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Traditional games of India

India has several traditional games and sports,[1] some of which have been played for thousands of years.[2][3][4] Their popularity has greatly declined in the modern era, with Western sports having overtaken them in India during the British Raj,[5] and the Indian government now making some efforts to revive them.[6][7] Many of these games do not require much equipment or playing space.[8] Some of them are only played in certain regions of India, or may be known by different names and played under different rules and regulations in different regions of the country.[9][10] Many Indian games are also similar to other traditional South Asian games.

A kho-kho defensive player (center) runs from one half of the court to the other to avoid being touched by an opponent.

Association of Traditional Sports and Games, India

The president of the Arunachal Olympic Association, Padi Richo, was unanimously chosen as the president of the Association of Traditional Sports and Games, India (ATSGI), while Aman Kumar Sharma from Punjab assumed the position of Secretary-General.[11] The ATSGI is dedicated to revitalizing and fostering traditional games and sports, operating under the guidance of the International Council for Traditional Sports and Games (ICTSG) endorsed by UNESCO.[12]

History edit

 
An Indian stamp from 1990 commemorating the introduction of kabaddi, India's most popular traditional sport, into the Asian Games.

Ancient era edit

Kho-kho has been played since at least the fourth century BC.[13] Kabaddi and kho-kho may have had certain aspects of their gameplay mentioned in the Mahabharata, which was written before 300 AD.[3][4] Atya-patya is mentioned in the Naṟṟiṇai, written in 300 AD or before.[14] Chaturanga is an ancient board game which experienced various modifications as it was transmitted from India toward Europe and became the modern game of chess.[15] Some of these games were used for military training purposes;[16][17][14] constant warfare between Indians/against invaders forced an emphasis on physical activities related to fighting.[18] One example of this connection between sports and war was Abhimanyu's piercing of the Chakravyuha as depicted in the Mahabharata, which may have had a connection to the skills used in kabaddi and kho-kho.[4][19][20][21]

Traditional Indian games served various purposes throughout and had various connections to Indian history; for example, certain aspects of the Bengali hopscotch game of ekka-dokka may have represented concepts of social division of property,[22] kabaddi may have been used as a preparation for hunting,[23] and the Bengali tag game of gollachut may have represented escape attempts by agricultural slaves during the Indus Valley Civilization.[22] Hindu teachings placed emphasis on being physically fit, with the Kshatriya warrior caste in particular having to practice martial activities such as archery, while Buddhist teachings were more mixed; Buddha prohibited some traditional games which were considered to be causing negligence amongst people, though he himself played certain other games, such as archery and kabaddi.[24][25] Buddhist monks, who generally shunned violence, adopted the use of Indian martial arts to protect themselves.[18] Different activities were interrelated; the breathing aspects of kabaddi had connections with the pranayama breath-control techniques from yoga[26][27][28] (with kabaddi having been practiced by Buddha and other monks),[29] and the martial art of kalaripayattu was practiced in tandem with atya-patya by soldiers in Kerala.[14]

 
A few traditional Indian games are conjectured to have spread throughout Greater India and into Southeast Asia in ancient times, such as atya-patya,[14] whose Indonesian variant gobak sodor is pictured here.

Hunting for recreation was common through Indian history, and was partaken in by royals; it was done for a variety of reasons, such as proving manliness, for religious purposes, or simply for thrill-seeking purposes.[30][31][32] The emphasis on hunting coincided with an overall view of the forest as being an area to be conquered and used by the state, which resulted in conflict between kingdoms and forest-dwellers.[32][33][34] Though Hindu scriptures warned against excessive hunting of animals,[31] by the colonial era, some animal species had been hunted to extinction, such as cheetahs.[35]

Medieval era edit

During Mughal rule, some of the traditional games were greatly patronised and played in modified ways; for example, Akbar invented a version of polo which could be played at night by setting the ball on fire,[36][37][38] and played a magnified version of pachisi with courtesans acting as the pieces on the board.[39] Wrestling was popular at the time as well,[40] with Persian and Indian forms of wrestling merging to form pehlwani.[41]

Colonial era edit

 
A photo from 1870 depicting Hyderabadis preparing for pehlwani.

During the time of the British Raj, Indians began to focus more on playing British sports such as cricket, hockey, and football rather than their traditional sports.[5][42] Part of the reason behind this was so that they could rise up the ranks by imitating the culture of the colonisers;[43] later on, some Indians also started to see British sports as an activity in which they could "beat" their colonisers.[44] The British also at times pushed for the growth of Western physical culture, seeing it as a way to increase the uptake of British culture and values in India and arguing that Indian men were naturally effeminate and thus needed a more European physical regimen (see Muscular Christianity).[45][46][47][48] The British also used hunting as a way to establish imperial dominance and protect Indians from attacks by wild animals.[49][50][51]

A notable traditional sport which continued to be played during this time was polo, which the British helped to codify and support as an official sport.[48] Some British board games, such as Snakes and Ladders and Ludo, were also inspired by Indian board games.[52]

Some self-funded sports clubs, such as the akharas, promoted and organized competitions at various levels for traditional games during this time.[53] Traditional games and practices which were considered to embody masculine values, such as kabaddi and kushti, were promoted as a way to resist British accusations of effeminacy;[54] Sikhs in particular used their martial history as a way to distinguish themselves.[55] Various traditional games began to be standardized during this period,[56][57] and some of them were exhibited at the 1936 Berlin Olympic Games.[58] Some traditional games, such as kho-kho, were also exported to places like the Caribbean, Africa, and other parts of Asia where indentured Indian servants had been taken by the British.[59][60][61]

Post-colonial era edit

 
Khelo India is an initiative of the Indian government to organise sports competitions across the nation. Both Khelo India and the National Games of India include several indigenous sports.[62][63][64][9]

In post-Independent India, the traditional sports' popularity has greatly declined with the further growth of Western sports and online gaming.[65] Kabaddi is the most popular traditional sport, with the highest viewership and most career opportunities; its growth was spurred on by the creation of the Pro Kabaddi League.[66] Kabaddi's growth has led to it spreading outside of South Asia as well, with countries such as South Korea and Iran playing it.[67][68] Kho-kho has also had a franchise league started for it, Ultimate Kho Kho;[69] the Pro Kabaddi League and Ultimate Kho Kho are respectively the most and third-most viewed non-cricket competitions in India.[70] Panja (arm wrestling) has a professional competition called the Pro Panja League; its exhibition events have received hundreds of millions of views on social media.[71] Whereas in the past, traditional Indian games were often played on mud surfaces in rural areas, in the modern day they are often played on matted surfaces with changes to their rule sets and other aspects of their appearance to make them more appealing and exciting.[72][73][74] Some traditional games are also being digitalized so that they can be played as video games (see Desi Adda: Games of India).[75][76][77][78][79]

In addition, the Indian government is starting the Bharatiya Khel initiative to revive traditional Indian games with the view that they are more affordable for rural Indians to play, and are important for reviving Indian culture as well as increasing team spirit.[80][81] It is also planning to introduce some games like kabaddi and kho-kho into the Olympics if it wins a bid to host a future Olympic event.[82] The Fit India movement has also contributed to the revival of traditional Indian games, with schools required to include such games as part of physical education.[83]

At the state level, the Chhattisgarhiya Olympics is an annual Chhattisgarhi competition meant for celebrating traditional games; over 3 million people likely participated in the 2023 edition.[84] The Qila Raipur Sports Festival has been celebrating traditional Punjabi sports since 1933.[85]

Traditional games edit

Gilli Danda edit

Gilli Danda is similar to many other games around the world, such as the English game of tip-cat, and also has similarities to the popular Indian sport of cricket.[86] It is a game where a player hits a short stick on the ground up into the air using a longer stick held in their hand. They then hit the airborne stick with the hand-held stick again so that it travels as far as possible. If a player on the other team catches the stick before it touches the ground, then the hitter is out (eliminated).[87][88]

Nondi edit

Nondi (known by several other regional names) is a game similar to hopscotch. In it, several connected boxes are drawn on the ground, and players throw a rock or similar object onto one of the boxes and then attempt to hop their way to the box the rock lands in.[89]

Ball games edit

 
A pile of seven stones and a ball that can be used to play the game of seven stones.

