Pope Julius, or Pope July, is a gambling card game of the 16th century for four or more players. Players included King Henry VIII and it appears to have been one of his and Anne Boleyn's favourite pastimes.
Very little is known about the game, and its existence is known to be attested only by three written sources, those being:
- c. 1521 - John Skelton, Speke, parrot
- Of Pope Julius cardys he ys chefe cardynall.
- 1532 - anon, Privy Purse Expences of King Henry VIII (30 November 1532)
- Itm the xx daye delifed to the kingf grace at Stone whiche his grace loste at pope Julius game to my lady marques, m! Bryan and maister Weston
- c. 1596 - Sir John Harington, A Treatise on Playe, in Nugae antiquae (1769)
- Pope Julio (if I fail not in the name, and sure I am that there is a game of the cards after his name) was a great and wary player, a great vertue in a man of his profession
Some sources speculate that it was the precursor to the game of Pope Joan.
References
- Farquhar, Helen (1916). "Royal Charities" (PDF). British Numismatic Journal and Proceedings of the British Numismatic Society. 12: 84.
- Warnicke, Retha M. (1991). The rise and fall of Anne Boleyn: family politics at the court of Henry VIII. Cambridge University Press. p. 119. ISBN 978-0-521-40677-2.
- Grueninger, Natalie (2022). The Final Year of Anne Boleyn. Barnsley: Pen & Sword.
- Lives of the Queens of England by Agnes Strickland. Retrieved 24 December 2020.