Format: http://www.debian.org/doc/packaging-manuals/copyright-format/1.0/
Upstream-Name: PySol Fan Club Edition - Additional Cardsets
Source: http://pysolfc.sourceforge.net/
Comment: The following cardsets from the upstream source package
 (found in the respective cardset-* directories) have been removed due to
 unclear, probably non-free licensing:
 patience
 rangoon-d
 rangoon-e
 rangoon-r
 tksol

Files: cardset-1567/*
Copyright: 1999 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The court cards in this set come from a deck published in France
 in the mid 16th century by Pierre Marechal.  The red Jacks are
 missing from the only original deck of this type known to exist.
 The Jack of clubs was flipped left to right and the pip was changed
 to create the Jack of Diamonds.  The Jack of Hearts was created
 by flipping the Jack of Spades.  The pip cards were created by
 using one pip of each suit from the courts.

Files: cardset-1750/*
Copyright: 1999 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The court cards in this set come from a deck published by English
 card maker Bamford in the mid 18th century.  The pip cards were
 created by using one pip of each suit from the courts.

Files: cardset-1815/*
Copyright: 1999 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The court cards in this set come from a deck published by Belgium
 card maker Hunt around 1815.  This was a "fake" pack of cards made
 to avoid the high English taxes.  The pip cards were created by
 using one pip of each suit from the courts.

Files: cardset-1880-delarue/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This card set was produced using the court images from a deck
 published by De La Rue of London in 1880.  Extra pip cards with
 eleven, twelve and thirteen pips were added to make this a Hex
 A Deck type card set.  The Wizards were taken from a late 19th
 century lithograph advertising the lounge in a hotel.

Files: cardset-1880-tarot/*
Copyright: 1999 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The images used in this card set were first published in France
 around 1760 by card maker Nicolas Conver.  That deck was produced
 using wood block molds and stencils.  They were widely copied
 by other card makers.  They were republished by the heirs of Mr.
 Conver in 1880 using lithography.  These images are from the
 1880 deck.

Files: cardset-1890-grimaud/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This card set is a set of unretouched photographs of a deck
 of cards published by card maker B. P. Grimaud of Paris in 1890.
 The indexes were added to the pip cards to make them usable
 in computer solitaire games.

Files: cardset-aisleriot/*
Copyright: 1998 Jonathan Blandford <jrb@mit.edu>
           1998 Markus F.X.J. Oberhumer <markus.oberhumer@jk.uni-linz.ac.at>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was adapted from gnome-games 0.27 (aisleriot).
 http://www.gnome.org

Files: cardset-amber-mahjongg/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This set of Mahjongg tiles uses a combination of classic pips
 and Ukiyo E style images.  The tiles resemble a variety of Baltic Amber.

Files: cardset-ashta-dikapala/*
Copyright: 2003 Mt. Hood Playing Card Company
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This Moghul Ganjifa card set uses the Ashta Dikapala or Guardians
 of the Eight Region as themes for the suits.  The backs depict
 Shri Ganesh, the Destroyer of Obstacles.

Files: cardset-bavarian-court/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The court cards in this card set use images that have been
 traditional in Bavarian countries since the early 19th century
 and before.  Images of this type probably originated in what
 is now Germany or Austria.  These images being double ended
 date from sometime in the mid to late 19th century.

Files: cardset-bavarian-half-court/*
       cardset-bavarian-half-court-s/*
Copyright: 2001 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This card set uses the classic style of court cards that
 is found in the region around Germany and Austria.  The
 card back is from a very old wood block and stenciled
 playing card which is from the same region.

Files: cardset-bavarian-half-hex/*
Copyright: 2001 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This card set uses the classic style of court cards that
 is found in the region around Germany and Austria.  The
 card back is from a very old wood block and stenciled
 playing card which is from the same region. The Wizards
 are from the Tarock deck which originated in the same area.

Files: cardset-belgium-export/*
Copyright: 2001 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The courts and Aces in this card set were published in Belgium
 around 1890.  The cards were nearly exact copies of cards from
 a publisher in another country (likely France or Russia).  Belgium
 card makers of this period made cards that resembled those of other
 card makers to get around various taxes in effect at the time.  In
 other words, they were contraband.

