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Shatranj

Shatranj (Arabic: شطرنج; Persian: شترنج; from Middle Persian chatrang چترنگ) is an old form of chess, as played in the Sasanian Empire. Its origins are in the Indian game of chaturaṅga.[1] Modern chess gradually developed from this game, as it was introduced to Europe by contacts in Muslim Al-Andalus (modern Spain) and in Sicily in the 10th century.

Two shatranj players in a detail from a Persian miniature painting of Bayasanghori Shahname made in 1430

Etymology and origins

The Persian word shatranj ultimately derives from Sanskrit (Sanskrit: चतुरङ्ग; caturaṅga) (catuḥ: "four"; anga: "arm"), referring to the game of the same name: Chaturanga. In Middle Persian the word appears as chatrang, with the 'u' lost due to syncope and the 'a' lost to apocope, such as in the title of the text Mâdayân î chatrang ("Book of Chess") from the 7th century AD. In Persian folk etymology, a Persian text refers to Shah Ardashir I, who ruled from 224 to 241, as a master of the game:

 
Antique North Indian Mughul shatranj chess set made from sandalwood.

"By the help of Providence, Ardeshir became more victorious and warlike than all, on the polo and the riding-ground, at Chatrang and Vine-Artakhshir, and in several other arts."[2]

However, Karnamak contains many fables and legends, and this only establishes the popularity of chatrang at the time of its composition.[3]

 
Iranian shatranj set, glazed fritware, 12th century Nishapur (New York Metropolitan Museum of Art)

During the reign of the later Sassanid king Khosrau I (531–579), a gift from an Indian king (possibly a Maukhari Dynasty king of Kannauj)[6] included a chess game with sixteen pieces of emerald and sixteen of ruby (green vs. red).[3] The game came with a challenge which was successfully resolved by Khosrau's courtiers. This incident, originally referred to in the Mâdayân î chatrang (c. 620 AD), is also mentioned in Ferdowsi's Shahnama (c. 1010).

The rules of chaturanga seen in India today have enormous variation, but all involve four branches (angas) of the army: the horse (knight), the elephant (bishop), the chariot (rook) and the foot soldier (pawn), played on an 8×8 board. Shatranj adapted much of the same rules as chaturanga, and also the basic 16-piece structure. There is also a larger 10×11 board derivative; the 14th-century Tamerlane chess, or shatranj kamil (perfect chess), with a slightly different piece structure.

In some later variants the darker squares were engraved. The game spread Westwards after the Islamic conquest of Persia and a considerable body of literature on game tactics and strategy was produced from the 8th century onwards.

In early Indian chaturanga (c. 500–700), the king could be captured and this ended the game. Persian shatranj (c. 700–800) introduced the idea of warning that the king was under attack (announcing check in modern terminology). This was done to avoid the early and accidental end of a game. Later the Persians added the additional rule that a king could not be moved into check or left in check. As a result, the king could not be captured,[7] and checkmate was the only decisive way of ending a game.[8]

With the spread of Islam, chess diffused into the Maghreb and then to Andalusian Spain. During the Islamic conquest of India (c. 12th century), some forms came back to India as well, as evidenced in the North Indian term māt (mate, derivative from Persian māt) or the Bengali borey (pawn, presumed derived from the Arabic baidaq).[9] Over the following centuries, chess became popular in Europe, eventually giving rise to modern chess.

Rules

  a b c d e f g h  
8                 8
7                 7
6                 6
5                 5
4                 4
3                 3
2                 2
1                 1
  a b c d e f g h  
Shatranj starting setup

The initial setup in shatranj was essentially the same as in modern chess; however, the position of the white shah (king), on the right or left side was not fixed. Either the arrangement as in modern chess or as shown in the diagram were possible. In either case, the white and black shāh would be on the same file (but not always in modern India). The game was played with these pieces:

Shatranj pieces
   shah (king)
   ferz (counselor or ferz)
   rukh ( rook)
   pīl, or "alfil" in Arabic (elephant or alfil)
   asb or faras (horse or knight)
   sarbaz / piyadeh, or "baydaq" in Arabic (soldier, infantryman or pawn)
     
     
     
     
     
Moves of the ferz
     
     
     
     
     
Moves of the alfil, which can jump over other pieces
     
     
     
     
     
