Ashtapada
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Ashtāpada (Sanskrit: अष्टापद) or Ashtapadi is an Indian board game which predates chess and was mentioned on the list of games that Gautama Buddha would not play. Chaturanga, which could be played on the same board, appeared sometime around the 6th century in India. It could be played by two to four participants.
Variants played on different boards include Daśapada (Sanskrit: दशपद). and, in Gujarat, Chomal Ishto or Chomal Eshto . Similar traditional games can be found in China and Korea.
Etymology
The word Ashtāpada is a Sanskrit term describing the eight-by-eight board that the game is played on. This meaning was first recorded by Patanjali in a Mahābhāshya book written in the 2nd century. The game came to be ordered to work Brahmin Sutrakrilānga.
Rules
Like a chess board, the Ashtāpada board is divided into an eight-by-eight grid of squares, although they are all the same color. The board has special markings known as "castles", where pieces are safe from being captured or removed from play when mating with an opponent.
Each player receives an even number of pieces to play the game. The goal is to move a piece around the board clockwise, entering the castle, and to regain his castle back in a counterclockwise direction so as to make it reach the center.
Variants
A variant played on a larger ten-by-ten board is known as Daśapada (Sanskrit: दशपद).
A variant played on smaller five-by-five board is known as Chomal Ishto or Chomal Eshto in Gujarat. Each player has four pieces to play and retrieve after reaching the center. The game is generally played with cowrie shells instead of dice to determine the progress of game.
In Korea, the board of the traditional game 용호쌍륙 (Korean: 용호쌍륙) is similar to Ashtapada.[1][2]
In China, the rules of traditional board game 雞婆棋 is similar to Ashtapada.
See also
References
- ↑ "으라차차 - 농어촌 교수학습지원센터". classfarm.com. Retrieved 2012-08-25.
- ↑ 용호쌍륙 (in Korean). Gababo.com. Retrieved 2012-08-25.