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Chaturanga
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- This article is about two-handed ancient game Chaturanga. For the four-handed version, played with dice, see Chaturaji.
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Chaturanga (Sanskrit ???????) is an ancient (Gupta period) Indian game which is presumed to be the common ancestor of the games of chess, shogi, and makruk, and related to xiangqi and janggi.
Chaturanga developed in Gupta India around the 6th century.

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Encyclopedia
- This article is about two-handed ancient game Chaturanga. For the four-handed version, played with dice, see Chaturaji.
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| Chaturanga pieces |
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| | Raja (King) | | | Mantri or Senapati (Counselor or General; Queen) | | | Iratham (Chariot; Rook) | | | Yaanei (Elephant: Bishop) | | | Kutharei (Horse; Knight) | | | Pawn) | |
Chaturanga (Sanskrit ???????) is an ancient (Gupta period) Indian game which is presumed to be the common ancestor of the games of chess, shogi, and makruk, and related to xiangqi and janggi.
Chaturanga developed in Gupta India around the 6th century. In the 7th century, it was adopted as Shatranj in Sassanid Persia, which in turn was the form that brought chess to late medieval Europe (see Origins of chess for more information on the ancestry of chess.)
The exact rules of Chaturanga are not known. Chess historians suppose that the game had the similar rules to those of its successor Shatranj. In particular, there is uncertainty as to the moves of the Gaja (elephant), the precursor of the Bishop in modern chess.
History
Sanskrit is a bahuvrihi compound, meaning "having four limbs or parts" and in epic poetry often means "army". The name itself comes from a battle formation mentioned in the Indian epic Mahabharata, referring to four divisions of an army, viz. elephants, chariots, cavalry, and infantry.
Chaturanga was played on an 8x8 uncheckered board, called . The board had some special markers, the meaning of which is unknown today. These markers were not related to chaturanga, but were drawn on the board only by tradition. The great chess historian Murray has conjectured that the Ashtapada was also used for some old race-type dice game, perhaps similar to Chowka bhara, in which these markers had a meaning.
An early reference to an ancient Indian board-game is sometimes attributed to Subandhu in his Vasavadatta (c. AD 450):
The colors are not those of the two camps, but mean that the frogs have a two-tone dress, yellow and green.
Banabhatta's Harsha Charitha (c. 625) contains the earliest reference to the name Chaturanga:
If there is little doubt that Ashtāpada is the gaming-board of 8x8 squares, the double meaning of Chaturanga, as the four folded army, may be controversial. There is a probability that the ancestor of Chess was mentioned there.
Pieces
- Raja (King) - Moves like the King in chess, as in Shatranj.
- Rani (Queen); also known as Senapati (General) - Moves one square diagonally, like the Fers in Shatranj.
- Iratham (Chariot); also spelled Sakata - Moves like the Rook in chess, as in Shatranj.
- Yaanei (Elephant) - Three different moves are described in ancient literature:
- Two squares in any diagonal direction, jumping over one square, as the Alfil in Shatranj. This is likely its oldest move.
- The same move is used for the Boat in a four-handed version of Chaturangam, Chaturaji.
- The Elephant in Xiangqi (Chinese chess) has the similar move, but without jumping. (The name Elephant is used for a fairy chess piece with this move: a (2,2) leaper, but one that cannot jump over an intervening piece.)
- One square forward or one square in any diagonal direction (think of the four legs and trunk of the elephant).
- This is the same move as the Silver General in Shogi.
- In Makruk (Thai chess) and Sittuyin (Burmese chess) the elephant moves in the same way.
- This move was described ca. 1030 by Biruni in his India book.
- Two squares in any orthogonal direction, jumping over one square.
- A piece with such a move is called a in some chess variants. This move was described by the Arabic chess master ca. 840 in his (partly lost) chess work. (The Arabic word dabbabah in former times meant a covered siege engine for attacking walled fortifications, and nowadays means "army tank").
- The German historian Johannes Kohtz (1843-1918) suggests, rather, that this was the earliest move of the Ratha.
Kutharei (Horse); also spelled Ashva, Ashwa, Asva - Moves like the Knight in chess, as in Shatranj. (This is the distinctive move that marks a game as a likely descendant of Chaturanga.)Padąti/Bhata (Foot-soldier); also spelled Pedati, Bhata; also known as Sainik (Warrior) - Moves like the Pawn in chess, as in Shatranj.
Al-Adli also mentions two further differences from Shatranj:
- Stalemate was a win for a stalemated player. This rule seems to be quite illogical, however it appeared again in some medieval chess variations in England ca. 1600. According to some sources, there was no stalemate, though this is improbable.
- The player, who is first to bare the opponent's king (captures all the pieces except the king), wins. In Shatranj this is also a win, but only in the case that the opponent cannot bare the player's king on the next move in return.
See also
External links
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