Complementarity of the shatranj pieces' movements, excluding king and pawn.
  • Shāh ("king" in Persian) moves like the king in chess.
  • Ferz ("counselor"; also spelled fers; Arabic firz, from Persian فرزين farzīn) moves exactly one square diagonally, which makes it a rather weak piece. It was renamed "queen" in Europe. Even today, the word for the queen piece is ферзь (ferz) in Russian, vezér in Hungarian, vezir in Turkish, vazīr in Persian and wazīr in Arabic. It has analogue to the guards in xiangqi.
  • Rukh ("chariot"; from Persian رخ rokh) moves like the rook in chess.
  • Pīl, alfil, aufin, and similar ("elephant"; from Persian پيل pīl; al- is the Arabic for "the") moves exactly two squares diagonally, jumping over the square between. Each pīl could reach only one-eighth of the squares on the board, and because their circuits were disjoint, they could never capture one another. This piece might have had a different move sometimes in chaturanga, where the piece is also called "elephant". The pīl was replaced by the bishop in modern chess. Even today, the word for the bishop piece is alfil in Spanish, alfiere in Italian, fil in Turkish, fīl in Persian and Arabic, and слон ("elephant") in Russian. As chess spread from Iran northward to Russia, and westward into eastern Europe, south to Italy, and finally westward, it mostly retained the original name and look of the piece as an elephant. Usually, it was carved as a rounded shape with two blunt points representing the elephant's tusks. In Christian Europe, this piece became a bishop because the two points looked like a bishop's mitre to those unfamiliar with elephants in Western Europe. An early example of the bishop being used is the Lewis chessmen chess set of the 12th century. The elephant piece survives in xiangqi with the limitations that the elephant in xiangqi cannot jump over an intervening piece and is restricted to the owner's half of the board. In janggi, its movement was changed to become a slightly further-reaching version of the horse.
  • Asb (Faras) (current meaning of "horse" in Persian, from old Persian Asp (اسپ)), moves like the knight in chess.
  • Sarbaz ("soldier"; also called piyādeh (پیاده "infantryman") in Persian and adopted later to Baidaq (بيدق) in Arabic (a new singular extracted by treating the Persian form as an Arabic broken plural), moves and captures like the pawns in chess, but not moving two squares on the first move. When they reach the eighth rank, they are promoted to ferz.

Pieces are shown on the diagrams and recorded in the notation using the equivalent modern symbols, as in the table above. In modern descriptions of shatranj, the names king, rook, knight and pawn are commonly used for shah, rukh, faras, and baidaq.

There were also other differences compared to modern chess: Castling was not allowed (it was invented much later). Stalemating the opposing king resulted in a win for the player delivering stalemate. Capturing all one's opponent's pieces apart from the king (baring the king) was a win, unless the opponent could capture the last piece on their next move, which was considered a draw in most places in the Islamic world (except for Medina, where it was a win).[3]

The possible movements of the main shatranj pieces, excluding that of the king and pawn, are complementary to one another, and without any omission or redundancy occupy all available squares with respect to the central position of a 5x5 grid, as shown in the figure to the right.[10]

History

 
Early shatranj
 
Ivory chess king or vizier, 9th century, islamic art

Middle Persian literature

Three books written in Pahlavi, Kar-Namag i Ardashir i Pabagan, Khosrow and ridag, and Wizārišn ī čhatrang ("Treatise on Chess"), also known as the Chatrang Nama ("Book of Chess"), all mention chatrang. In Kār-nāmak it is said that Ardashīr "with the help of the gods became more victorious and experienced than all others in polo, horsemanship, chess, backgammon, and other arts," and in the small treatise on Khosrow and ridag, the latter declares that he is superior to his comrades in chess, backgammon, and hašt pāy. Bozorgmehr, the author of Wizārišn ī čhatrang, describes how the game of chess was sent as a test to Khosrow I (r. 531-79) by the "king of the Hindus Dēvsarm" with the envoy Takhtarītūs and how the test was answered by the vizier Bozorgmehr, who in his turn invented the game Backgammon as a test for the Hindus. These three Middle Persian sources do not give any certain indication of the date when chess was introduced into Persia. The mentions of chess in Kar-Namag i Ardashir i Pabagan and Khosrow and ridag are simply conventional and may easily represent late Sasanian or even post-Sasanian redactions.[11] According to Touraj Daryaee, Kar-Namag i Ardashir i Pabagan is from 6th century.[12] Wizārišn ī čhatrang was written in the 6th century.[13]