Seven stones edit

A member of one team (the seekers) throws a ball at a pile of stones to knock them over. The seekers then try to restore the pile of stones while staying safe from the opposing team's (the hitters’) throws. The hitters' objective is to hit the seekers with the ball before they can reconstruct the stone pile. If the ball touches a seeker, that seeker is out and the team which the seeker came from continues, without the seeker. A seeker can always safeguard themselves by touching an opposite team member before the ball hits the seeker.

Maram pitti edit

Maram Pitti also known as Picchi Banti (పిచ్చి బంతి) in Telugu, is an Indian version of dodgeball. It is played with a rubber ball or tennis ball. It is played by a small group typically 5-6 in a small enclosed area or bylanes. It is also played solo, duo or in teams of 3+.[90]

Ball badminton edit

Ball badminton is a sport native to India. It is a racket sport game, played with a yellow ball made of wool, on a court of fixed dimensions (12 by 24 metres) divided by a net. The game was played as early as 1856 by the royal family in Tanjore, the capital of Thanjavur district in Tamil Nadu, India. It enjoys the greatest popularity in India. Ball badminton is a fast-paced game; it demands skill, quick reflexes, good judgment, agility, and the ability to control the ball with one's wrist.[91]

Games involving simple objects edit

Marbles edit

Some Indian games involving marbles are also known as Kancha/Kanche or Golli Gundu. Several games are played involving players flicking marbles at other marbles, often in order to "capture" as many marbles as possible by the end of the game to win.[92][93][94]

Gutte edit

 
Children in Nepal playing astragaloi
In India, particularly in Tamil Nadu, the game is called anju kal ("5 stones"). It is played with 5–7 stones. It is played between two or more players in turn. The game is played in 5 rounds. Generally for first 4 rounds four stones are thrown on the floor. First round is to pick up 4 stones one by one. Second round is to pick 2 stones at a time. Third round is to pick 3 stones together and then pick one. Fourth round is to pick all four in one go. Last round is to toss all the stones from palm and place it on the back of the palm and then catch all four by tossing to above.

Variations of tag edit

There are several Indian variations of the game of tag (sometimes referred to in India as "running and catching" or pakdam pakdai),[95] with kabaddi and kho-kho being the two most popular such games and being played in professional leagues (Pro Kabaddi League and Ultimate Kho Kho respectively).[96][69]

Deciding who the denner is edit

In many Indian variations of tag, the player who is supposed to tag the other players is referred to as the "denner".[95][97] There are a number of ways of determining which player should be the denner; one such method is Saa Boo Three (also known as pugam pugai), in which three players face one of their hands either up or down, and if one of them faces their hand the opposite direction of the other two, then that player is the denner.[98][99]

Kabaddi edit

 
Kabaddi being played at the 2018 Asian Games
Kabaddi is a contact team sport played between two teams of seven players, originating in ancient India.[100] The objective of the game is for a single player on offense, referred to as a "raider", to run into the opposing team's half of the court, touch out as many of their players as possible, and return to their own half of the court, all without being tackled by the defenders in 30 seconds. Points are scored for each player tagged by the raider, while the opposing team earns a point for stopping the raider. Players are taken out of the game if they are touched or tackled, but are brought back in for each point scored by their team from a tag or a tackle.

Kho-kho edit

 
Kho kho playing in Govt middle school, Nallambal, Karaikal

Kho kho is a traditional Indian sport that dates back to ancient India.[101][102] It is the second-most popular traditional tag game in the Indian subcontinent after kabaddi.[103] Kho kho is played on a rectangular court with a central lane connecting two poles which are at either end of the court. During the game, nine players from the chasing team (attacking team) are on the field, with eight of them sitting (crouched) in the central lane, while three runners from the defending team run around the court and try to avoid being touched.[102] Each sitting player on the chasing team faces the opposite half of the field that their adjacent teammates are facing.

At any time, one player from the chasing team (the 'active chaser'/'attacker') may run around the court to attempt to tag (touch) members of the defending team, with one point scored per tag, and each tagged defender required to leave the field; however, the active chaser cannot cross the central lane to access the other half of the field, and cannot change direction once they start running toward either pole. The chasing team can get around these restrictions if the active chaser either switches roles with a sitting teammate (by touching them on the back while saying "Kho") who is facing the other half of the court and therefore has access to it, or runs to the area behind either pole and then switches direction/half. Each team has two turns to score and two turns to defend, with each turn lasting nine minutes. The team that scores the most points by the end of the game wins.[104]

Langdi edit

 
School kids play langadi during a inter-school competition
Langdi (Hindi: लंगड़ी) is a traditional Indian field sport which combines elements of tag and hopscotch.[105] It was originally played during the Pandiyan Dynasty and called "Nondiyaattam" at that time. The teams alternate chasing (attacking) and defending roles in each of the 4 innings of the game, with the chasing team's players restricted to hopping around on one foot, and attempting to score points by tagging as many defenders as possible within the 9 minutes of each inning. It is described by Marathis as a sport with a Marathi ethos.[106]

Atya-patya edit

 
Atya patya (Hindi: आट्यापाट्या) is a traditional Indian tag sport played by two sides of nine players. It is more popular in rural areas of India. It is more commonly played in Maharashtra, a western Indian state.[107] Atya patya is described as a "game of feints".[108] The playing area comprises nine trenches, coming out of either side of a central trench; a point is awarded to the attacking team's players for each trench they cross without being tagged out by the defensive players within the trenches.[109] The game ends after 4 innings (scoring turns) of 7 minutes each, with each team having two innings to score. It has been described as a game of "militant chase".[110] The sport is played in a relatively small area and requires no equipment, similar to other games indigenous to India such as kabaddi, seven stones, kho kho, gillidanda and langdi.[108]

Chor Police edit

Chor Police (transl. Thief and Police),[111] also known as Chor Sipahi,[112][113] is an outdoor role-playing game played by children in Indian subcontinent. The game is usually played by children divided into two teams with no limit of players. One team acts as police and another one acts as thieves within a narrative.[114][115] Police players chase chor (thieves) in an attempt to catch and mark them defeated.

Oonch Neech edit

In Oonch neech if the denner (tagger) says neech (down), all players have to go to an elevated area. If he says oonch (up) then all players have to stay down. Whatever the denner picks, he has to stay on that platform.

