History of poker
free downloand new pokerit.eu platform |

19th-century

By the 1990s some gaming historians including David Parlett started to challenge the notion that poker is a direct derivative of As Nas.
There is evidence that a game called poque, a French game similar to
poker, was played around the region where poker is said to have
originated. The name of the game likely descended from the Irish Poca (Pron. Pokah) ('Pocket') or even the French poque, which descended from the German pochen ('to brag as a bluff' lit. 'to knock').
Yet it is not clear whether the origins of poker itself lie with the
games bearing those names. It is commonly regarded as sharing ancestry
with the Renaissance game of primero and the French brelan. The English game brag (earlier bragg) clearly descended from brelan and incorporated bluffing (though the concept was known in other games by that time).

A modern school of thought rejects these ancestries,
as they focus on the card play in poker, which is trivial and could
have been derived from any number of games or made up on general
cardplay principles.The unique features of poker have to do with the betting, and do not appear in any known older game.
In this view poker originated much later, in the early or mid-18th century, and spread throughout the Mississippi River
region by 1800. It was played in a variety of forms, with 52 cards, and
included both straight poker and stud. 20 card poker was a variant for
two players (it is a common English practice to reduce the deck in card
games when there are fewer players).

English actor Joseph Crowell
reported that the game was played in New Orleans in 1829, with a deck
of 20 cards, and four players betting on which player's hand was the
most valuable. Jonathan H. Green's book, An Exposure of the Arts and Miseries of Gambling (G. B. Zieber, Philadelphia, 1843), described the spread of the game from there to the rest of the country by Mississippi riverboats, on which gambling was a common pastime. As it spread north along the Mississippi River and to the West during the gold rush, it is thought to have become a part of the frontier pioneer ethos.

During the American Civil War, many additions were made including stud poker (the five-card variant), and the straight. Further American developments followed, such as the wild card (around 1875), lowball and split-pot poker (around 1900), and community card poker games (around 1925).
20th-century
Poker Room at the Trump Taj Mahal, Atlantic City, New Jersey



21st-century



After the passage of the UIGEA in October 2006, attendance at live tournaments as well as participation in live and online cash games
initially slowed; however, they are still growing and far more popular
today than they were before 2003. The growth and popularity of poker can
be seen in the WSOP which had a record 7,319 entrants to the 2010 main event.
As of 2011, the only nations in Europe that prohibit live poker are Norway and Albania, according to Dagbladet in 2011.
Poker"DEMOCRACY"