Early Arabic literature

During the Islamic Golden Age, many works on shatranj were written, recording for the first time the analysis of opening moves, game problems, the knight's tour, and many more subjects common in modern chess books. Many of these manuscripts are missing, but their content is known due to compilation work done by the later authors.[3]

The earliest listing of works on chess is in the Fihrist, a general bibliography produced in 377 AH (988 AD) by Ibn al-Nadim.[14][15] It includes an entire section on the topic of chess, listing:

  • Al-Adli's Kitab ash-shatranj ('Book of Chess')
  • Ar-Razi's Latif fi 'sh-shatranj ('Fun with Chess')
  • As-Suli's Kitab ash-shatranj (two volumes)
  • Al-Lajlaj's Kitab mansubat ash-shatranj ('Book: Strategies of Chess')
  • B. Aluqlidisi's Kitab majmu' fi mansubat ash-shatranj ('Book: Intent of Strategies of Chess')

There is a passage referring to chess in a work said to be by al-Hasan al-Basri, a philosopher from Basra who died in 728 AD.[citation needed] The attribution of authorship is dubious, however.

Player classification

Al-Adli as well as As-Suli introduced classifications of players by their playing strength. Both of them specify five classes of players:

  • Aliyat (or aliya), grandees
  • Mutaqaribat, proximes – players who could win 2–4 games out of 10 in the match against grandee. They received odds of a pawn from grandee (better players g-, a- or h-pawn, weaker ones d- or e-pawn).
  • Third class – players who received odds of a ferz from grandee.
  • Fourth class – received odds of a knight.
  • Fifth class – received odds of a rook.

To determine a player's class, a series or match would be undertaken with a player of a known class without odds. If the player won 7 or more games out of 10, he belonged to a higher class.

Notable players

During the reign of the Arab caliphs, shatranj players of highest class were called aliyat or grandees.[3] There were only a few players in this category including:

  • Jabir al-Kufi, Rabrab and Abun-Naam were three aliyat players during the rule of caliph al-Ma'mun.
  • Al-Adli was the strongest player during the rule of caliph al-Wathiq. At this time he was the only player in aliyat category.
  • Al-Razi (Persian polymath) in 847 won a match against an already old al-Adli in the presence of caliph al-Mutawakkil and so become a player of aliyat category.
  • As-Suli was the strongest player during the reign of caliph al-Muktafi. Ar-Razi was already dead and there were no players of comparable strength before as-Suli appeared on the scene. In the presence of al-Muktafi he easily won a match against a certain al-Mawardi and thus proved that he was the best player of that time. As-Suli considered Rabrab and ar-Razi as the greatest of his predecessors.
  • Al-Lajlaj was a pupil of as-Suli and also a great shatranj master of his time.

Gameplay

Openings

Mujannah–Mashaikhi opening
  a b c d e f g h  
8                 8
7                 7
6                 6
5                 5
4                 4
3                 3
2                 2
1                 1
  a b c d e f g h  
In the opening, players usually tried to reach a specific position, tabiya.

Openings in shatranj were usually called taʿbīya تَعبِيّة (pl. taʿbīyāt), تَعبِيّات in Arabic, which can be translated as "battle array". Due to slow piece development in shatranj, the exact sequence of moves was relatively unimportant. Instead players aimed to reach a specific position, tabiya, mostly ignoring the play of their opponent.

The works of al-Adli and as-Suli contain collections of tabiyat. Tabiyat were usually given as position on a half-board with some comments about them. The concrete sequence of moves to reach them was not specified. In his book Al-Lajlaj analyzed some tabiya in detail. He started his analysis from some given opening, for example "Double Mujannah" or "Mujannah–Mashaikhi", and then continued up to move 40, giving numerous variations.