Dog and the bone edit

In Dog and the Bone (known by various names in India, such as "Cheel Jhapatta", and more commonly in other parts of the world as "steal the bacon"), there is an object placed in the center of the field, with two teams placed on opposite ends of the field. One player from each team rushes towards the object to try to take it back to their team; a point is scored either if a player successfully retrieves the object, or if a player tags an opponent who is holding the object before the opponent safely makes it back.[9]

River or mountain edit

River or mountain, which is known as Nadee-Parvat in Hindi, and Nadi ki Pahad in Marathi and other regional languages, is a game where the field is divided into areas referred to as "rivers" and "mountains". At the start of play, the denner shouts out either "river" or "mountain", with all players then attempting to go to the areas referred to by the denner. While outside of those areas, the players can be tagged and eliminated by the denner.[9]

Surr edit

 
Surr playing field
The game is played on a rectangular field, divided into four equal quadrants, by two teams of two to four players each.[116] The attacking team gathers in one quadrant, and the defending team gathers along the quadrant's borders with the adjoining quadrants. The objective of the attacking team is to enter the other quadrants without being touched by the players of the defending team. If all the members of the attacking team manage to enter all the quadrants, the attacking team wins, and its members shout "Bol Den Goivan Surr!".[117] In an Awadhi variation, they sing "Bol Goiyan Banva Surr" ("बोल गोइयां बणवा सुर्र");[116] if they are touched by the defending team, they lose, and have to stand on the quadrant line as "thieves", and have to sing another phrase.[118]

Chain tag edit

Chain tag involves the denner tagging other players, who are then required to form a chain with the denner by holding hands. Only the two players at either end of the chain can tag the remaining players (since they have a free hand not trapped in the chain.) The game ends once all players are part of the chain.[9][119]

Lock and key edit

Also prominently known as Vish-Amrit/Vish-Amrut (Poison-Antidote), lock and key is similar to the Western game of freeze tag, in which the denner(s) can "freeze" opponents by tagging them, with the frozen players' teammates able to "unfreeze" them by tagging them. A unique feature of lock and key is that players may be required to shout out "lock" or "key", as appropriate, when tagging other players.[9][120]

Aankh micholi edit

 
Blindfolded player in Aankh micholi

Aankh micholi is the Hindi name for blind man's buff (blindfolded tag).[121]

Kokla chappaki edit

One player goes around all the other players, who sit in a circle, and eventually drops a handkerchief behind one of them. That player must grab the cloth and then attempt to tag the first player.[122]

Four corners edit

Players attempt to run between the four corners of a square without being tagged by the denner, who is in the middle of the square.[89] In a Telugu variation of the game, Nalugu Stambalata, there is a pole in each corner of the square that the players must touch.[9] In Maharashtra, the game is known as "Khamb-Khambolya".[123]

Gella-Chutt edit

Gella-Chutt (transl. "the king ran away") is a traditional Indian game from Tripura.[124][125] In the game, one team has a king stationed in a "prison", which is at a distance from the "home" area. The goal of the king is to reach home with the help of his teammates ("guards") without being tagged by the opponents.[126]

Tree-climbing monkey edit

The denner tries to tag players who can climb up trees to escape; these players can try to touch a stick kept within a circle on the ground in order to become safe from the denner.[127][128] Variants of this game are also known as "Surparambya" or "Surparambi".[129][130][131][132]

Labbo-Daal edit

Also known as "kiss the stick" or "Soljhapta" in Bengali,[133] this variation of tree-climbing monkey sees the denner attempting to rush back to kiss the stick after tagging another player, while the other players try to thwart the denner by picking the stick up and throwing it away before the denner can kiss it.[134]

Chappa-pani edit

Players who are squatting can't be tagged by the denner in this game, but they can only stand up when touched by players who are standing up.[132][123] This game is also known as Uthali.[135]

Limbdi-pipali edit

Players can avoid being tagged in this game by hanging onto something overhead (such as a tree branch).[135]

Vagh-bakri edit

One player is the "shepherd", and all but one of the players, known as "lambs" or "goats", form a chain behind the shepherd by grabbing each other's waists. The lambs are required to remain in this chain formation. The last player (the "tiger") has to try to capture the lambs by getting around the shepherd, who is allowed to move around. Once a lamb is tagged, they become the new tiger and play restarts.[132][123]

Combat sports edit

Archery edit

Dhanurveda describes the practices and uses of archery, bow- and arrow-making, military training, and rules of engagement. The treatise discusses martial arts in relation to the training of warriors, charioteers, cavalry, elephant warriors, infantry etc. It was considered a sin to shoot a warrior in the back and to fight more than one warrior at a time. The bow used in the Vedic period were called danush, and were described in detail in the Vedas. The curved shape of the bow is called vakra in Artha Veda. The bowstring was called jya, and was strung only when needed. An arrow was called an iṣu, and a quiver was called an iṣudhi.[136]

Wrestling edit

Panja (arm wrestling) edit

Arm wrestling (also spelled armwrestling) is a sport with two opponents who face each other with their bent elbows placed on a table and hands firmly gripped, who then attempt to force the opponent's hand down to the table top ("pin" them). The sport is often casually used to demonstrate the stronger person between two or more people.

Arm wrestling is a popular pastime in India, with India having a professional arm wrestling competition known as the Pro Panja League.[137]

Gatta gusthi edit

 
Freestyle gusthi in Madurai
Gatta gusthi is a form of submission wrestling practiced in Kerala, India. It is competed inside an open ring on the ground, usually on a beach, known as godha. Wrestlers are called phayalvans. The sport consists of around 100 techniques. Gatta gusthi was popular in the state until the arrival of freestyle wrestling and karate in late 1960s. Its freestyle form is known simply as gusthi.

Pehlwani edit

Pehlwani,[138] also known as Kushti, is a form of wrestling contested in the South Asia. It was developed in the Mughal Empire by combining Persian Koshti pahlevani with influences from native Indian Malla-yuddha.[139][140] The words pehlwani and kushti derive from the Persian terms pahlavani (heroic) and koshti (wrestling, lit. killing) respectively, meaning Heroic wrestling. A practitioner of this sport is referred to as a pehlwan (Persian word for hero) while teachers are known as ustad (Persian word for teacher or master).[140]

Martial arts edit

Indian martial arts refers to the fighting systems of the Indian subcontinent. A variety of terms are used for the English phrases "Indian martial arts", deriving from ancient sources. While they may seem to imply specific disciplines (e.g. archery, armed combat), by Classical times they were used generically for all fighting systems.

Gatka edit

Gatka (Gurmukhi: ਗੱਤਕਾ; Shahmukhi: گَتّکا; Hindi: गतका; Urdu: گَتکا) is a form of martial art associated primarily with the Sikhs of the Punjab and other related ethnic groups, such as Hindkowans.[141][142] It is a style of stick-fighting, with wooden sticks intended to simulate swords.[143] The Punjabi name, gatka, refers to the wooden stick used and this term might have originated as a diminutive of a Sanskrit word, gada, meaning "mace".[144]

Kalaripayattu edit

 
Kalaripayattu (IPA: [kɐɭɐɾip:ɐjɐt:ɨ̆]; also known simply as Kalari) is an Indian martial art that originated in Kerala, a state on the southwestern coast of India during the 11th–12th century CE.

Silambam edit

 
Silambam is an Indian martial art originating in Tamil Nadu, South India in the Indian subcontinent. This style is mentioned in Tamil Sangam literature. The World Silambam Association is the official international body of Silambam.

Board games edit

Indian board games have a long history, and have been found etched into the floors and surfaces of ancient temples throughout the country.[145][146][147]

Carrom edit

 
The carrom board. Each of the four players must strike from between the two lines on their side of the board.

