Once you fill in your outline/map with some of the details of your essay, you will be well on your way to drafting the paper. Be sure to append your bibliography!
Suggested Outline for the Project:
The Representation of the Four Suits
[Your Name Here]
Humanity 303
Week 3 outline
I. Introduction and Thesis Statement
• The thesis statement is about the four suits on a deck of cards. The four suits include spades, clubs, hearts, and diamonds. Spades represent nobility, clubs represent peasants, hearts represent clergy, and diamonds represent merchants.
II. Events that Led to the Advancement
• During the fifteenth century the French designed the suits on the deck of cards as we know the suits today being spades, clubs, hearts, and diamonds. When the French designed the suits, instead of diamonds they were considering acorns. Since the cards were made for the French upper class, they decided diamonds over acorns because they believe diamonds were more expensive than acorns.
• The ideas of the suits are much older then we anticipate. Before the French design of the suite, the invention of the suit took place in Egypt during the thirteenth century. The suits were known as swords, sticks, cups, and coins.
III. Effects of Advancement
• In today’s history, we know the four suits on a deck of cards are Spades, Clubs, Hearts, and Diamonds. In the fifteenth century, the French designed the four suits. Spades which represent nobility, clubs represent peasants, hearts stands for clergy, and diamonds represents merchants. The diamond suit was replaced for an acorn. The cards were made for the French upper class a decision was made to replace acorns to diamonds because diamonds were more expensive than acorns. • Playing cards affected the humanity by the type of playing cards that were invented. During the tenth century card playing to the Chinese were paper dominoes. They would shuffle and deal them in new games. They were
Bibliography: A Brief History of Playing Cards. (n.d.). Retrieved from The United States Playing Card Company: http://web.archive.org/web/20070826144858/http://www.usplayingcard.com/gamerules/briefhistory.html CliffsNotes.com. (n.d.). Retrieved November 2010, from CliffNotes: http://www.cliffsnotes.com/Section/Where-do-the-four-suits-in-a-deck-of-cards-originate-What-do-they-represent-.id-305402,articleId-8203.html History of Playing Cards and Games. (1997). Retrieved from The World of Playing Cards: http://www.wopc.co.uk/uk/index2.html Smith, S. A. (2007, May 14). The History of Playing Cards. Retrieved from http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/241339/the_history_of_playing_cards.html?cat=37