Piece values

Both al-Adli and as-Suli provided estimation of piece values in their books on shatranj. They used a monetary system to specify piece values. For example, as-Suli gives piece values in dirhem, the currency in use in his time:[3]

Piece Value Shape of piece sometimes found
  king 2   seat, representing a throne
  rook 5   rectangular block with V-shaped cut in top, representing a chariot
  knight 3   cone with beak-shaped sideways projection at top
  ferz 2   seat, smaller than king, depicting a smaller throne
  alfil 2   cone with notch cut in top
  pawn 1   small cone, or sometimes a dome

Mansubat

Dilaram Problem, c. 10th century
  a b c d e f g h  
8                 8
7                 7
6                 6
5                 5
4                 4
3                 3
2                 2
1                 1
  a b c d e f g h  
White to move and win

Persian chess masters composed many shatranj problems. Such shatranj problems were called manṣūba مَنصوبة (pl. manṣūbāt), منصوبات. This word can be translated from Arabic as "arrangement", "position" or "situation". Mansubat were typically composed in such a way that a win could be achieved as a sequence of checks. One's own king was usually threatened by immediate checkmate.

One Mansuba is the Dilaram Problem (see diagram). Black threatens immediate checkmate by 1...Ra2#, Ra8#, or either Rb4#. But White can win with a two-rook sacrifice:

1. Rh8+ Kxh8 2. Bf5+ Kg8 3. Rh8+ Kxh8 4. g7+ Kg8 5. Nh6#

Note that the alfil (♗) moves two squares diagonally, jumping over intermediate pieces; this allows it to jump over the white knight to deliver the discovered check from the second rook with 2.Bf5+. It was said that a nobleman (playing White) wagered his wife Dilārām on a chess game and this position arose. She appealed "Sacrifice your two Rooks, and not me."[16]

See also

References

  1. ^ Jean-Louis Cazaux (2012-04-20). "Shatranj". History.chess.free.fr. Retrieved 2013-11-23.
  2. ^ Unknown court historian of the Sassanid Empire. The Karnamik-I-Ardashir, or The Records of Ardashir. Note: Vine-Artakhsir is a reference to the game later known as Nard, a predecessor of backgammon.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Murray 1913.
  4. ^ Eder, Manfred A. J. (2010). South Asian Archaeology 2007 Proceedings of the 19th Meeting of the European Association of South Asian Archaeology in Ravenna, Italy, July 2007, Volume II (PDF). Archaeopress Archaeology. p. 69. ISBN 978-1-4073-0674-2. (PDF) from the original on 2016-04-14.
  5. ^ Bakker, Hans T. (2017). The Huns in Central and South Asia. How Two Centuries of War against Nomadic Invaders from the Steps are Concluded by a Game of Chess between the Kings of India and Iran.
  6. ^ Jean-Louis Cazaux (12 March 2004). "The Enigma of Chess birth: The Old Texts: 6th, 7th and 8th centuries". Retrieved 14 July 2007.
  7. ^ Davidson, Henry (1949), A Short History of Chess, McKay, ISBN 0-679-14550-8 (1981 paperback)*Emms, John (2004), Starting Out: Minor Piece Endgames, Everyman Chess, p. 22, ISBN 1-85744-359-4
  8. ^ Davidson, Henry (1949), A Short History of Chess, McKay, ISBN 0-679-14550-8 (1981 paperback)*Emms, John (2004), Starting Out: Minor Piece Endgames, Everyman Chess, pp. 63–64, ISBN 1-85744-359-4
  9. ^ Jean-Louis Cazaux (16 June 2006). "Indian Chess Sets". Retrieved 14 July 2007.
  10. ^ Something similar also holds for both modern chess (rook-knight-bishop and knight-queen), as well as Tamerlane chess (general-vizier-elephant-catapult-knight and rook-general-knight-camel-giraffe).
  11. ^ "CHESS". ENCYCLOPÆDIA IRANICA. Retrieved 18 January 2016.
  12. ^ Daryaee, Touraj (2009). Sasanian Persia: The Rise and Fall of an Empire. I.B.Tauris & Co Ltd. p. 114. ISBN 9781850438984.
  13. ^ Explanation of chess and disposition of backgammon 2015-06-12 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ Nadīm (al), Abū al-Faraj Muḥammad ibn Isḥāq Abū Ya’qūb al-Warrāq (1970). Dodge, Bayard (ed.). The Fihrist of al-Nadim; a tenth-century survey of Muslim culture. Vol. i. New York & London: Columbia University Press. p. 341.
  15. ^ Nadīm (al-), Abū al-Faraj Muḥammad ibn Isḥāq (1872). Flügel, Gustav (ed.). Kitāb al-Fihrist (in Arabic). Leipzig: F.C.W. Vogel. p. 567 (p.155).
  16. ^ Murray 1913, p. 311 (bottom).