Carrom is played on a small board, with gameplay similar to pool and billiards (cue sports). The main unique feature of carrom is that players flick a puck-like object with their fingers in order to impact the other pieces on the board, with each of the four players having two designated lines on their side of the board between which they must flick/shoot their striking piece from.[148]

Chaturanga edit

Chaturanga (Sanskrit: चतुरंग:; caturaṅga pronounced “chuh-toor-anga”) is an ancient Indian strategy board game. It is first known from India around the seventh century CE,[149] but its roots may date 5000 years back, to the Indus Valley Civilization.[150]

Pachisi edit

Pachisi (/pəˈzi/, Hindustani: [pəˈtʃiːsiː]) is a cross and circle board game that originated in Ancient India. It is described in the ancient text Mahabharata under the name of "Pasha".[151] It is played on a board shaped like a symmetrical cross. A player's pieces move around the board based upon a throw of six or seven cowrie shells, with the number of shells resting with the aperture upward indicating the number of spaces to move.

In addition to chaupar,[152] there are many versions of the game. Barjis [ar] (barsis) is popular in the Levant, mainly Syria, while Parchís is another version popular in Spain and northern Morocco.[153] Parqués is its Colombian variant. Parcheesi, Sorry!, and Ludo are among the many Westernised commercial versions of the game. The Jeu des petits chevaux (Game of Little Horses) is played in France, and Mensch ärgere Dich nicht is a popular German variant. It is also possible that this game led to the development of the Korean board game Yunnori, through the ancient kingdom Baekje.

Lambs and tigers edit

 
Three variations of empty grids on which this game can be played

The lambs and tigers game locally referred as the game of goats and tigers (Tamil: Āḍu-puli āṭṭam,

Telugu: Mē̃ka-puli āṭa, Kannada: Āḍu-huli āṭa) or Telugu: Pulijūdam, is a strategic, two-player (or 2 teams) leopard hunt game that is played in south India. The game is asymmetric in that one player controls three tigers and the other player controls up to 15 lambs/goats. The tigers 'hunt' the goats while the goats attempt to block the tigers' movements.[154]

Snakes and ladders edit

Snakes and ladders is a board game for two or more players regarded today as a worldwide classic. The game originated in ancient India as Moksha Patam, and was brought to the UK in the 1890s. It is played on a game board with numbered, gridded squares. A number of "ladders" and "snakes" are pictured on the board, each connecting two specific board squares. The object of the game is to navigate one's game piece, according to die rolls, from the start (bottom square) to the finish (top square), helped by climbing ladders but hindered by falling down snakes.

Snooker edit

 
Four-time world champion Mark Selby playing at a practice table during the 2012 Masters tournament
Snooker (pronounced UK: /ˈsnkər/ SNOO-kər, US: /ˈsnʊkər/ SNUUK-ər)[155][156] is a cue sport played on a rectangular billiards table covered with a green cloth called baize, with six pockets, one at each corner and one in the middle of each long side. First played by British Army officers stationed in India in the second half of the 19th century, the game is played with twenty-two balls, comprising a white cue ball, fifteen red balls, and six other balls—a yellow, green, brown, blue, pink, and black—collectively called the colours. Using a cue stick, the individual players or teams take turns to strike the cue ball to pot other balls in a predefined sequence, accumulating points for each successful pot and for each time the opposing player or team commits a foul. An individual frame of snooker is won by the player who has scored the most points. A snooker match ends when a player reaches a predetermined number of frames.

Pallanguzhi edit

 
A fish shaped pallankuli board
Pallanguli,[157] or Pallankuli[158][159] (Tamil: பல்லாங்குழி, romanized: Pallāṅkuḻi, Malayalam: പല്ലാങ്കുഴി, romanizedPallāṅkuḻi, Kannada: ಅಳಗುಳಿ ಮನೆ, romanized: Alaguli Mane, Telugu: వామన గుంటలు, romanizedVamana guntalu, Marathi: सत्कोलि, romanized: Satkoli),[160] is a traditional ancient mancala game played in South India, especially Tamil Nadu and Kerala. This game was later introduced to Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh in India, as well as Sri Lanka and Malaysia. The game is played by two players, with a wooden board that has fourteen pits in all (hence, it is also called fourteen pits, or pathinālam kuḻi. There have been several variations in the layout of the pits, one among them being seven pits on each player's side. The pits contain cowry shells, seeds or small pebbles used as counters.[161] There are several variations of the game depending on the number of shells each player starts with.[162]

Card games edit

Ganjifa edit

Ganjifa, Ganjapa or Gânjaphâ,[163] is a card game and type of playing cards that are most associated with Persia and India. After Ganjifa cards fell out of use in Iran before the twentieth century, India became the last country to produce them.[164] The form prevalent in Odisha is Ganjapa.

Boat racing edit

Vallam kali edit

 
Aranmula Boat in Uthrattathi Boat Race
Vallam kali (vaḷḷaṃ kaḷi, literally: boat game), also known as snake boat race, is a traditional boat race in Kerala, India. It is a form of canoe racing, and uses paddled war canoes. It is mainly conducted during the season of the harvest festival Onam in spring. Vallam kali includes races of many kinds of paddled longboats and 'snake boats'. Each team spends about 6 lakhs for the Nehru Trophy Boat Race.[165]

Hiyang Tannaba edit

Hiyang Tannaba (Meitei: ꯍꯤꯌꯥꯡ ꯇꯥꯟꯅꯕ, lit.'boat race')[166] is a traditional boat race ceremony performed in Manipur, India as a part of the religious festival of Lai Haraoba.[167][168] It is generally organized in the month of November at many places including Thangapat (moat).[166][167] The boats called Hiyang Hiren are regarded as invested with spiritual powers and the game is associated with religious rites.[166][169] The Meiteis believe that the worship of the Hiyang Hiren will bring protection from evil spirits.[166]

Physical exercises edit

Dand edit

 
The Hindu push-up, also known as a dand. This is the most basic version, similar to that used by Bruce Lee who referred to it as a cat stretch.
The most basic form of Hindu push-up starts from the downward dog yoga position (hands and feet on the floor with the posterior raised) and transitions to an upward dog position (hands and feet on the floor with the torso arched forwards and the legs close to the floor). It is also known as a dand, and is still widely known by this title especially in India where it originated from. It is a common exercise in Indian physical culture and martial arts, particularly Pehlwani.[170][171] The famous martial artist Bruce Lee also used it in his training regime and referred to it as a cat stretch.[172] It is an effective core strength exercise because it dynamically involves both the anterior and posterior chains in a harmonious fashion. There are numerous variations of the Hindu push-up although most incorporate the two postures used in the most basic version. It may also be known as a Hanuman push up, judo push up, or dive-bomber push-up.

Baithak edit

A baithak, also known as a Hindu squat or a deep knee bend on toes, is performed without additional weight, and body weight placed on the forefeet and toes with the heels raised throughout; during the movement the knees track far past the toes. The baithak was a staple exercise of ancient Indian wrestlers. It was also used by Bruce Lee in his training regime.[173] It may also be performed with the hands resting on an upturned club or the back of a chair.