Files: cardset-bellot/*
Copyright: 2006 David Bellot
           2007 Skomoroh
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was adapted from the SVG cards by David Bellot.
 http://david.bellot.free.fr/svg-cards/

Files: cardset-briscola/*
Copyright: 1998 Niccolo Rigacci
           1999 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was adapted from the game Briscola by Niccolo Rigacci.

Files: cardset-chitrashala-dashavatara/*
Copyright: 2003 Mt. Hood Playing Card Company
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This Dashavatara Ganjifa card set uses the ten Avatars of Krishna
 or Vishnu as themes for the suits.  The backs depict Shri Ganesh,
 the Destroyer of Obstacles.

Files: cardset-colossus/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: These cards were originally a set of 32x32 pixel icons.  They
 were reduced to 27x32 pixels to give them a more "card like" appearance.

Files: cardset-culemann-1850a/*
       cardset-culemann-1850b/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The court cards in this set use images from a deck published in
 1850 in Hannover Germany by card maker Friedrich Georg Hermann Culemann.
 The cards were produced by stencil coloring lithographic prints.

Files: cardset-denizens/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The images used to create the courts for this card set were
 taken from a set of "trade cards" published in the United
 States of America in the late 19th century.  Cards of this
 type were given away as premiums with the purchase of various
 products.  The originals were actually part of a "fortune
 telling" deck.  The full set consisted of 36 different cards.

Files: cardset-dondorf-kinder/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The courts and Aces in this card set were published by B. Dondorf
 of Frankfort Germany in 1870.  They are representative of a type
 of deck published by card makers in many countries that use
 portraits of children for the Jacks, Queens and Kings.

Files: cardset-dondorf-whist-a/*
       cardset-dondorf-whist-b/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This card set uses the court and Ace images from a deck published
 by Dondorf and Co. of Frankfurt in 1896.  The cards are double ended
 and have different images on each end.  Two card sets were produced.

Files: cardset-eight-legions/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This Mughal Ganjifa card set uses one set of pip indicators
 commonly used on this type of deck.  The backs have a portrait of
 Babur, considered by some as the patron saint of Ganjifa cards.

Files: cardset-emperial-dondorf/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The courts and Aces in this card set were published by card maker
 B. Dondorf of Germany some time around the middle of the nineteenth
 century.  These are not the same images that were used in the deck
 that Dondorf published in 1894 under the name "Empire".

Files: cardset-fantasy/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The courts in this card set were originally published in France
 in the early part of the 17th century.  The pip cards were created
 by taking one pip or each suit from one of the court cards.

Files: cardset-fine-art-tarot/*
Copyright: 2004 Mark Polo <markpolo@gmail.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was created by mpolo.
 The images qualify as public domain under U.S. law
 (Corel decision on copies of two-dimensional artwork)
 and would likely be considered Fair Use in other jurisdictions
 (due to extremely reduced resolution).

Files: cardset-flowers/*
       cardset-flowers-small/*
       cardset-genjuro/*
       cardset-hanafuda/*
       cardset-hanafuda-tiny/*
       cardset-hanafuda-visions/*
       cardset-hwato/*
       cardset-ivory-mahjongg/*
       cardset-ivory-mahjongg-small/*
       cardset-mini-hanafuda/*
       cardset-oonsoo/*
       cardset-oonsoo-small/*
       cardset-sn-dietsche-small/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+

Files: cardset-french-1816/*
Copyright: 2001 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The courts and Aces in this set were taken from a pack published
 in France in 1816.  One of several publishers may have produced
 the cards.  All French card makers were required to print playing
 cards in patterns defined by law at the time.

Files: cardset-fromman-1890/*
Copyright: 2001 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The court cards in this card set were published in 1890 by card
 maker Fromman of Schaffhausen, Germany.

Files: cardset-gdkcard-bonded/*
Copyright: 1994 Heiko Eissfeldt <heiko@colossus.escape.de>
           1994 Michael Bischoff <mbi@mo.math.nat.tu-bs.de>
           1998 Felix Bellaby <felix@pooh.u-net.com>
           1998 Ryu Changwoo <cwryu@eve.kaist.ac.kr>
           1999 Markus F.X.J. Oberhumer <markus.oberhumer@jk.uni-linz.ac.at>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was adapted from gnome-games 1.0.2 (gdk-card-image).
 http://www.gnome.org

Files: cardset-get-a-round/*
       cardset-hungarian-tarokk/*
       cardset-kintengu-small/*
       cardset-maritimes/*
       cardset-ovale-salon/*
       cardset-prince-charles/*
       cardset-spin-dist/*
       cardset-transformation/*
       cardset-traugott-1800/*
       cardset-traugott-1834/*
       cardset-vienna-2k-small/*
       cardset-vienna-tarok/*
       cardset-wilhelmtell/*
Copyright: 1999, 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was created by T. Kirk.