Bibliography

Further reading

External links

shatranj, 1969, film, 1969, film, 1993, film, 1993, film, arabic, شطرنج, persian, شترنج, from, middle, persian, chatrang, چترنگ, form, chess, played, sasanian, empire, origins, indian, game, chaturaṅga, modern, chess, gradually, developed, from, this, game, in. For the 1969 film see Shatranj 1969 film For the 1993 film see Shatranj 1993 film Shatranj Arabic شطرنج Persian شترنج from Middle Persian chatrang چترنگ is an old form of chess as played in the Sasanian Empire Its origins are in the Indian game of chaturaṅga 1 Modern chess gradually developed from this game as it was introduced to Europe by contacts in Muslim Al Andalus modern Spain and in Sicily in the 10th century Two shatranj players in a detail from a Persian miniature painting of Bayasanghori Shahname made in 1430 Contents 1 Etymology and origins 2 Rules 3 History 3 1 Middle Persian literature 3 2 Early Arabic literature 3 3 Player classification 3 4 Notable players 4 Gameplay 4 1 Openings 4 2 Piece values 5 Mansubat 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEtymology and origins EditThe Persian word shatranj ultimately derives from Sanskrit Sanskrit चत रङ ग caturaṅga catuḥ four anga arm referring to the game of the same name Chaturanga In Middle Persian the word appears as chatrang with the u lost due to syncope and the a lost to apocope such as in the title of the text Madayan i chatrang Book of Chess from the 7th century AD In Persian folk etymology a Persian text refers to Shah Ardashir I who ruled from 224 to 241 as a master of the game Antique North Indian Mughul shatranj chess set made from sandalwood By the help of Providence Ardeshir became more victorious and warlike than all on the polo and the riding ground at Chatrang and Vine Artakhshir and in several other arts 2 However Karnamak contains many fables and legends and this only establishes the popularity of chatrang at the time of its composition 3 Persian manuscript from the 14th century describing how an ambassador from India brought chess to the Persian court Indian ambassador probably sent by the Maukhari King Sarvavarman of Kannauj introducing chess to the Persian court of Khosrow I 4 5 Shams e Tabrizi as portrayed in a 1500 painting in a page of a copy of Rumi s poem dedicated to Shams See Rumi ghazal 163 Krishna and Radha playing chaturanga on an 8 8 Oshtapata board Iranian shatranj set glazed fritware 12th century Nishapur New York Metropolitan Museum of Art During the reign of the later Sassanid king Khosrau I 531 579 a gift from an Indian king possibly a Maukhari Dynasty king of Kannauj 6 included a chess game with sixteen pieces of emerald and sixteen of ruby green vs red 3 The game came with a challenge which was successfully resolved by Khosrau s courtiers This incident originally referred to in the Madayan i chatrang c 620 AD is also mentioned in Ferdowsi s Shahnama c 1010 The rules of chaturanga seen in India today have enormous variation but all involve four branches angas of the army the horse knight the elephant bishop the chariot rook and the foot soldier pawn played on an 8 8 board Shatranj adapted much of the same rules as chaturanga and also the basic 16 piece structure There is also a larger 10 11 board derivative the 14th century Tamerlane chess or shatranj kamil perfect chess with a slightly different piece structure In some later variants the darker squares were engraved The game spread Westwards after the Islamic conquest of Persia and a considerable body of literature on game tactics and strategy was produced from the 8th century onwards In early Indian chaturanga c 500 700 the king could be captured and this ended the game Persian shatranj c 700 800 introduced the idea of warning that the king was under attack announcing check in modern terminology This was done to avoid the early and accidental end of a game Later the Persians added the additional rule that a king could not be moved into check or left in check As a result the king could not be captured 7 and checkmate was the only decisive way of ending a game 8 With the spread of Islam chess diffused into the Maghreb and then to Andalusian Spain During the Islamic conquest of India c 12th century some forms came back to India as well as evidenced in the North Indian term mat mate derivative from Persian mat or the Bengali borey pawn presumed derived from the Arabic baidaq 9 Over the following centuries chess became popular in Europe eventually giving rise to modern chess Rules Edit a b c d e f g h 8 87 76 65 54 43 32 21 1 a b c d e f g h Shatranj starting