Gada edit

The gada is one of the traditional pieces of training equipment in Hindu physical culture, and is common in the akhara of north India. Maces of various weights and heights are used depending on the strength and skill level of the practitioner. It is believed that Lord Hanuman's gada was the largest amongst all the gadas in the world. For training purposes, one or two wooden gada (mudgar) are swung behind the back in several different ways and is particularly useful for building grip strength and shoulder endurance. The Great Gama was known for extensive use of gada. Winners in a kushti contest are often awarded with a gada.[citation needed]

Other physical activities edit

Yoga edit

Yoga (/ˈjɡə/ ; pronounced [joːɡɐ]) is a group of physical, mental, and spiritual practices or disciplines which originated in ancient India and aim to control (yoke) and still the mind, recognizing a detached witness-consciousness untouched by the mind (Chitta) and mundane suffering (Duḥkha). There is a wide variety of schools of yoga, practices, and goals in Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism, and traditional and modern yoga is practiced worldwide.

Mallakhamba edit

 
A mallakhamba team performs on the pole, 2015

Mallakhamba, or mallakhamb is a traditional sport, originating from the Indian subcontinent, in which a group of gymnasts perform aerial yoga and gymnastic postures using wrestling grips in concert with a stationary vertical pole. The word "mallakhamb" also refers to the pole used in the sport.[174] The pole is usually made from sheesham (Indian rosewood) polished with castor oil.[175] Other popular versions of mallakhamba are practiced using a cane or a rope instead of a pole.[176] The origins of pole dancing can be traced back to the sport of mallakhamba.[177]

The name mallakhamba derives from the terms malla, meaning wrestler, and khamb, which means a pole. Literally meaning "wrestling pole", the term refers to a traditional training implement used by wrestlers.[178]

Kite-flying edit

Fighter kites are known as patang in India.[179][180] In many others, kite flying takes place mainly during specific festivals particularly the spring festival known as Basant, during Makar Sankranti and more recently on Indian Independence Day.[181]

Events involving animals edit

 
A Kambala participant driving his two bulls forward.

Kambala edit

Kambala involves one person racing a pair of bulls across a paddy field.[182]

Jallikattu edit


Jallikattu (or sallikkattu), also known as ēru taḻuvuṭal and mañcuvirattu,[183] is a traditional event in which a bull (Bos indicus), such as the Pulikulam[184] or Kangayam breeds,[185] is released into a crowd of people, and multiple human participants attempt to grab the large hump on the bull's back with both arms and hang on to it while the bull attempts to escape. Participants hold the hump for as long as possible, attempting to bring the bull to a stop. In some cases, participants must ride long enough to remove flags on the bull's horns.[186][187]

Jallikattu is typically practised in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu as a part of Pongal celebrations on Mattu Pongal day, which occurs annually in January.

Polo edit

 
Players playing polo
Polo is a ball game that is played on horseback, a traditional field sport and one of the world's oldest known team sports.[188] The game is played by two opposing teams with the objective of scoring using a long-handled wooden mallet to hit a small hard ball through the opposing team's goal. Each team has four mounted riders, and the game usually lasts one to two hours, divided into periods called chukkas or chukkers.

Miscellaneous games edit

Antakshari edit

Antakshari, also known as Antyakshari (अंताक्षरी transl. The game of the ending letter) is a spoken parlor game played in India.[189] Each contestant sings the first verse of a song (often Classical Hindustani or Bollywood songs) that begins with the consonant of Hindi alphabet on which the previous contestant's song ended.

Raja Mantri Chor Sipahi edit

 
Shuffled chits
Raja Mantri Chor Sipahi (transl.  King, Minister, thief and soldier) is a type of role-playing game that is a popular pastime in India. It involves four players—each player takes up the role of either the king, Minister, thief or soldier— and the Minister (Mantri) has to guess the identity of the thief. Along with other such games, its popularity has decreased in the 21st century.[190]

Toys edit

Bhatukali edit

Bhatukali involves children playing with a mock set of kitchen items, with the intention of being taught how to do kitchen-related work.[191][192][193] Bhatukali dates back to ancient times, as evidenced by its presence in literary works such as the Dnyaneshwari and Kama Sutra.[194]

Dug dugi edit

Dug dugi is a type of rattle for children to play with. A dug dugi has a core with strings on either side attached to small stone-like objects; once the dug dugi is shaken, the stones hit the core from either side to make sound.[194][195][196]

Gulel edit

Children often play with a slingshot ('gulel' in Hindi), which traditionally was also used for hunting purposes.[194]

Pambaram edit

Pambaram (Tamil: பம்பரம், Malayalam: പമ്പരം), also called the Lattu (Urdu: لٹو), , Latim (Bengali: লাটিম), Bhawra (Marathi: भावरा), Buguri (Kannada: ಬುಗುರಿ), or Bongaram (Telugu: బొంగరం), is a traditional throwing top used mainly in India and Bangladesh.[197]

Regional games edit

Yubi lakpi edit

Yubi lakpi is a seven-a-side traditional football game played in Manipur, India, using a coconut, which has some notable similarities to rugby. Despite these similarities, the name is not related to the game of rugby or Rugby School in England, it is in fact of Meitei origin, and means literally "coconut snatching".[198] Emma Levine, an English writer on little known Asian sports, speculates:

"Perhaps this was the root of modern rugby? Most Manipuris are quite adamant that the modern world 'stole' the idea from them and made it into rugby... this game, which has been around for centuries, is so similar to rugby, which evolved a great deal later, that it must be more than a coincidence."[199]

Dhopkhel edit

 
Dhopkhel is played by both indigenous Assamese men and women
Dhopkhel, also transliterated dhop khel and dhoop khel (Assamese: ঢোপখেল), is a traditional ball game played in the Indian state of Assam. The game is played between two teams of 11 on a 125 m × 80 m field bounded by four flags. The players take turns throwing the ball at the opponent to knock them out of the game, while seeking to catch the ball and avoid being tagged by other players. It is a test of speed, stamina, and acrobatic skills.[200]

See also edit

  • History of India
  • List of Indian inventions and discoveries
  • Traditional games of Bangladesh
  • Traditional games of Pakistan
  • Traditional games of Andhra Pradesh

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Further reading edit

  • Indigenous Sports of India: Connecting Past to the Present
  • INDIGENOUS GAMES IN INDIA: THEN & NOW

External links edit

  • https://bharatiyakhel.in/ - the official Indian government website for traditional Indian games
  • Khel Book
  • Association of Traditional Sports and Games, India
  • UNESCO TSG

