Eighteenth-century lotteries
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Authors
Lotteries have been the playground for big successes and immense losses for at least six centuries. Games of chance have a much longer history. People have been throwing the dice for millennia. In the fifteenth century, however, an Italian patrician transformed aleatoric selection processes for political candidates into a system for the monetization of gambling. The Genoese Benedetto Gentile cleverly appropriated the giuoco del seminario, a mechanism of choice of candidates for the ‘membri dei Serenissimi Collegi’ and restaged it as a lottery game for the public: giuoco del lotto. In each case – political election and aleatoric game for personal profit –
the rule system was simply to pick 5 out of 90 available numbers. In the former case the chamber and the senate were selected, in the latter one the financial winners were determined by chance....
the rule system was simply to pick 5 out of 90 available numbers. In the former case the chamber and the senate were selected, in the latter one the financial winners were determined by chance....
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | The Casino, Card and Betting Game Reader : Communities, Cultures and Play |
Editors | Mark R. Johnson |
Number of pages | 20 |
Place of Publication | New York |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Academic |
Publication date | 11.2022 |
Pages | 374-393 |
ISBN (print) | 978-1-5013-4725-2 |
ISBN (electronic) | 978-1-5013-4727-6, 978-1-5013-4726-9, 978-1-5013-4728-3 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 11.2022 |
- Media and communication studies