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Title: A Cultural History of Traditional Board Games


1
A Cultural History of Traditional Board Games
Celia Pearce LCC 4725-8823 Game Design as
Cultural Practice Fall 2009
2
What is a game?
3
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6
What is the relationship between games and
culture?
7
Are games the first communication medium?
Peek-a-boo by Eric Joseph Cotter
Some scholars believe that games predate
language. Human babies learn to play games before
they learn to talk.
8
Photo National Geographic
  • Animals play games Anthropologist Gregory
    Bateson famously asked How do animals know when
    they are play fighting?

9
Jane Goodall aped by a chimp.
Mirror neurons enable humans and animals to
empathize imitate.
  • Recent research has found that mirror neurons are
    key to language play in both human and animals.

10
Zanzi the ape learning language skills.
Orangutan playing a video game at Zoo Atlanta.
  • Games are the primary method used to study the
    intelligence of Primates.

11
  • Kids can make a game or toy out of anything.

12
  • Play is universal to all cultures...

13
  • and eras.

and eras.
14
Craftsmanship
15
A Cultural History of Games
16
King Tut was a gamer
Senet board found in the tomb of Tutankhamen, who
was an avid player, and may have also believed he
could use it to win battles in the afterlife.
  • Senet is the the oldest known board game
  • Oldest archaeological evidence dates from 3500
    BCE

17
Senet
Queen Nefertari playing Senet
  • Appears to have been played primarily by royalty
    of both sexes

18
Royal Game of Ur
  • Oldest evidence dates back to 2600BCE
  • Believed to be the predecessor to Backgammon

19
Backgammon
  • In the 11th century Shahnameh, the Persian poet
    Ferdowsi credits Burzoe with the invention of the
    game nard in the 6th century. He describes an
    encounter between Burzoe and a Raja visiting from
    India. The Raja introduces the game of chess, and
    Burzoe demonstrates nard, played with dice made
    from ivory and teak

20
Backgammon
Backgammon players, from Alfonso X Libro de los
Juegos
Herr Goeli, from the 14th century Codex Manesse
  • Herr Goeli, from the 14th century Codex Manesse

21
Backgammon
  • Backgammon board manufacture (c.1280)
  • From Alfonso X Libro de los Juegos

22
Backgammon
  • Brädspel ("board game") set recovered from the
    warship Vasa, which sank in 1628.

23
Backgammon
  • Lebanese backgammon board carved from wood.

24
Mancala aka Gebeta
  • Ancient Gebeta (Mancala) holes from in Aksum (or
    Axum), Ethiopia.

Mancalas age is debated, but Murray, a noted
archaeologist, traced its origins as far back as
15th to 11th centuries BCE.
25
Mancala aka Gebeta
Seega
Gebeta aka Mancala
  • Many examples of mancala-style board games have
    been found carved into stone in Petra, the
    capital of ancient Nabataea, Ethiopia, hence
    earning its moniker the City of Games.

26
Mancala aka Gebeta
  • Mancala is still played in many variants in
    Africa and throughout the world. African boards
    carved from wood are often sculptural works of
    art.

27
Sri Lankan variant Olinda Kaliya
  • Olinda Kaliya table, a Mancala variant in the
    lobby of the Kandalama Hotel, Sri Lanka (left).

Mancala derivatives are usually called seed or
counting games and involve sowing stones or
seeds from pits into your kalaha pit.
28
The Alquerque Family (Quirkat or al-Quirkat)
Spanish men en playing Alquerque, pictured in
''Libro de los juegos (c.1283)
  • Quirkat, is a checkers-like game, probably of
    Egyptian origin, believed to have crossed the
    straits with Tariq's conquering Arab and Berber
    army in 711 A.D., then spread from Moorish Spain
    (al-Andalus) to the rest of Europe.

29
The Alquerque Family (Quirkat or al-Quirkat)
  • Before starting, each player places their twelve
    pieces in the two rows closest to them and in the
    two rightmost spaces in the center row.
  • A piece can move from its point to any adjacent
    empty point
  • A piece can jump over an opposing piece and
    remove it from the game, if that opposing piece
    is adjacent and the point beyond it is empty
  • Multiple capturing jumps are permitted, and
    compulsory if possible
  • If a capture is possible it must be made, or else
    the piece is removed (or huffed)
  • The goal of the game is to eliminate the
    opponent's pieces.

30
The Alquerque Family (Checkers/Draughts)
  • The Madagascan game of Fanorona (c. 1680 AD)
  • is a descendant of Alquerque and is still played
    today.