traditional, games, india, traditional, games, indian, subcontinent, traditional, games, south, asia, also, sport, india, traditional, games, india, several, traditional, games, sports, some, which, have, been, played, thousands, years, their, popularity, grea. For Traditional games of the Indian subcontinent see Traditional games of South Asia See also Sport in India Traditional games India has several traditional games and sports 1 some of which have been played for thousands of years 2 3 4 Their popularity has greatly declined in the modern era with Western sports having overtaken them in India during the British Raj 5 and the Indian government now making some efforts to revive them 6 7 Many of these games do not require much equipment or playing space 8 Some of them are only played in certain regions of India or may be known by different names and played under different rules and regulations in different regions of the country 9 10 Many Indian games are also similar to other traditional South Asian games A kho kho defensive player center runs from one half of the court to the other to avoid being touched by an opponent Association of Traditional Sports and Games IndiaThe president of the Arunachal Olympic Association Padi Richo was unanimously chosen as the president of the Association of Traditional Sports and Games India ATSGI while Aman Kumar Sharma from Punjab assumed the position of Secretary General 11 The ATSGI is dedicated to revitalizing and fostering traditional games and sports operating under the guidance of the International Council for Traditional Sports and Games ICTSG endorsed by UNESCO 12 Contents 1 History 1 1 Ancient era 1 2 Medieval era 1 3 Colonial era 1 4 Post colonial era 2 Traditional games 2 1 Gilli Danda 2 2 Nondi 3 Ball games 3 1 Seven stones 3 2 Maram pitti 3 3 Ball badminton 4 Games involving simple objects 4 1 Marbles 4 2 Gutte 5 Variations of tag 5 1 Deciding who the denner is 5 2 Kabaddi 5 3 Kho kho 5 4 Langdi 5 5 Atya patya 5 6 Chor Police 5 7 Oonch Neech 5 8 Dog and the bone 5 9 River or mountain 5 10 Surr 5 11 Chain tag 5 12 Lock and key 5 13 Aankh micholi 5 14 Kokla chappaki 5 15 Four corners 5 16 Gella Chutt 5 17 Tree climbing monkey 5 17 1 Labbo Daal 5 18 Chappa pani 5 19 Limbdi pipali 5 20 Vagh bakri 6 Combat sports 6 1 Archery 6 2 Wrestling 6 2 1 Panja arm wrestling 6 2 2 Gatta gusthi 6 2 3 Pehlwani 6 3 Martial arts 6 3 1 Gatka 6 3 2 Kalaripayattu 6 3 3 Silambam 7 Board games 7 1 Carrom 7 2 Chaturanga 7 3 Pachisi 7 4 Lambs and tigers 7 5 Snakes and ladders 7 6 Snooker 7 7 Pallanguzhi 8 Card games 8 1 Ganjifa 9 Boat racing 9 1 Vallam kali 9 2 Hiyang Tannaba 10 Physical exercises 10 1 Dand 10 2 Baithak 10 3 Gada 11 Other physical activities 11 1 Yoga 11 2 Mallakhamba 11 3 Kite flying 12 Events involving animals 12 1 Kambala 12 2 Jallikattu 12 3 Polo 13 Miscellaneous games 13 1 Antakshari 13 2 Raja Mantri Chor Sipahi 14 Toys 14 1 Bhatukali 14 2 Dug dugi 14 3 Gulel 14 4 Pambaram 15 Regional games 15 1 Yubi lakpi 15 2 Dhopkhel 16 See also 17 References 18 Further reading 19 External linksHistory editSee also List of Indian inventions and discoveries Games and Sport in India Ancient and Medieval period nbsp An Indian stamp from 1990 commemorating the introduction of kabaddi India s most popular traditional sport into the Asian Games Ancient era edit Kho kho has been played since at least the fourth century BC 13 Kabaddi and kho kho may have had certain aspects of their gameplay mentioned in the Mahabharata which was written before 300 AD 3 4 Atya patya is mentioned in the Naṟṟiṇai written in 300 AD or before 14 Chaturanga is an ancient board game which experienced various modifications as it was transmitted from India toward Europe and became the modern game of chess 15 Some of these games were used for military training purposes 16 17 14 constant warfare between Indians against invaders forced an emphasis on physical activities related to fighting 18 One example of this connection between sports and war was Abhimanyu s piercing of the Chakravyuha as depicted in the Mahabharata which may have had a connection to the skills used in kabaddi and kho kho 4 19 20 21 Traditional Indian games served various purposes throughout and had various connections to Indian history for example certain aspects of the Bengali hopscotch game of ekka dokka may have represented concepts of social division of property 22 kabaddi may have been used as a preparation for hunting 23 and the Bengali tag game of gollachut may have represented escape attempts by agricultural slaves during the Indus Valley Civilization 22 Hindu teachings placed emphasis on being physically fit with the Kshatriya warrior caste in particular having to practice martial activities such as archery while Buddhist teachings were more mixed Buddha prohibited some traditional games which were considered to be causing negligence amongst people though he himself played certain other games such as archery and kabaddi 24 25 Buddhist monks who generally shunned violence adopted the use of Indian martial arts to protect themselves 18 Different activities were interrelated the breathing aspects of kabaddi had connections with the pranayama breath control techniques from yoga 26 27 28 with kabaddi having been practiced by Buddha and other monks 29 and the martial art of kalaripayattu was practiced in tandem with atya patya by soldiers in Kerala 14 nbsp A few traditional Indian games are conjectured to have spread throughout Greater India and into Southeast Asia in ancient times such as atya patya 14 whose Indonesian variant gobak sodor is pictured here Hunting for recreation was common through Indian history and was partaken in by royals it was done for a variety of reasons such as proving manliness for religious purposes or simply for thrill seeking purposes 30 31 32 The emphasis on hunting coincided with an overall view of the forest as being an area to be conquered and used by the state which resulted in conflict between kingdoms and forest dwellers 32 33 34 Though Hindu scriptures warned against excessive hunting of animals 31 by the colonial era some animal species had been hunted to extinction such as cheetahs 35 Medieval era edit During Mughal rule some of the traditional games were greatly patronised and played in modified ways for example Akbar invented a version of polo which could be played at night by setting the ball on fire 36 37 38 and played a magnified version of pachisi with courtesans acting as the pieces on the board 39 Wrestling was popular at the time as well 40 with Persian and Indian forms of wrestling merging to form pehlwani 41 Colonial era edit See also Sports in Maharashtra History nbsp A photo from 1870 depicting Hyderabadis preparing for pehlwani During the time of the British Raj Indians began to focus more on playing British sports such as cricket hockey and football rather than their traditional sports 5 42 Part of the reason behind this was so that they could rise up the ranks by imitating the culture of the colonisers 43 later on some Indians also started to see British sports as an activity in which they could beat their colonisers 44 The British also at times pushed for the growth of Western physical culture seeing it as a way to increase the uptake of British culture and values in India and arguing that Indian men were naturally effeminate and thus needed a more European physical regimen see Muscular Christianity 45 46 47 48 The British also used hunting as a way to establish imperial dominance and protect Indians from attacks by wild animals 49 50 51 A notable traditional sport which continued to be played during this time was polo which the British helped to codify and support as an official sport 48 Some British board games such as Snakes and Ladders and Ludo were also inspired by Indian board games 52 Some self funded sports clubs such as the akharas promoted and organized competitions at various levels for traditional games during this time 53 Traditional games and practices which were considered to embody masculine values such as kabaddi and kushti were promoted as a way to resist British accusations of effeminacy 54 Sikhs in particular used their martial history as a way to distinguish themselves 55 Various traditional games began to be standardized during this period 56 57 and some of them were exhibited at the 1936 Berlin Olympic Games 58 Some traditional games such as kho kho were also exported to places like the Caribbean Africa and other parts of Asia where indentured Indian servants had been taken by the British 59 60 61 Post colonial era edit nbsp Khelo India is an initiative of the Indian government to organise sports competitions across the nation Both Khelo India and the National Games of India include several indigenous sports 62 63 64 9 In post Independent India the traditional sports popularity has greatly declined with the further growth of Western sports and online gaming 65 Kabaddi is the most popular traditional sport with the highest viewership and most career opportunities its growth was spurred on by the creation of the Pro Kabaddi League 66 Kabaddi s growth has led to it spreading outside of South Asia as well with countries such as South Korea and Iran playing it 67 68 Kho kho has also had a franchise league started for it Ultimate Kho Kho 69 the Pro Kabaddi League and Ultimate