setup The initial setup in shatranj was essentially the same as in modern chess however the position of the white shah king on the right or left side was not fixed Either the arrangement as in modern chess or as shown in the diagram were possible In either case the white and black shah would be on the same file but not always in modern India The game was played with these pieces Shatranj pieces shah king ferz counselor or ferz rukh rook pil or alfil in Arabic elephant or alfil asb or faras horse or knight sarbaz piyadeh or baydaq in Arabic soldier infantryman or pawn Moves of the ferz Moves of the alfil which can jump over other pieces Complementarity of the shatranj pieces movements excluding king and pawn Shah king in Persian moves like the king in chess Ferz counselor also spelled fers Arabic firz from Persian فرزين farzin moves exactly one square diagonally which makes it a rather weak piece It was renamed queen in Europe Even today the word for the queen piece is ferz ferz in Russian vezer in Hungarian vezir in Turkish vazir in Persian and wazir in Arabic It has analogue to the guards in xiangqi Rukh chariot from Persian رخ rokh moves like the rook in chess Pil alfil aufin and similar elephant from Persian پيل pil al is the Arabic for the moves exactly two squares diagonally jumping over the square between Each pil could reach only one eighth of the squares on the board and because their circuits were disjoint they could never capture one another This piece might have had a different move sometimes in chaturanga where the piece is also called elephant The pil was replaced by the bishop in modern chess Even today the word for the bishop piece is alfil in Spanish alfiere in Italian fil in Turkish fil in Persian and Arabic and slon elephant in Russian As chess spread from Iran northward to Russia and westward into eastern Europe south to Italy and finally westward it mostly retained the original name and look of the piece as an elephant Usually it was carved as a rounded shape with two blunt points representing the elephant s tusks In Christian Europe this piece became a bishop because the two points looked like a bishop s mitre to those unfamiliar with elephants in Western Europe An early example of the bishop being used is the Lewis chessmen chess set of the 12th century The elephant piece survives in xiangqi with the limitations that the elephant in xiangqi cannot jump over an intervening piece and is restricted to the owner s half of the board In janggi its movement was changed to become a slightly further reaching version of the horse Asb Faras current meaning of horse in Persian from old Persian Asp اسپ moves like the knight in chess Sarbaz soldier also called piyadeh پیاده infantryman in Persian and adopted later to Baidaq بيدق in Arabic a new singular extracted by treating the Persian form as an Arabic broken plural moves and captures like the pawns in chess but not moving two squares on the first move When they reach the eighth rank they are promoted to ferz Pieces are shown on the diagrams and recorded in the notation using the equivalent modern symbols as in the table above In modern descriptions of shatranj the names king rook knight and pawn are commonly used for shah rukh faras and baidaq There were also other differences compared to modern chess Castling was not allowed it was invented much later Stalemating the opposing king resulted in a win for the player delivering stalemate Capturing all one s opponent s pieces apart from the king baring the king was a win unless the opponent could capture the last piece on their next move which was considered a draw in most places in the Islamic world except for Medina where it was a win 3 The possible movements of the main shatranj pieces excluding that of the king and pawn are complementary to one another and without any omission or redundancy occupy all available squares with respect to the central position of a 5x5 grid as shown in the figure to the right 10 History Edit Early shatranj Ivory chess king or vizier 9th century islamic art Middle Persian literature Edit Three books written in Pahlavi Kar Namag i Ardashir i Pabagan Khosrow and ridag and Wizarisn i chatrang Treatise on Chess also known as the Chatrang Nama Book of Chess all mention chatrang In Kar namak it is said that Ardashir with the help of the gods became more victorious and experienced than all others in polo horsemanship chess backgammon and other arts and in the small treatise on Khosrow and ridag the latter declares that he is superior to his comrades in chess backgammon and hast pay