The original name was The Baroness Patience, although the most common name since is just Baroness.[3] It has also been occasionally referred to "boringly and not very descriptively" as Five Piles[2] or Thirteens after two of its ludemes.[1] Arnold describes Baroness as "a most pleasant name... maintaining a tradition in which patience games were often named after ladies of the aristocracy."[4]
History
The first author to publish its rules, Mary Whitmore Jones, says, in 1890, that it is a "very old Patience."[3] Brock plagiarises the text verbatim in his 1909 work, but renames it The Baroness Solitaire.[5] In these earliest accounts, the Kings are first discarded as they do not pair with any other card.[3] In later accounts, the Kings are discarded singly.[a] Baroness has continued to feature in games literature down to the present day.
Rules
In the classic rules, the Kings are discarded at the outset;[3] otherwise they are discarded singly during play. The following is based on Arnold (2011), except where noted:[4]
The aim is to discard all the cards by removing any Kings and pairs of available cards that total 13. In this game, spot cards are taken at face value, Jacks are worth 11, Queens 12, and Kings 13. So the following combinations of cards may be discarded:[4]
Queen and Ace
Jack and 2
10 and 3
9 and 4
8 and 5
7 and 6
Kings on their own.
When all available discards have been made, five fresh cards are dealt, one onto each pile in the tableau either filling a space or covering the existing card. The new top cards are available for play and, once again, any Kings or combinations totalling 13 are moved to the discard pile. When the top card of a pile is discarded, the card beneath becomes immediately available. Play continues in this way until there are only two cards left in hand; these are used as grace cards,[b] being added to the end of the tableau, face up and side by side, and are available for play.[4][c]
Keller records several variations to increase the chances of winning:[2]
Six or seven piles are used.
Available cards may be moved to any spaces in the tableau.
Available cards may be paired with the card immediately beneath it.
Closely related games
The name Thirteens also refers to a closely related game that plays similarly, but begins with a tableau of ten cards in two rows or non-overlapping columns of five each. Cards are replaced individually from the stock as they are played.[d]
Footnotes
^For example, see Morehead & Mott-Smith (2001), p. 77.