Kho Kho are respectively the most and third most viewed non cricket competitions in India 70 Panja arm wrestling has a professional competition called the Pro Panja League its exhibition events have received hundreds of millions of views on social media 71 Whereas in the past traditional Indian games were often played on mud surfaces in rural areas in the modern day they are often played on matted surfaces with changes to their rule sets and other aspects of their appearance to make them more appealing and exciting 72 73 74 Some traditional games are also being digitalized so that they can be played as video games see Desi Adda Games of India 75 76 77 78 79 In addition the Indian government is starting the Bharatiya Khel initiative to revive traditional Indian games with the view that they are more affordable for rural Indians to play and are important for reviving Indian culture as well as increasing team spirit 80 81 It is also planning to introduce some games like kabaddi and kho kho into the Olympics if it wins a bid to host a future Olympic event 82 The Fit India movement has also contributed to the revival of traditional Indian games with schools required to include such games as part of physical education 83 At the state level the Chhattisgarhiya Olympics is an annual Chhattisgarhi competition meant for celebrating traditional games over 3 million people likely participated in the 2023 edition 84 The Qila Raipur Sports Festival has been celebrating traditional Punjabi sports since 1933 85 Traditional games editGilli Danda edit Gilli Danda is similar to many other games around the world such as the English game of tip cat and also has similarities to the popular Indian sport of cricket 86 It is a game where a player hits a short stick on the ground up into the air using a longer stick held in their hand They then hit the airborne stick with the hand held stick again so that it travels as far as possible If a player on the other team catches the stick before it touches the ground then the hitter is out eliminated 87 88 Nondi edit Main articles Nondi and Chindro Nondi known by several other regional names is a game similar to hopscotch In it several connected boxes are drawn on the ground and players throw a rock or similar object onto one of the boxes and then attempt to hop their way to the box the rock lands in 89 Ball games edit nbsp A pile of seven stones and a ball that can be used to play the game of seven stones Seven stones edit This section is an excerpt from Seven stones Gameplay edit A member of one team the seekers throws a ball at a pile of stones to knock them over The seekers then try to restore the pile of stones while staying safe from the opposing team s the hitters throws The hitters objective is to hit the seekers with the ball before they can reconstruct the stone pile If the ball touches a seeker that seeker is out and the team which the seeker came from continues without the seeker A seeker can always safeguard themselves by touching an opposite team member before the ball hits the seeker Maram pitti edit This section is an excerpt from Maram Pitti edit Maram Pitti also known as Picchi Banti ప చ చ బ త in Telugu is an Indian version of dodgeball It is played with a rubber ball or tennis ball It is played by a small group typically 5 6 in a small enclosed area or bylanes It is also played solo duo or in teams of 3 90 Ball badminton edit This section is an excerpt from Ball badminton edit Ball badminton is a sport native to India It is a racket sport game played with a yellow ball made of wool on a court of fixed dimensions 12 by 24 metres divided by a net The game was played as early as 1856 by the royal family in Tanjore the capital of Thanjavur district in Tamil Nadu India It enjoys the greatest popularity in India Ball badminton is a fast paced game it demands skill quick reflexes good judgment agility and the ability to control the ball with one s wrist 91 Games involving simple objects editMarbles edit Some Indian games involving marbles are also known as Kancha Kanche or Golli Gundu Several games are played involving players flicking marbles at other marbles often in order to capture as many marbles as possible by the end of the game to win 92 93 94 Gutte edit This section is an excerpt from Knucklebones South Asia edit nbsp Children in Nepal playing astragaloi In India particularly in Tamil Nadu the game is called anju kal 5 stones It is played with 5 7 stones It is played between two or more players in turn The game is played in 5 rounds Generally for first 4 rounds four stones are thrown on the floor First round is to pick up 4 stones one by one Second round is to pick 2 stones at a time Third round is to pick 3 stones together and then pick one Fourth round is to pick all four in one go Last round is to toss all the stones from palm and place it on the back of the palm and then catch all four by tossing to above Variations of tag editMain article Variations of tag There are several Indian variations of the game of tag sometimes referred to in India as running and catching or pakdam pakdai 95 with kabaddi and kho kho being the two most popular such games and being played in professional leagues Pro Kabaddi League and Ultimate Kho Kho respectively 96 69 Deciding who the denner is edit In many Indian variations of tag the player who is supposed to tag the other players is referred to as the denner 95 97 There are a number of ways of determining which player should be the denner one such method is Saa Boo Three also known as pugam pugai in which three players face one of their hands either up or down and if one of them faces their hand the opposite direction of the other two then that player is the denner 98 99 Kabaddi edit See also Variations of kabaddiThis section is an excerpt from Kabaddi edit nbsp Kabaddi being played at the 2018 Asian GamesKabaddi is a contact team sport played between two teams of seven players originating in ancient India 100 The objective of the game is for a single player on offense referred to as a raider to run into the opposing team s half of the court touch out as many of their players as possible and return to their own half of the court all without being tackled by the defenders in 30 seconds Points are scored for each player tagged by the raider while the opposing team earns a point for stopping the raider Players are taken out of the game if they are touched or tackled but are brought back in for each point scored by their team from a tag or a tackle Kho kho edit This section is an excerpt from Kho kho edit nbsp Kho kho playing in Govt middle school Nallambal KaraikalKho kho is a traditional Indian sport that dates back to ancient India 101 102 It is the second most popular traditional tag game in the Indian subcontinent after kabaddi 103 Kho kho is played on a rectangular court with a central lane connecting two poles which are at either end of the court During the game nine players from the chasing team attacking team are on the field with eight of them sitting crouched in the central lane while three runners from the defending team run around the court and try to avoid being touched 102 Each sitting player on the chasing team faces the opposite half of the field that their adjacent teammates are facing At any time one player from the chasing team the active chaser attacker may run around the court to attempt to tag touch members of the defending team with one point scored per tag and each tagged defender required to leave the field however the active chaser cannot cross the central lane to access the other half of the field and cannot change direction once they start running toward either pole The chasing team can get around these restrictions if the active chaser either switches roles with a sitting teammate by touching them on the back while saying Kho who is facing the other half of the court and therefore has access to it or runs to the area behind either pole and then switches direction half Each team has two turns to score and two turns to defend with each turn lasting nine minutes The team that scores the most points by the end of the game wins 104 Langdi edit This section is an excerpt from Langdi sport edit nbsp School kids play langadi during a inter school competitionLangdi Hindi ल गड is a traditional Indian field sport which combines elements of tag and hopscotch 105 It was originally played during the Pandiyan Dynasty and called Nondiyaattam at that time The teams alternate chasing attacking and defending roles in each of the 4 innings of the game with the chasing team s players restricted to hopping around on one foot and attempting to score points by tagging as many defenders as possible within the 9 minutes of each inning It is described by Marathis as a sport with a Marathi ethos 106 Atya patya edit This section is an excerpt from Atya patya edit nbsp Atya patya Hindi आट य प ट य is a traditional Indian tag sport played by two sides of nine players It is more popular in rural areas of India It is more commonly played in Maharashtra a western Indian state 107 Atya patya is described as a game of feints 108 The playing area comprises nine trenches coming out of either side of a central trench a point is awarded to the attacking team s players for each trench they cross without being tagged out by the defensive players within the trenches 