Bozorgmehr the author of Wizarisn i chatrang describes how the game of chess was sent as a test to Khosrow I r 531 79 by the king of the Hindus Devsarm with the envoy Takhtaritus and how the test was answered by the vizier Bozorgmehr who in his turn invented the game Backgammon as a test for the Hindus These three Middle Persian sources do not give any certain indication of the date when chess was introduced into Persia The mentions of chess in Kar Namag i Ardashir i Pabagan and Khosrow and ridag are simply conventional and may easily represent late Sasanian or even post Sasanian redactions 11 According to Touraj Daryaee Kar Namag i Ardashir i Pabagan is from 6th century 12 Wizarisn i chatrang was written in the 6th century 13 Early Arabic literature Edit During the Islamic Golden Age many works on shatranj were written recording for the first time the analysis of opening moves game problems the knight s tour and many more subjects common in modern chess books Many of these manuscripts are missing but their content is known due to compilation work done by the later authors 3 The earliest listing of works on chess is in the Fihrist a general bibliography produced in 377 AH 988 AD by Ibn al Nadim 14 15 It includes an entire section on the topic of chess listing Al Adli s Kitab ash shatranj Book of Chess Ar Razi s Latif fi sh shatranj Fun with Chess As Suli s Kitab ash shatranj two volumes Al Lajlaj s Kitab mansubat ash shatranj Book Strategies of Chess B Aluqlidisi s Kitab majmu fi mansubat ash shatranj Book Intent of Strategies of Chess There is a passage referring to chess in a work said to be by al Hasan al Basri a philosopher from Basra who died in 728 AD citation needed The attribution of authorship is dubious however Player classification Edit Al Adli as well as As Suli introduced classifications of players by their playing strength Both of them specify five classes of players Aliyat or aliya grandees Mutaqaribat proximes players who could win 2 4 games out of 10 in the match against grandee They received odds of a pawn from grandee better players g a or h pawn weaker ones d or e pawn Third class players who received odds of a ferz from grandee Fourth class received odds of a knight Fifth class received odds of a rook To determine a player s class a series or match would be undertaken with a player of a known class without odds If the player won 7 or more games out of 10 he belonged to a higher class Notable players Edit During the reign of the Arab caliphs shatranj players of highest class were called aliyat or grandees 3 There were only a few players in this category including Jabir al Kufi Rabrab and Abun Naam were three aliyat players during the rule of caliph al Ma mun Al Adli was the strongest player during the rule of caliph al Wathiq At this time he was the only player in aliyat category Al Razi Persian polymath in 847 won a match against an already old al Adli in the presence of caliph al Mutawakkil and so become a player of aliyat category As Suli was the strongest player during the reign of caliph al Muktafi Ar Razi was already dead and there were no players of comparable strength before as Suli appeared on the scene In the presence of al Muktafi he easily won a match against a certain al Mawardi and thus proved that he was the best player of that time As Suli considered Rabrab and ar Razi as the greatest of his predecessors Al Lajlaj was a pupil of as Suli and also a great shatranj master of his time Gameplay EditOpenings Edit Mujannah Mashaikhi opening a b c d e f g h 8 87 76 65 54 43 32 21 1 a b c d e f g h In the opening players usually tried to reach a specific position tabiya Openings in shatranj were usually called taʿbiya ت عب ي ة pl taʿbiyat ت عب ي ات in Arabic which can be translated as battle array Due to slow piece development in shatranj the exact sequence of moves was relatively unimportant Instead players aimed to reach a specific position tabiya mostly ignoring the play of their opponent The works of al Adli and as Suli contain collections of tabiyat Tabiyat were usually given as position on a half board with some comments about them The concrete sequence of moves to reach them was not specified In his book Al Lajlaj analyzed some tabiya in detail He started his analysis from some given opening for example Double Mujannah or Mujannah Mashaikhi and then continued up to move 40 giving numerous variations Piece values Edit Both al Adli and as Suli provided estimation of piece values in their books on shatranj They used a monetary system to specify piece values For example as Suli gives piece