Table GamesPub GamesGiant GamesBoard GamesOutdoorsTile & Dice GamesCard Games
Table GamesPub GamesGiant GamesBoard GamesOutdoorsTiles and DiceCard Games


See all .  

Dal Negro 90cm Telescopic
Steel Roulette Rake

 

Dal Negro have been the world's leading supplier of premium quality gaming boxes including Backgammon sets since the nineteen-fifties. They are also the global specialist in playing cards with a history going back to the mid-eighteenth century.

 

This is a good quality steel rake for use with larger Roulette mats. The handle is wooden. It is telescopic so shrinks down to a third of its extended size when not in use.

Length is a full 90cm (35 inches) when extended.

 

Dal Negro Telescopic Steel chip rake

Change to $
Change to €
UK pounds
(ex.VAT)
Pounds
(incl.
VAT)
ETA in
workg. days
Add to
basket

Dal Negro Telescopic steel chip rake (90cm)

£47.42 £56.90 Eng/Wales:
3 wk.days

For an immediate quote and ETA, add to the basket & select your location.


 

 

Masters Traditional Games


Product Index
Testimonials
View Basket
About Us

Game Rules


Shortcuts
Bowls
Chess




Ideas For:
Events
Pubs
Weddings
Fairs
Disabled


01727 855058
Email Us

 

 UK based
We ship globally


Printable version of this page
 
All material on this site - © Copyright Masters Games Ltd.

 

 

 

 

Origins and History of Roulette

Roulette seems to have been invented by monks in a French monastery, in the 17th century. Some attribute the invention to a French scientist called Blaise Pascal during his monastic retreat on 1655. Another theory is that French Dominican monks invented Roulette, basing it upon an old Tibetan game in which the object was to arrange 37 animal statuettes into a magic number square of 666. Roulette in French means "Small Wheel" which again points back to a French origin of the game.

E.O., a relative of Roulette seems to have become rapidly very popular in the 1770s until it was banned by statute around 1782, and it could well be that E.O. is the direct English ancestor of modern Roulette.

Documentary evidence indicates that the game of roulette sprung up in the 18th century. Like many English games, the earliest mentions are in legal documents banning the game. The English Act 18 Geo. II of 1745 stated "And whereas as certain pernicious game called Roulette or Roly-Poly is daily practiced"... "no place shall be kept for the playing of the said game of Roulette or Roly-Poly"....

You can learn more about Roulette from The Online Guide to Traditional Games.