Jeu Militaire
(French Military Game, Hare and Hounds)DLP Game   
Category
Board, Hunt
Description
The Jeu Militaire is a game documented since the nineteenth century in France. It was reported by several sources as being played in the French military.
Rules
The board consists of three intersecting lines, with diagonals drawn in the square formed. On opposite ends of the square, the central line is extended beyond the square and lines drawn from the adjacent corners to the end of this line, forming two triangles at opposite ends. One player takes the part of three white towers, the other the part of a single black army piece. First the army moves their piece, then the towers move one of their pieces, play alternating thereafter until the game is ended. A tower piece may move one step along a marked line in any forward or sideways direction. Tower pieces cannot move backwards, diagonally or otherwise, towards the end of the board from which they started. The army may move one step in any direction along a marked line. The army wins by passing the towers and reaching the end of the board from which they started. The towers win by trapping the army so that it cannot move in its turn.
Lucas 1887: 402-404.
These rules were taken from the Lucas ruleset.
All Rulesets
Described rulesets
Lucas
Rules for the French Military Game.
Suggested rulesets
Gardner
Described by M. Gardner.
Schuh
Described by Schuh
Origin
France
Ludeme Description
Jeu Militaire.lud
Concepts
Browse all concepts for Jeu Militaire here.
Reference
Lucas 1887: 402-404.
Sources
Garnder, M. 1963. "Mathermatical Games." Scientific American 209(4): 125-126.
Lucas, É. 1887. "Récréations scientifiques: le jeu militaire." La Nature: 402-404.
Similar Games
Identifiers
DLP.Games.368
BGG.31271
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