values in dirhem the currency in use in his time 3 Piece Value Shape of piece sometimes found king 2 seat representing a throne rook 5 rectangular block with V shaped cut in top representing a chariot knight 3 cone with beak shaped sideways projection at top ferz 2 seat smaller than king depicting a smaller throne alfil 2 cone with notch cut in top pawn 1 small cone or sometimes a domeMansubat EditDilaram Problem c 10th century a b c d e f g h 8 87 76 65 54 43 32 21 1 a b c d e f g h White to move and win This section uses algebraic notation to describe chess moves Persian chess masters composed many shatranj problems Such shatranj problems were called manṣuba م نصوبة pl manṣubat منصوبات This word can be translated from Arabic as arrangement position or situation Mansubat were typically composed in such a way that a win could be achieved as a sequence of checks One s own king was usually threatened by immediate checkmate One Mansuba is the Dilaram Problem see diagram Black threatens immediate checkmate by 1 Ra2 Ra8 or either Rb4 But White can win with a two rook sacrifice 1 Rh8 Kxh8 2 Bf5 Kg8 3 Rh8 Kxh8 4 g7 Kg8 5 Nh6 Note that the alfil moves two squares diagonally jumping over intermediate pieces this allows it to jump over the white knight to deliver the discovered check from the second rook with 2 Bf5 It was said that a nobleman playing White wagered his wife Dilaram on a chess game and this position arose She appealed Sacrifice your two Rooks and not me 16 See also EditChess in early literature History of chess Tamerlane chess Timeline of chessReferences Edit Jean Louis Cazaux 2012 04 20 Shatranj History chess free fr Retrieved 2013 11 23 Unknown court historian of the Sassanid Empire The Karnamik I Ardashir or The Records of Ardashir Note Vine Artakhsir is a reference to the game later known as Nard a predecessor of backgammon a b c d e f Murray 1913 sfn error no target CITEREFMurray1913 help Eder Manfred A J 2010 South Asian Archaeology 2007 Proceedings of the 19th Meeting of the European Association of South Asian Archaeology in Ravenna Italy July 2007 Volume II PDF Archaeopress Archaeology p 69 ISBN 978 1 4073 0674 2 Archived PDF from the original on 2016 04 14 Bakker Hans T 2017 The Huns in Central and South Asia How Two Centuries of War against Nomadic Invaders from the Steps are Concluded by a Game of Chess between the Kings of India and Iran Jean Louis Cazaux 12 March 2004 The Enigma of Chess birth The Old Texts 6th 7th and 8th centuries Retrieved 14 July 2007 Davidson Henry 1949 A Short History of Chess McKay ISBN 0 679 14550 8 1981 paperback Emms John 2004 Starting Out Minor Piece Endgames Everyman Chess p 22 ISBN 1 85744 359 4 Davidson Henry 1949 A Short History of Chess McKay ISBN 0 679 14550 8 1981 paperback Emms John 2004 Starting Out Minor Piece Endgames Everyman Chess pp 63 64 ISBN 1 85744 359 4 Jean Louis Cazaux 16 June 2006 Indian Chess Sets Retrieved 14 July 2007 Something similar also holds for both modern chess rook knight bishop and knight queen as well as Tamerlane chess general vizier elephant catapult knight and rook general knight camel giraffe CHESS ENCYCLOPAEDIA IRANICA Retrieved 18 January 2016 Daryaee Touraj 2009 Sasanian Persia The Rise and Fall of an Empire I B Tauris amp Co Ltd p 114 ISBN 9781850438984 Explanation of chess and disposition of backgammon Archived 2015 06 12 at the Wayback Machine Nadim al Abu al Faraj Muḥammad ibn Isḥaq Abu Ya qub al Warraq 1970 Dodge Bayard ed The Fihrist of al Nadim a tenth century survey of Muslim culture Vol i New York amp London Columbia University Press p 341 Nadim al Abu al Faraj Muḥammad ibn Isḥaq 1872 Flugel Gustav ed Kitab al Fihrist in Arabic Leipzig F C W Vogel p 567 p 155 Murray 1913 p 311 bottom sfn error no target CITEREFMurray1913 help Bibliography Cazaux Jean Louis Knowlton Rick 2017 A World of Chess McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 9427 9 Murray H J R 1913 A History of Chess Reissued ed Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 827403 3 Further reading EditParlett David 1999 Shatranj Islamic Chess The Oxford History of Board Games Oxford University Press Inc pp 296 99 ISBN 0 19 212998 8 External links EditShatranj the medieval Arabian Chess by Jean Louis Cazaux Shatranj by Hans L Bodlaender The Chess Variant Pages The Time of Shatranj and the Aliyat by Miguel Villa ICC shatranj rules Shatranj at BoardGameGeek Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shatranj amp oldid 1136625036, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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