Files: cardset-gnome-mahjongg-2/*
       cardset-gnome-mahjongg-3/*
Copyright: Jonathan Buzzard and Max Watson
           2007 Skomoroh
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This is an adapted version of a set of Mahjongg tiles found
 in Gnome Mahjongg.

Files: cardset-gortz-1841/*
       cardset-gortz-1842/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The court images in this card set were originally publish in
 a deck produced by card maker Heinrich Traugott Friedrich Gortz
 in Hannover Germany around 1841.  They were printed using copper
 plates and hand colored.

Files: cardset-gpl/*
Copyright: 1998 Oliver Xymoron <oxymoron@waste.org>
           1999 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was adapted from cards-2.0.tar.gz.
 http://www.waste.org/~oxymoron/cards/

Files: cardset-greywyvern/*
Copyright: 2004-2011 GreyWyvern
           2008 Deluge
License: GreyWyvern-BSD
Comment: Playing Cards Image set by GreyWyvern.
 Homepage: http://www.greywyvern.com/?post=183
 .
 Assembled for PySol by Deluge 2008.
 See http://opendesktop.org/content/show.php/?content=104357

Files: cardset-half-tarokk-s/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: These are traditional Tarock card faces that have been "cut in
 half" to produce two card sets.  One set uses the top end of the
 cards, the other set uses the bottoms.

Files: cardset-hamburg-a/*
       cardset-hamburg-b/*
Copyright: 1999 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The courts and aces in this card set were published in Frankfurt
 Germany around 1864 by card maker C. L. Wust.  The Kings depict
 influential citizens of Hamburg Germany of the time.  The Queens
 and Jacks are dressed in period costumes.  The Aces show important
 buildings in Hamburg.  Card set Hamburg A and Hamburg B use the
 same set of images.  The between the two difference is that the
 court cards are reversed.

Files: cardset-hanafuda-200-small/*
       cardset-hanafuda-200-tiny/*
       cardset-hanafuda-200-years/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: These cards are a reconstruction of a Hanafuda deck produced
 by the Japanese multi-plate wood block technique some time in
 the 19th century.

Files: cardset-hannover-court/*
       cardset-hannover-hex/*
       cardset-hegewald-1770/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The court images in this card set were published in Hannover
 Germany around 1770 by card maker Johann Gottlob Hegewald.
 They were produced with stencil colored wood block prints.

Files: cardset-hard-a-port/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This transformation card set uses images from a set of trade
 cards produced in the late 19th century in the United States
 of America.  Cards of this type were given away as premiums
 with the purchase of various products.  Each of the cards
 has a different image.

Files: cardset-houbigant/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The courts in this card set were first published in France by
 card maker Houbigant around 1818.  An interesting feature of
 the original deck is that it included an early form of indexing.
 There is a small suit sign in the lower right corner of each
 of the courts along with a letter abbreviation of the rank.
 This feature was not reproducible at the reduction required to
 make the cards usable with PySol.

Files: cardset-india-pantheon/*
Copyright: 2001 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The court cards and Aces in this set were hand painted in India
 by an unknown card maker some time in the late nineteenth century.
 Some of the elements are similar to those found in Ganjifa cards
 and it seems likely that the painter(s) were familiar with that
 type of cards.  Two interesting features of this deck are that
 the Hearts are inverted and that the courts and Aces have numbers
 rather than the more familiar letters.

Files: cardset-jacoby/*
Copyright: 1993-1996 John Heidemann <johnh@isi.edu>
           1999 Markus F.X.J. Oberhumer <markus.oberhumer@jk.uni-linz.ac.at>
License: Dontspace
Comment: This cardset was adapted from dontspace 1.2.
 http://www.isi.edu/~johnh/SOFTWARE/JACOBY/index.html

Files: cardset-joan-darc/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This card set has images from a deck of cards usually referred
 to as the Joan d'Arc pack.  The original deck was published in
 the early 19th century and has been widely copied.  Reproduction
 decks appear regularly.

