Who are the queens in a deck of cards

English: The Queen is a playing card with a picture of a queen on it. The usual rank of a queen is as if it were 12 (or 13), that is, between the King and the Jack, or Knight.

See also categories: Playing cards with letter Q, Playing cards with letter D and Playing cards with letter д.

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Some interesting facts (or possibly fiction) about playing cards.

It is said that each of the suits on a deck of cards in a card game represents the four major pillars of the economy in the Middle Ages: Hearts represented the Church, Spades represented the military, Clubs represented agriculture, and Diamonds represented the merchant class.

Each face card in a deck of playing cards is said to represent a great person from history:
King of Spades – David
King of Hearts – Charles (possibly Charlemagne, or Charles VII, where Rachel would then be the pseudonym of his mistress, Agnès Sorel)
King of Diamonds – Julius Caesar
King of Clubs – Alexander the Great

Queen of Spades – Pallas
Queen of Hearts – Judith
Queen of Diamonds – Rachel (either biblical, historical (see Charles above), or ythical as a corruption of the Celtic Ragnel, relating to Lancelot below)
Queen of Clubs – Argine (possibly an anagram of regina, which is Latin for queen, or perhaps Argea, wife of Polybus and mother of Argus)

Knave (Jack) of Spades – Ogier the Dane/Holger Danske (a knight of Charlemagne)
Knave (Jack) of Hearts – La Hire (comrade-in-arms to Joan of Arc, and member of Charles VII’s court)
Knave (Jack) of Diamonds – Hector
Knave (Jack) of Clubs – Judas Maccabeus, or Lancelot

The King of Hearts is the only king without a mustache and is the only king with a sword through his head, otherwise known as the “Suicide King”.

The Face Cards (King, Queen & Jack) are referred to as the “Court”.

52 cards represents the 52 weeks in a year

4 suits represents the 4 seasons

13 cards in each suit represents the 13 weeks in each season

12 Royals represent the 12 months

2 red and 2 black suits represent the 4 different solstices

The 4 suits also represent the four natural elements
Hearts = Water
Clubs = Fire
Diamonds = Earth
Spades = Air

An interesting fact about playing cards is that specially-constructed decks were sent to American soldiers who were being held in German camps during World War II. The United States Playing Card Company collaborated with the government in the production of these cards. What made these cards so unique was, once they became wet, they peeled apart. Inside, the prisoners found parts of maps that would lead them to freedom.

Who are the queens of cards?

The names of the queens -- Judith or Judic (hearts), Pallas (spades), Rachel (diamonds), and Argine (clubs) -- have been a continual object of speculation, as the real-life personages they represent are not so easily identified.

Who are the kings and queens in a deck of cards?

King of Hearts: Charlemagne or Charles the 1st. ... .
King of Diamonds: Julius Caesar. ... .
King of Clubs: Alexander the Great. ... .
Queen of Spades: Pallas Athena. ... .
Queen of Hearts: Judith. ... .
Queen of Diamonds: Rachel. ... .
Queen of Clubs: Argine or Argea. ... .
Jack of Spades: Ogier the Dane..

What do the queens mean in a deck of cards?

Queens are a big deal in the tarot. They are a symbol of leadership, reaching that stage in life when you're happy in your own skin, finding your ~niche~, becoming a person others look up to and follow—a boss, basically.

Which queen faces right in cards?

Which is the only Queen in the deck that faces to the right? Queen of Spades. What is unique about the King of Diamonds?

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