Pasakakrida is a race game that was described in the Manasollasa, a twelfth-century CE Sanskrit text from India. The game could be played with either four-sided or six-sided dice.
Rules
24 long rounded spaces, arranged in two rows of twelve, and each row split into two groups of six. Fifteen pieces per player, one with white pieces and the other with colored pieces. Two four-sided dice, with the values 2, 3, 4, 5. The pieces start in the following arrangement: White with five pieces on the top right space, the top left space, and the sixth from the bottom right; five colored pieces are on the sixth from the top, the bottom left, and the bottom right. Pieces are sent back to the beginning when another player's piece lands on an opponent's piece. A player's piece cannot land on a space that is occupied by more than one of the opponent's pieces. Pieces move according to the throws of the dice.
Browse all concepts for Pasakakrida (Type 2) here.
Reference
Bock-Raming 1995: 114-115.
Evidence Map
1 pieces of evidence in total. Browse all evidence for Pasakakrida (Type 2) here.
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Sources
Bock-Raming, A. 1995. "The Literary Sources of Indian Chess and Related Board Games." In A. de Voogt (ed.), New Approaches to Board Games Research: Asian Origins and Future Perspectives. Leiden: International Institute for Asian Studies.
Bock-Raming, A. 1995a. Untersuchungen zum Indischen Wurfelspiel in nachvedischer Zeit I: Das Backgammon nach der Darstellung des Manasollasa. Seevetal: Egbert Meissenburg.