Files: cardset-kabale/*
Copyright: 1998 Rene Seindal <rene@seindal.dk>
           1999 Markus F.X.J. Oberhumer <markus.oberhumer@jk.uni-linz.ac.at>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was adapted from Kabale.
 http://www.seindal.dk/rene/software/gtkabale

Files: cardset-kmahjongg-3d/*
Copyright: 1998 Mathias Mueller <in5y158@public.uni-hamburg.de>
           2007 Skomoroh
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was adapted from KMahjongg.
 http://www.kde.org

Files: cardset-kmahjongg/*
       cardset-kmahjongg-small/*
Copyright: 1998 Mathias Mueller <in5y158@public.uni-hamburg.de>
           2000 T. Kirk <grania@inetarena.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was adapted from kdegames 1.0 (KMahjongg).
 http://www.kde.org

Files: cardset-konqi-modern/*
Copyright: Laura Layland <l_layland@hotmail.com>
           Agnieszka Czajkowska <agnieszka@imagegalaxy.de>
           Stefan Spatz <stefan.spatz@stud-mail.uni-wuerzburg.de>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was adapted from kpat 2.0.
 Modern Konqi - play the family carddeck
 Design: Laura Layland <l_layland@hotmail.com>
 Katie by Agnieszka Czajkowska <agnieszka@imagegalaxy.de>
 Konqi by Stefan Spatz <stefan.spatz@stud-mail.uni-wuerzburg.de>

Files: cardset-lhombre/*
Copyright: 2001 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The court cards and Aces in this card set were published by
 B. Dondorf of Frankfurt Germany in 1890.  The proper name for
 the deck is l'Hombre but it is also known as the Sphinx deck.
 The deck was published with the blue and rust colored backs.
 The third back in this reproduction is actually one of the
 boxes the pack was sold in.

Files: cardset-liege/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The courts in this card set were first published in France by
 card maker Liege around 1811.  An interesting feature of the
 original deck is that it included an early form of indexing.
 There is an inverted suit sign in the lower right corner of
 each of the courts.  These signs have not been modified from
 the original images other than the reduction required to make
 them usable with PySol.

Files: cardset-little-sorcerer/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This card set has court images taken from a deck used in a fortune
 telling game called the Little Sorcerer.

Files: cardset-logomachy/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: These cards are from a game published in 1889 by McLoughlin Brothers.
 They are from the game of Logomachy or War of Words.

Files: cardset-melange/*
Copyright: 1999 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This card set was produced using court and ace images from
 several different decks of playing cards.  All of the decks
 were originally published during the early to late 19th century.

Files: cardset-migeon-costume/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The court cards in this set are taken from a deck printed by
 card maker Migeon of Paris in 1860.  The pack was one of the
 earlier ones to use rounded corners.  The convention of using
 one dot to designate Jacks, two for Queens and three for Kings
 was one of the earliest types of indexing.

Files: cardset-mini/*
License: GPL-2+
Comment: Upstream only states license, but not copyright information. Asked at
 https://sourceforge.net/projects/pysolfc/forums/forum/503708/topic/4880735
 for more information, but no reply yet.

Files: cardset-muller-schaffhausen/*
Copyright: 2001 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The courts and Aces in this card set were published by
 J. Muller of Schaffhausen Germany in 1860.

Files: cardset-national-patriotic/*
Copyright: 2001 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The original of this deck was published in 1897 by card maker
 David Kimberley and Sons of Birmingham England.  The court cards
 have portraits of royalty and leaders of England, France, Germany
 and the United States of the period.  The Aces have the flags and
 other emblems of the respective nations.  The back used in this
 reproduction is taken from the original box the cards came in.

Files: cardset-nickel-ante/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The court cards in this set were taken from a set of "trade
 cards" produced in the United States of America in the late
 19th century.  Trade cards were popular during this period
 as premiums given away with the purchase of various products.
 This set of cards was a transformation deck with images on
 the pip cards as well as the courts.  Not all the cards were
 available so only the twelve courts have images.

