Beginnings The early history of the game of Skat has been well researched, although some theories about its origins cannot be proven or have since been discredited. In particular, the once popular anecdote that Friedrich Ferdinand Hempel, a well known Altenburg lawyer, simply invented Skat himself one evening having become bored with a game of Solo has since been discredited by Oskar Stein (1887), although subsequent research has shown that Hempel (along with his namesake J.F.L. Hempel) had a hand in its development. What is certain is that the game was developed between 1810 and 1813 in the Thuringian town of
Altenburg from older card games. The concept of
bidding appears to be derived from
L'Hombre through its simpler German version,
Solo; the idea of setting aside two cards (the
skat) was taken from the
Tarot game of
Grosstarock.
Doppelkopf, however, is not one of Skat's precursors but a 19th century development of the double-pack games in
German Schafkopf. The first Skat players and 'inventors' of the game were Altenburg dignitaries and members of a local
Tarock club: grammar school teacher (
Gymnasialprofessor) Johann Friedrich Ludwig Hempel (1773-1849), medical health officer (
Medizinalrat) Dr. Hans Carl Leopold Schuderoff, court advocate and notary Friedrich Ferdinand Hempel (1778-1836), Councillor Carl Christian Adam Neefe (1774-1821) and Chancellor Hans Carl Leopold von der Gabelentz (1778–1831). Another participant in the rounds was well-known publisher,
Friedrich Arnold Brockhaus. The game was first known as Ore Mountain Schafkopf (
Erzgebirgischer Schafkopf). A further verifiable written record of the new game can be found in an article about Osterland games in edition no. 30 of the weekly
Osterländische Blätter published in Altenburg on 25 July 1818 under the heading "Das Skadspiel". In the years that followed the game spread more and more, especially among the students of Thuringian and Saxon universities and was soon popular in large parts of German-speaking Europe. The earliest recorded rules for "Scat" were written down by one of its inventors, "Hp" (J.F.L. Hempel), for Pierer and von Binzer's 1833
Encyclopädisches Wörterbuch, by when it was already popular in the
Kingdom of Saxony, especially in the
Duchy of Altenburg and the surrounding area. These describe a game for 3 players with
German-suited cards who received 10 each in packets of 3, 2, 3 and 2, the two remaining cards being dealt to the table as a
talon known as the
Scat. There were just two contracts –
Frage and
Solo – and
forehand opened the bidding or passed. A
Frage bidder could be overcalled by a
Solo and either could be overcalled by the same contract in a higher-ranking suit, the suits ranking in the same order as in the modern game. The declarer needed 61
card points to win and there were bonuses for scoring 90 (
Schneider), taking all tricks (
Schwarz) and, optionally, for holding or lacking
matadors in unbroken sequence from the top. The four
Unters were permanent trumps ranking above the trump suit. The first
treatise on the rules of Skat,
Das Scatspiel: Nebst zwei Liedern, was published in 1848, also by J. F. L. Hempel, shortly before his death. Nevertheless, more and more variations and regional peculiarities of the game developed; the rules thus differed from one region to another until the first attempt to set them in order was made by a congress of Skat players on 7 August 1886 in Altenburg. These were the first official rules finally published in a book form in 1888 by Theodor Thomas of Leipzig. Because of the poor economic conditions and lack of political freedom in many German states, Germany was a classic emigration region in the 19th century and many emigrants took the game with them to their new homeland.
First Skat congresses and foundation of German Skat Association The first 70 years were a success story. The game spread and won more and more supporters from all social classes, but suffered from a confusion of local and regional rules. There was a danger that Skat would disintegrate into many new games. In the 1870s important new movements began, which led to the rules being unified and later simplified. The founding of the
Empire accelerated this process in many ways. During the boom of the
Gründerzeit period, the game was able to spread throughout Germany unhindered by the old borders, but this also encouraged uncontrolled growth. In the rapidly expanding towns and the huge factories many people from different parts of the German Empire met and came into social contact. In addition, supra-regional player associations could be formed in the new unitary state, which ultimately led to the foundation of the
German Skat Association. In 1884, Freiherr von Hirschfeld published an
Illustriertes Scatbuch (Illustrated Scat Book).
Recent history At the following two congresses, the values of the Null and normal Grand contracts, which are still valid today, were determined. It was also decided that Hand games would not be penalised twice and that the basic value of the Grand Ouvert would be 36. Another innovation was the regulation introduced in 1936 at the suggestion of Otto Seeger that every game won would be rewarded with a bonus of 50 points. At the first Skat Congress after the
Second World War, Altenburg-based President, Erich Fuchs, was confirmed in office. In 1980 the company Novag Industries launched
Skat Champion, the world's first electronic Skat computer, on the German market. The device was strictly programmed according to the rules of the German Skat Association. However, Skat computers were not able to assert themselves permanently. After
German reunification in 1990, the East German clubs joined the German Skat Association again. The Skat Association tried to resolve the old dispute over playing cards with a compromise using a new
French-suited,
Berlin pattern pack with
German suit colours and known as the Tournament pattern. The conflict between the German Skat Association and ISPA was also resolved amicably in 1998. Both players' associations adopted the
International Skat Regulations. Hand games have been penalised twice since then and the basic value of the Grand Ouvert has been set at 24. In addition, the players' associations formed the
International Skat Court jointly in 2001, whose seat is in Altenburg. In 2005, the office of the German Skat Association in Bielefeld was closed and moved to its historical headquarters in Altenburg in accordance with the resolutions of the 28th Skat Congress. == Overview of Skat congresses ==