International Draughts
(Polish Draughts, Dam Blas)DLP Game   
PeriodModern
RegionNorthern Europe
CategoryBoard, War, Leaping, Diagonal
Description
International Draughts, which is also commonly known as Polish Draughts, has become one of the most widely-played forms of Draughts in the world, and is played in international competitions. It seems to have originated in the eighteenth century in Paris, and spread throughout Europe from there and to the rest of the world through European colonisation.
Rules
10x10 board, 20 pieces per player. Pieces move diagonally one or can jump an opponent's adjacent player to capture it. Pieces can move forward or backwards. When a piece reaches the opposite edge of the board from its starting position, it becomes a king and can may move and jump over any number of spaces diagonally. Captures are compulsory and the maximum number of jumps must be made. Winning is achieved by capturing all the opponent's pieces or by blocking them from moving.
Murray 1951: 80-81
Origin
France
Ludeme Description
International Draughts.lud
Concepts
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Reference
Murray 1951: 80–81
Evidence Map
1 pieces of evidence in total. Browse all evidence for International Draughts here.
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Sources
Murray, H.J.R. 1951. A History of Board-Games Other Than Chess. Oxford: Clarendon Press.