Files: cardset-naylor/*
Copyright: 1996 Mike Naylor <mike.naylor@5x5poker.com>
           1999 Markus F.X.J. Oberhumer <markus.oberhumer@jk.uni-linz.ac.at>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was adapted from cards.zip.
 http://www.serve.com/games/cards/

Files: cardset-nicu-ornamental/*
       cardset-nicu-small/*
Copyright: 2005 Nicu Buculei
           2007 Skomoroh
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was adapted from Nicu's Playing Cards.
 See http://www.nicubunu.ro/cards/ for Nicu Buculei's other works.

Files: cardset-oxymoron-small/*
Copyright: 1998 Oliver Xymoron <oxymoron@waste.org>
           1999 Markus F.X.J. Oberhumer <markus.oberhumer@jk.uni-linz.ac.at>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was adapted from cards-2.0.tar.gz.
 http://www.waste.org/~oxymoron/cards/

Files: cardset-paris/*
Copyright: Richard Hoelscher
           2007 Skomoroh
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was adapted from the SVG cards by Richard Hoelscher.
 http://rahga.com/svg/

Files: cardset-penguins/*
Copyright: 1998 DJ Delorie <dj@delorie.com>
           1998 Markus F.X.J. Oberhumer <markus.oberhumer@jk.uni-linz.ac.at>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was adapted from the Ace of Penguins 1.0.
 http://www.delorie.com/store/ace/

Files: cardset-revolution-1/*
       cardset-revolution-2/*
       cardset-revolution-3/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This card set was created using images from a deck published
 in France during the revolutionary period in the late 18th
 century.  During this period it was dangerous to produce or
 even to own anything too closely related to or representative
 of royalty.  Actually, you could end up at the wrong end of
 the guiotine.  Since card playing was one of the favorite pass
 times alternatives to the standard courts had to be found.
 This is one such set of alternative court card images.

Files: cardset-rivers-banks/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This card set uses images from a pack of Chinese Domino cards.
 The domino dots were duplicated at both the top and bottom of
 the cards.  The characters on the cards are from "The Story of
 the River's Banks".

Files: cardset-russian-bezique/*
Copyright: 2001 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The court cards and Aces were published in Czarist Russia in 1880.

Files: cardset-russian-court/*
Copyright: 2001 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The four court cards in each suit of this Hex A Deck card set were
 published in Czarist Russia sometime around the middle of the nineteenth
 century.  They may have been part of a deck used to play a game similar
 to Tarok, in which case the Trumps are missing.  Or they may represent
 a complete deck that was used to play an entirely different game.

Files: cardset-russian-mini/*
Copyright: 2001 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The images used to produce this card set are from a miniature deck
 produced in Czarist Russia around 1880.  The Ace of Clubs is imprinted
 with the mark and seal of Imperial Russia.

Files: cardset-schweitzertrachtenkarte/*
Copyright: 2001 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The courts and Aces in this card set were published in Wust,
 Germany in 1860 in a pack named Schweitzertrachtenkarte.

Files: cardset-seminole-war/*
Copyright: 2001 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The court cards in this card set were originally published in 1819
 by card maker J.Y. Humphreys of Philadelphia.  This is the earliest
 known U. S. made "No Revoke" deck which means that each of the suits
 has a different color.  In the original deck the Native American
 chiefs were the Jacks.  But they were here first weren't they?  The
 original back for this pack was unavailable.  The back chosen is a
 late 19th century photograph of Chief White Buffalo.

Files: cardset-shakespeare/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The court cards in this card set were published in London in
 1895 in a pack called the Shakespeare Playing Cards.

Files: cardset-slack-gnome-mahjongg/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This is an adapted version of a set of Mahjongg tiles found
 in Gnome Mahjongg in the Slackware 7 distribution.

Files: cardset-sn-dietsche/*
Copyright: 2001 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The courts and Aces of this card set were first published by
 Nederlandsche Speelkaartenfabriek in 1909.

Files: cardset-spaced/*
Copyright: 1999 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The backs for these cards came from the U.S. National Aeronautics
 and Space Administration.  The original images can be found at:
 http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/archivepix.html
 along with a lot more just like 'em.
 .
 The penguins are by "The PAPA" <papalini@biancaneve.ing.unifi.it>
 and can be found at:
 http://biancaneve.ing.unifi.it/~papalini/
 and there's a lot more of those too.