31
The Alquerque Family (Checkers/Draughts)
  • Draughts players in medieval England

32
The Alquerque Family
  • Children playing giant Draughts, June 7, 1934
  • (Photo by Fred Morley, Getty Images)

33
The Alquerque Family (Checkers/Draughts)
  • Sri Lankans playing a variant of draughts.

34
Go
Go, also named WeiChi or WeiQi in China and Baduk
in Korea, is a traditional game for control of
territory. It may date back as far as 23372258
BC, but the earliest reference dates to the 4th
Century BCE.
35
Go
In many East Asian cultures, Go was considered
one of the most important skills a civilized
person could learn. This screen showing Chinese
Go players in the Ming Dynasty was made by Kano
Eitoku (????) in the 16th century.
36
Go
All things of this world I can generally
understand, only I cannot bear myself to be
defiled by playing go. Lun Pu (967-1028)
In China, Go was considered one of the Four
Accomplishments of the civilized person, which
also included lute, calligraphy and painting.
Here, the poet Lun Pu laments his poor skill at
the game.
37
Go
Confucius and Lao-tze Playing Go, Diptych by
Suzuki Rinsho, Kubo Shunman, and Tsutsumi Tomei
c.1800.
Many traditional images from China and Japan
depict the immortals and other key figures
playing Go.
38
Go
Titled The Pleasure Quarters in Full Splendor,
this print by Chikashige depicts the courtesans
of an upper-class establishment showing off their
skills at music, poetry, go, and painting.
In Japan, Geisha and courtesans were expected to
learn Go as part of their repertoire of
entertainment.
39
Go
In China, Go was considered the game of the
aristocracy while Chess was considered the game
of the masses.
40
Go
These are among a number of Japanese prints using
Go as an allegory for warrior supremacy.
41
Dice and Dominoes
  • Dice were originally made of knucklebones of
    hooved animals such as oxen, and often used for
    fortune-telling. As a result early dice tended to
    be tetrahedral in shape.

42
Dice and Dominoes
Norse rune stones.
Assorted dice from different cultures.
iChing coins and hexagram
  • Dice games of some kind have existed in nearly
    every culture. Games of chance have ranged from
    being viewed as sacred to sinful, depending on
    the culture. Chance also plays a major role in
    some fortune-telling systems, such as Chinese
    I-Ching and Nordic Runes.

43
Dice and Dominoes
Indian stick dice.
Walnut-shell dice used for gambling by the Native
American Yokuts
  • Dice variants appear in sites diverse as ancient
    Egypt and India to the pre-Columbian Americas.

44
Dice and Dominoes
  • The ancient Romans enjoyed dice, although the
    game was forbidden except during certain
    festivals. Philosophers of the Roman era thought
    that dice playing was a waste of time, and even
    dangerous.

45
Dice and Dominoes
Egyptian dice
Assorted Asian dice.
  • Like many games, dice are thought to have
    returned to Europe from China via the Middle-East.

46
Dice and Dominoes
  • Dice-making (c.1280) from Alfonso X, Libro de
    los Juegos

Dice were very popular in Medieval Europe,
although they were, like all gambling and games
(especially games of chance), considered sinful.
47
Dice and Dominoes
  • Dice-makers, 16th Century

48
Dice and Dominoes
Chinese domino cards from the 19th Century.
Chinese dominoes. (University of Waterloo Games
Museum)
  • The patterns on dominoes, which also originated
    in China, are based on the number rolls of
    six-sided dice. Both are essentially systems with
    which many games can be played. There are also
    domino card systems in China.

49
Dominoes
Cuba (Photo by Roy Llera)
Dominican Republic
  • Dominoes are extremely popular in the Caribbean,
    played almost exclusively by men.

50
Dominoes variants - Mah Jongg
  • Legend has it that Mah Jongg was invented by
    Confucius around 500 CE. Another says the game
    was invented by a Princess in the Court of the
    Emperor Wu. Most historians believe it originated
    in the 1800s and was derived from the card game
    Mah-Tiao, a game played during the Ming Dynasty
    (1368-1644), in the 1800s. Mah Jongg appears to
    be a hybrid between cards and dominoes.

51
Mah Jongg
Mrs. J.P. Babcock Miriam Cordell, star of
"Rain," playing Mah Jongg. Babcock and her
husband brought the game to the U.S. from China.
  • Mah Jongg became very popular in the US in the
    1920s and 1930s, and was a particular favorite
    among Jewish women. The game remains popular
    today among this demographic. The popularity of
    the game coincided with the rise of orientalism
    in the US.

52
Card Games A Migratory Tale
  • Playing cards originated China sometime between
    600 and 1000CE. The cards were more strip-shaped
    than modern cards and contained images having to
    do with wealth and money. Paper and printing were
    enabling technologies that made this possible.

