Anthropology
Related: About this forumThese 10 Ancient Games Are Still Fun to Play
JULY 16, 2024
10 MIN READ
Find new ways to fill the long summer days with these quick primers on 10 ancient games
BY STEPHANIE PAPPAS
Game box for playing Senet and Twenty Squares, circa 16351458 B.C.E.
Penta Springs Limited/Alamy Stock Photo
Board games might involve a race to a finish line, as in Sorry! or that ubiquitous first board game for kids, Candyland. Or they might entail a strategic battle for dominance, as in chess or checkers. Some have simple rules (think Clue), while others have a headache-inducing learning curve (such as Feudeum, in which players control a set of medieval characters who must survive in a complex economy).
Whether you like to while away long hours with Monopoly or a quick Snakes and Ladders is more your speed, youre taking part in a tradition that stretches back millennia. Here are 10 of the oldest board games and a quick primer on how to play each one. With these games, you may find new (ancient) ways to fill the long summer days.
An inlaid game board and playing pieces discovered in a tomb at the southern Iraqi site of Ur. They date back to the second millennium B.C.E.Zev Radovan/Alamy Stock Photo
1. THE ROYAL GAME OF UR
First played: As early as 2600 B.C.E.
Who played it: Ancient Mesopotamians. The game also spread around Central Asia, from Iran to India.
The backstory: No one knows what the people who invented the Royal Game of Ur called it. Modern archaeologists named this game after the site in southern Iraq where the boards and pieces were found in the 1920s. The game was played until at least around 177 B.C.E., but it may have persisted into the 20th century among the Jewish community of Kochi, India, says Walter Crist, an archaeologist and lecturer at Leiden University in the Netherlands, who studies ancient games. Some snippets of the rules are known from ancient texts that describe the games distinctive I-shaped board but dont say the name of the game, which, Crist notes, would have been nice.
More:
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/10-ancient-games-that-are-still-fun-to-play/
Judi Lynn
(162,437 posts)Bernardo de La Paz
(51,024 posts)The rules are simple, you can make a board and "stones" with pieces of paper. There is a great online server with a wonderful user interface at https://gokgs.com
First played: Around 500 B.C.E.
Who played it: The ancient Chinese, who also spread the game throughout Asia.
The backstory: Myth and legend hold that a Chinese emperor named Yao taught his son Dan Zhu the game of Go as early as 2100 B.C.E., while other tales trace the game to the mythical Yellow Emperor Huangdi. The oldest archaeological evidence of the game dates to the last few centuries B.C.E., however, Crist says. Its basically the oldest of the traditional board games that are really still popular today, he adds.
The rules: Go is played on a 19-by-19 board of squares. Each of the two players gets a supply of stones (181 black pieces or 180 white ones) and must place them on the board in turn. The goal is to surround the other players stones to win more of the boards area. The player with the most area wins.
Can I play today? Oh, you can play all right. Go is a massively popular strategy game with associations dedicated to its play around the world.
The first boards were 15x15 (Tibet) and then 17x17. Modern 19x19 came in a few centuries ago and is the standard today. You can play good quick games on 13x13 and even 9x9.
The Magistrate
(96,043 posts)Fascinating!
"Every day's a school day."