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Chaturanga (Caturanga, Catur)DLP Game   

Period Medieval

Region Central Asia, Eastern Asia, Southern Asia

Category Board, War, Replacement, Checkmate, Chaturanga

Description

Chaturanga is believed to be the earliest ancestor of Chess, Shogi, and many other similar games throughout the world. It is first documented in India, and the pieces (infantry, horses, elephants, and chariots) reflect the four divisions of the Indian army, who protect the counselor and king. Various Indian texts discuss the rules and problems, and it is also a popular theme in Indian art and literature.

Rules

Played on an 8x8 board. 8 Bhata (or Padati; move like Chess pawns but without being able to move two on the first turn); 2 Ashva (horses; move like Chess knights); 2 Gaja (elephants; two spaces in any orthogonal direction, jumping over the first square); 2 Ratha (chariots; moves like a rook in chess); 1 Mantri (counselor; moves one square diagonally in any direction); 1 Raja (king; moves one square in any direction). These are set up along one edge of the board: Ratha-Ashva-Gaja-Mantri-Raja-Gaja-Ashva-Ratha, with the eight Bhata lined up in the row in front of these, as in chess. Players take turns moving. When one piece lands on the space occupied by another piece, it is captured. Play continues until one player's king cannot move without being captured.

Bock-Raming 1996.

These rules were taken from the Manasollasa ruleset.

All Rulesets

Described rulesets
Manasollasa Rules from Manasollasa.

Scholarly rulesets
Elephant Diagonal Jump Elephants jump to the second space diagonally.
Elephant Diagonal Move Elephants move one space diagonally.

Origin

India

Ludeme Description

Chaturanga.lud

Concepts

Browse all concepts for Chaturanga here.

Reference

Murray 1913: 51–94

Evidence Map

6 pieces of evidence in total. Browse all evidence for Chaturanga here.

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Sources

Bock-Raming, A. 1996. Manasollasa, 5,560–623: Ein Bisher unbeachtet gebliebener Text zum indischen Schachspiel, übersetzt, kommentiert und interpretiert. Indo-Iranian Journal. 39(1):1–40.

Eder, M. 1994. "Die Schachfiguren aus Afrasiab: Fragen an die Wissenschaft zur Deutubng, Zeitstellung und Ikonographie. ANtike Welt 25(1): 71–78.

Mark, M. 2007. "The Beginnings of Chess." In I. Finkel ed, Ancient Board Games in Perspective. London: The British Museum Press, p. 138–157.

Murray, H. J. R. 1913. A History of Chess. London: Oxford University Press.

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Identifiers

DLP.Games.123

BGG.18011


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