53
Card Games A Migratory Tale
  • From China playing cards spread to the Islamic
    cultures, where cups and swords were added to
    represent various "suits" and "court" cards.
    These Mamlûk cards date from the 1100s and
    1200s and resemble Italian Tarot cards. Note the
    longer shape similar to Chinese cards.

54
Card Games A Migratory Tale
  • From Andy Polletts History of Playing Cards web
    site

Map showing migration of various card game genres
throughout Europe from the Middle East.
55
Card Games A Migratory Tale
  • By 1377 cards had arrived in Europe, and the
    court cards began showing kings, knights, and
    other royalty to represent higher values. In
    Germany and Switzerland, the two lower court
    cards are both on foot, representing an 'upper'
    and a 'lower' rank-as stated in the 1377
    description of playing-cards.

56
Card Games A Migratory Tale
From Denis Diderot's Encyclopedia of Trades and
Industry (18th Century)
  • Fueled by the rise of the printing press, in
    addition to printing biblical texts, printing
    could also be enjoyed by sinners in the form of
    playing cards.

57
Card Games
Original Arabic Suits
Contemporary Western Suits
  • As playing cards spread throughout Europe, the
    suit symbols developed were adapted from the
    Arabic suits based on regional cultures, until
    they arrived at the abstract symbols we recognize
    today as playing card suits.

58
Card Games
Coin
Cup/ Chalice
Sword
Club
Spanish playing cards by Fournier in the
Castilian style.
Spanish card suits Castilian, Catalan and Cadíz
  • Early design the Spanish cards borrowed from the
    four Arabic suits, slightly changing the signs of
    the two long suits (originally featuring
    scimitars and polo sticks) into something more
    identifiable by the local folk.

59
Card Games
Moroccan Cadíz pattern
  • As cards migrated from Arabic to European
    countries, their designs and representations
    evolved to reflect the culture.

60
Card Games
IX of France (marshal)
Queen of Bohemia
VII of Hungary (chief cook)
III of France (tailor)
  • The German Hofämterspiel (or householders
    deck) depicts many different members of a
    typical medieval court household. (c.1460)

61
Card Games
Pack of Fifty-two Playing Cards from Southern
Lowlands (Burgundian territories), ca.
147080 (Metropolitan Museum, Cloisters)
Queen of Bohemia
62
Card Games
Hand-painted Stuttgart Cards (Stuttgarter
Kartenspiel) (c.1430)
Hunting Cards
63
Card Games
Renaissance Lords and Ladies enjoying a game of
cards (with gambling)!
64
Card Games
Native American playing cards hand-painted on
leather.
65
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66
Earliest known chess pieces (chatrang), found at
Afrasaib, near Samarkand in Uzbekistan, dated 760
AD.
67
Persia, 1100 AD
68
Ancient European queen, 12th century, Spain
69
Scandinavian style chessmen, 12th century,
Scotland
70
Giant Chess Set, Dimapur, Nagaland, India,
associated with Mahabharata hero Bhima's wife
71
  • Chess-making from Alphonse X Book of Games
    (c.1280)

72
  • The Chess Match, by Lucas van Leyden (1508),
    captures a variant, Courier Chess, played in
    Central Europe for over six centuries.

73
Ben Franklin and Lady Howe play chess in 1774
while discussing British-Colony relations.
74
  • References
  • Ancient Board Games of the Nabataeans.
    www.nabataeans.net
  • Andy Polletts History of Playing Cards
    http//www.geocities.com/a_pollett/
  • Bateson, (1972). A Theory of Play and Fantasy. In
    Steps Toward an Ecology of Mind. New York
    Ballantine.
  • Concise History of Playing Cards
    http//www.wopc.co.uk/history/
  • Creative Pro http//www.creativepro.com
  • Crystalpunk http//www.socialfiction.org/
  • Ferrari, P.F., Gallese, V., Rizzolatti, G.,
    Fogassi, L. (2003). Mirror Neurons Responding to
    the Observation of Ingestive and Communicative
    Mouth Actions in the Monkey Ventral Premotor
    Cortex. European Journal of Neuroscience, 17,
    1703-1714.
  • Grunfeld, Frederic V. (1975). Games of the World.
    New York Holt, Rinehart and Winston. (Medieval
    Alquerque)
  • http//www.answers.com/topic/mancala?catentertain
    ment
  • International Playing Card Society
    http//i-p-c-s.org/history.html
  • Mah Jongg Museum http//www.mahjongmuseum.com/
  • Pinkard, William. Japanese prints and the world
    of Go. http//www.kiseido.com/printss/ukiyoedx.htm
    l
  • The Online Guide to Traditional Games
    http//www.tradgames.org.uk/index.html
  • Univeristy of Waterloo Games Museum, Canada
    http//www.gamesmuseum.uwaterloo.ca
  • Wikipedia
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