Indian chess

This article is about regional versions of chess played in India. For ancient Indian chess variants, which are believed to be predecessors of chess by some historians, see chaturanga.

Indian chess is the name given to a variations of chess played in India in the 18th and 19th centuries. The more ancient forms are known as chaturanga, and spread to the west via Persia in the 7th Century. There are several such variations, all quite similar to modern rules, with variants regarding castling, pawn promotion, etc. These variants were popular in India until the 1960s.

Differences from Western chess

Names of the pieces

The queen is called the Minister. The knight has been called a horse since chaturanga times, and is attested to in the iconography of the modern knight. The following table describes one version of Indian chess terminology for the various pieces (including Hindi/Urdu pronunciations):[1]

Name Western Hindi Urdu
King king Rājā or Bādshāh Bādshāh
Minister queen Mantrī or Wazīr Wazīr
Elephant rook Hāthī Hāthī
Horse knight Ghoṛā Ghora
Camelbishop  ūṅṭ Ūnt
Infantry pawn Paidal or Pyādā Paidal or Pyādā

See also

References

  1. Cazaux, Jean-Louis. "Indian Chess Sets". Another view on Chess: Odyssey of Chess. Retrieved 25 November 2014.
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