Files: cardset-spider/*
Copyright: 1989 Donald R. Woods and Sun Microsystems, Inc.
           1999 Markus F.X.J. Oberhumer <markus.oberhumer@jk.uni-linz.ac.at>
License: Spider
Comment: This cardset was adapted from spider 1.1.
 http://metalab.unc.edu/pub/Linux/games/solitaires/
 .
 The license qualifies as free according to
 http://lists.debian.org/debian-legal/2011/03/msg00040.html

Files: cardset-standard-small/*
       cardset-standard-tiny/*
Copyright: 1997 John Fitzgibbon
           1997 Jochen Tuchbreiter <whynot@mabi.de>
           1998 Markus F.X.J. Oberhumer <markus.oberhumer@jk.uni-linz.ac.at>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was adapted from kdegames 1.0 (KPoker).
 http://www.kde.org

Files: cardset-stone-mahjongg/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This Mahjongg tile set might have been carved on pieces of stone.

Files: cardset-stralsund-1890/*
Copyright: 2001 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The courts and Aces in this card set were published in 1890
 by a card maker named Stralsund.

Files: cardset-ten-avatars/*
Copyright: 2001 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This Dashavatara Ganjifa card set uses one set of pip indicators
 commonly used on this type of deck.  The backs have a portrait of
 Babur, considered by some as the patron saint of Ganjifa cards.

Files: cardset-tensho/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This card set is a late 18th century deck produced in Japan
 and is derived from the Hombre deck introduced by the Portuguese.
 The Hombre deck has pip cards from Ace through nine plus three
 courts.  The female court is the lowest ranked of the three.

Files: cardset-tuscany-court/*
Copyright: 2001 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The court card images in this card set are the classic style used
 to play the Italian game of Brisk or Briscola.  These cards use the
 French National Suit Symbols which is the custom in the Tuscany
 region of Italy.

Files: cardset-ukiyoe-fuji/*
       cardset-ukiyoe-fuji-tarock/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This card set uses Japanese Ukiyo E wood block prints as the
 trumps and courts.  Prints of this type were produced until
 around the middle of the 19th century.  The trumps are views
 of Mount Fuji by various artists.  The courts were also created
 by various artists.

Files: cardset-ukiyoe-sharaku/*
Copyright: 2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The court cards in this card set are some of the Ukiyo E wood
 block prints produced by the Noh actor Toshusai Sharaku.  Sharaku
 produced somewhere between 140 and 300 prints in approximately a
 year in 1794-1795.  Some artistic license has been taken in
 adapting these prints into a deck of cards.  Most notably, the
 dark background common to many of the portraits has been replaced
 with a lighter straw color similar to that found on some of them.

Files: cardset-warwick/*
Copyright: Warwick Allison
           2007 Skomoroh
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was adapted from kpat 2.0.

Files: cardset-wilhelm-tell-l/*
Copyright: 2001 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: The court cards and Aces in this card set were published by C. L.
 Wust of Frankfurt Germany in 1850.  The Aces depict scenes from
 the play Wilhelm Tell by Joachim Schiller.  The courts depict
 the actors and actresses in the play.

Files: cardset-xmahjongg-dorothys/*
Copyright: 2000 Dorothy Robinson <mokuren@teleport.com>
           2007 Skomoroh
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was adapted from XMAHJONGG 3.7.
 http://www.lcdf.org/xmahjongg/

Files: cardset-xmahjongg-small/*
Copyright: 2000 Berrie Bloem (http://www.mahjongg.com/)
           2007 Skomoroh
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was adapted from XMAHJONGG 3.7.
 http://www.lcdf.org/xmahjongg/

Files: cardset-xmahjongg-thick/*
Copyright: 2000 Eddie Kohler <eddietwo@lcs.mit.edu>
           2007 Skomoroh
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was adapted from XMAHJONGG 3.7.
 http://www.lcdf.org/xmahjongg/

Files: cardset-xpat2/*
       cardset-xpat2-nox-large/*
       cardset-xpat2-nox-medium/*
       cardset-xpat2-nox-small/*
       cardset-xpat2-nox-tiny/*
Copyright: 1994 Heiko Eissfeldt <heiko@colossus.escape.de>
           1994 Michael Bischoff <mbi@mo.math.nat.tu-bs.de>
           1998 Markus F.X.J. Oberhumer <markus.oberhumer@jk.uni-linz.ac.at>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was adapted from xpat2 1.04.
 http://metalab.unc.edu/pub/Linux/games/solitaires/

