgeries produced in imitation of the popular name of Nicolas Beniere/Besniere either by English makers or French makers from Rouen, settled in England (Fletcher, 1907, p.463). More recently, Michael Goodall has stated that the cards were probably lost by workmen having a game of cards during the construction of the staircase around 1599. (Goodall, p.197). The British Museum has examples of cards on uncut sheets made by members of the Besniere family in Rouen, the coloured sheets bearing the printed inscription of a 'Nicolas Besniere' and the monogram 'NB'. See BM: 1860,0414.269-270. These examples have been dated c.1525-1550.

School or Style

French

Techniques used in production

Stencil printing
Woodcut

Identification numbers

Accession number: P.15012-R(3)
Primary reference Number: 240070
Stable URI

Audit data

Created: Thursday 9 January 2020 Updated: Monday 2 October 2023 Last processed: Thursday 7 December 2023

Associated departments & institutions

Owner or interested party: The Fitzwilliam Museum
Associated department: Paintings, Drawings and Prints

Citation for print

This record can be cited in the Harvard Bibliographic style using the text below:

The Fitzwilliam Museum (2024) "Knave of Clubs" Web page available at: https://collection.beta.fitz.ms/id/object/240070 Accessed: 2024-11-22 23:57:33

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{{cite web|url=https://collection.beta.fitz.ms/id/object/240070 |title=Knave of Clubs |author=The Fitzwilliam Museum|accessdate=2024-11-22 23:57:33|publisher=The University of Cambridge}}

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