Files: cardset-xskat-french/*
       cardset-xskat-french-large/*
       cardset-xskat-german/*
Copyright: 1999 Gunter Gerhardt <gerhardt@draeger.com>
           2000 T. Kirk <grania@mailcity.com>
License: GPL-2+
Comment: This cardset was adapted from the game XSkat 3.2
 http://www.gulu.net/xskat/

Files: debian/*
Copyright: 2010 Bernhard Reiter <ockham@raz.or.at>
           2016 Hugo Lefeuvre <hle@debian.org>
License: GPL-3+

License: GPL-3+
 This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
 the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
 (at your option) any later version.
 .
 This package is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
 GNU General Public License for more details.
 .
 On Debian systems, the complete text of the GNU General
 Public License version 3 can be found in `/usr/share/common-licenses/GPL-3'.

License: GPL-2+
 This card set is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
 modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
 as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of
 the License, or (at your option) any later version.
 .
 This package is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
 GNU General Public License for more details.
 .
 On Debian systems, the complete text of the GNU General
 Public License version 2 can be found in `/usr/share/common-licenses/GPL-2'.

License: Dontspace
 # Copyright (C) 1993-1996 by John Heidemann <johnh@isi.edu>
 # All rights reserved.
 #
 # Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
 # modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
 # are met:
 # 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
 #    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
 # 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
 #    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
 #    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
 # 3. The name of John Heidemann may not be used to endorse or promote products
 #    derived from this software without specific prior written permission.
 #
 # THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY JOHN HEIDEMANN ``AS IS'' AND
 # ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
 # IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
 # ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO EVENT SHALL JOHN HEIDEMANN BE LIABLE
 # FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
 # DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
 # OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
 # HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
 # LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
 # OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
 # SUCH DAMAGE.

License: GreyWyvern-BSD
 These cards are released by me into the public domain.
 .
 For circumstances where a public domain domain licence cannot be used
 I also licence these cards using the following BSD licence:
 .
 .
 Copyright (c) 2004-2011, GreyWyvern
 All rights reserved.
 .
 Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
 modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
 met:
 .
 Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
 this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
 .
 Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
 notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
 documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
 .
 Neither the name of GreyWyvern.com nor the names of its contributors
 may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
 without specific prior written permission.
 .
 THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS
 IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED
 TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A
 PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
 OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
 SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
 LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
 DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
 THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
 (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
 OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

License: Spider
 /*
 % Copyright (c) 1989, Donald R. Woods and Sun Microsystems, Inc.
 %
 % Permission to use, copy, modify, distribute, and sell this software and its
 % documentation for any purpose is hereby granted without fee, provided that
 % the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that both that copyright
 % notice and this permission notice appear in supporting documentation, and
 % that the names of Donald Woods and Sun Microsystems not be used in
 % advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution of the software without
 % specific, written prior permission.  Donald Woods and Sun Microsystems make
 % no representations about the suitability of this software for any purpose.
 % It is provided "as is" without express or implied warranty.
 %
 % THE ABOVE-NAMED DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE,
 % INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS.  IN NO EVENT
 % SHALL DONALD WOODS OR SUN MICROSYSTEMS BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR
 % CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE,
 % DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER
 % TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE
 % OF THIS SOFTWARE.
 %
 % History: Spider is a solitaire card game that can be found in various books
 % of same; the rules are presumed to be in the public domain.  The author's
 % first computer implementation was on the Stanford Artificial Intelligence Lab
 % system (SAIL).  It was later ported to the Xerox Development Environment.
 % The card images are loosely based on scanned-in images but were largely
 % redrawn by the author with help from Larry Rosenberg.
 %
 % This program is written entirely in NeWS and runs on OPEN WINDOWS 1.0.
 % It could be made to run much faster if parts of it were written in C, using
 % NeWS mainly for its display and input capabilities, but that is left as an
 % exercise for the reader.  Spider may also run with little or no modification
 % on subsequent releases of OPEN WINDOWS, but no guarantee is made on this
 % point (nor any other; see above!).  To run Spider, feed this file to 'psh'.
 %
 % Author:       Don Woods
 %               woods@sun.com
 %
 %               Sun Microsystems, Inc.
 %               2550 Garcia Avenue
 %               Mountain View, CA  94043
 */