109 The game ends after 4 innings scoring turns of 7 minutes each with each team having two innings to score It has been described as a game of militant chase 110 The sport is played in a relatively small area and requires no equipment similar to other games indigenous to India such as kabaddi seven stones kho kho gillidanda and langdi 108 Chor Police edit This section is an excerpt from Chor Police game edit Chor Police transl Thief and Police 111 also known as Chor Sipahi 112 113 is an outdoor role playing game played by children in Indian subcontinent The game is usually played by children divided into two teams with no limit of players One team acts as police and another one acts as thieves within a narrative 114 115 Police players chase chor thieves in an attempt to catch and mark them defeated Oonch Neech edit This section is an excerpt from Oonch Neech edit In Oonch neech if the denner tagger says neech down all players have to go to an elevated area If he says oonch up then all players have to stay down Whatever the denner picks he has to stay on that platform Dog and the bone edit Main article Steal the bacon In Dog and the Bone known by various names in India such as Cheel Jhapatta and more commonly in other parts of the world as steal the bacon there is an object placed in the center of the field with two teams placed on opposite ends of the field One player from each team rushes towards the object to try to take it back to their team a point is scored either if a player successfully retrieves the object or if a player tags an opponent who is holding the object before the opponent safely makes it back 9 River or mountain edit River or mountain which is known as Nadee Parvat in Hindi and Nadi ki Pahad in Marathi and other regional languages is a game where the field is divided into areas referred to as rivers and mountains At the start of play the denner shouts out either river or mountain with all players then attempting to go to the areas referred to by the denner While outside of those areas the players can be tagged and eliminated by the denner 9 Surr edit This section is an excerpt from Surr edit nbsp Surr playing field The game is played on a rectangular field divided into four equal quadrants by two teams of two to four players each 116 The attacking team gathers in one quadrant and the defending team gathers along the quadrant s borders with the adjoining quadrants The objective of the attacking team is to enter the other quadrants without being touched by the players of the defending team If all the members of the attacking team manage to enter all the quadrants the attacking team wins and its members shout Bol Den Goivan Surr 117 In an Awadhi variation they sing Bol Goiyan Banva Surr ब ल ग इय बणव स र र 116 if they are touched by the defending team they lose and have to stand on the quadrant line as thieves and have to sing another phrase 118 Chain tag edit Chain tag involves the denner tagging other players who are then required to form a chain with the denner by holding hands Only the two players at either end of the chain can tag the remaining players since they have a free hand not trapped in the chain The game ends once all players are part of the chain 9 119 Lock and key edit Also prominently known as Vish Amrit Vish Amrut Poison Antidote lock and key is similar to the Western game of freeze tag in which the denner s can freeze opponents by tagging them with the frozen players teammates able to unfreeze them by tagging them A unique feature of lock and key is that players may be required to shout out lock or key as appropriate when tagging other players 9 120 Aankh micholi edit nbsp Blindfolded player in Aankh micholiAankh micholi is the Hindi name for blind man s buff blindfolded tag 121 Kokla chappaki edit See also Duck duck goose One player goes around all the other players who sit in a circle and eventually drops a handkerchief behind one of them That player must grab the cloth and then attempt to tag the first player 122 Four corners edit Main article Four corners game Players attempt to run between the four corners of a square without being tagged by the denner who is in the middle of the square 89 In a Telugu variation of the game Nalugu Stambalata there is a pole in each corner of the square that the players must touch 9 In Maharashtra the game is known as Khamb Khambolya 123 Gella Chutt edit This section is an excerpt from Gella Chutt edit Gella Chutt transl the king ran away is a traditional Indian game from Tripura 124 125 In the game one team has a king stationed in a prison which is at a distance from the home area The goal of the king is to reach home with the help of his teammates guards without being tagged by the opponents 126 Tree climbing monkey edit The denner tries to tag players who can climb up trees to escape these players can try to touch a stick kept within a circle on the ground in order to become safe from the denner 127 128 Variants of this game are also known as Surparambya or Surparambi 129 130 131 132 Labbo Daal edit Also known as kiss the stick or Soljhapta in Bengali 133 this variation of tree climbing monkey sees the denner attempting to rush back to kiss the stick after tagging another player while the other players try to thwart the denner by picking the stick up and throwing it away before the denner can kiss it 134 Chappa pani edit Players who are squatting can t be tagged by the denner in this game but they can only stand up when touched by players who are standing up 132 123 This game is also known as Uthali 135 Limbdi pipali edit Players can avoid being tagged in this game by hanging onto something overhead such as a tree branch 135 Vagh bakri edit Not to be confused with Bagh chal One player is the shepherd and all but one of the players known as lambs or goats form a chain behind the shepherd by grabbing each other s waists The lambs are required to remain in this chain formation The last player the tiger has to try to capture the lambs by getting around the shepherd who is allowed to move around Once a lamb is tagged they become the new tiger and play restarts 132 123 Combat sports editArchery edit This section is an excerpt from Dhanurveda History edit Dhanurveda describes the practices and uses of archery bow and arrow making military training and rules of engagement The treatise discusses martial arts in relation to the training of warriors charioteers cavalry elephant warriors infantry etc It was considered a sin to shoot a warrior in the back and to fight more than one warrior at a time The bow used in the Vedic period were called danush and were described in detail in the Vedas The curved shape of the bow is called vakra in Artha Veda The bowstring was called jya and was strung only when needed An arrow was called an iṣu and a quiver was called an iṣudhi 136 Wrestling edit Panja arm wrestling edit This section is an excerpt from Arm wrestling edit Arm wrestling also spelled armwrestling is a sport with two opponents who face each other with their bent elbows placed on a table and hands firmly gripped who then attempt to force the opponent s hand down to the table top pin them The sport is often casually used to demonstrate the stronger person between two or more people Arm wrestling is a popular pastime in India with India having a professional arm wrestling competition known as the Pro Panja League 137 Gatta gusthi edit This section is an excerpt from Gatta gusthi edit nbsp Freestyle gusthi in MaduraiGatta gusthi is a form of submission wrestling practiced in Kerala India It is competed inside an open ring on the ground usually on a beach known as godha Wrestlers are called phayalvans The sport consists of around 100 techniques Gatta gusthi was popular in the state until the arrival of freestyle wrestling and karate in late 1960s Its freestyle form is known simply as gusthi Pehlwani edit This section is an excerpt from Pehlwani edit Pehlwani 138 also known as Kushti is a form of wrestling contested in the South Asia It was developed in the Mughal Empire by combining Persian Koshti pahlevani with influences from native Indian Malla yuddha 139 140 The words pehlwani and kushti derive from the Persian terms pahlavani heroic and koshti wrestling lit killing respectively meaning Heroic wrestling A practitioner of this sport is referred to as a pehlwan Persian word for hero while teachers are known as ustad Persian word for teacher or master 140 Martial arts edit This section is an excerpt from Indian martial arts edit Indian martial arts refers to the fighting systems of the Indian subcontinent A variety of terms are used for the English phrases Indian martial arts deriving from ancient sources While they may seem to imply specific disciplines e g archery armed combat by Classical times they were used generically for all fighting systems Gatka edit This section is an excerpt from Gatka edit Not to be confused with Shastar Vidya the traditional battle system of northern India Gatka Gurmukhi ਗ ਤਕ Shahmukhi گ ت کا Hindi गतक Urdu گ تکا is a form of martial art associated primarily with the Sikhs of the Punjab and other related ethnic groups such as Hindkowans 141 142 It is a style of stick fighting with wooden sticks intended to simulate swords 143 The Punjabi name gatka refers to the wooden stick used and this term might have originated as a diminutive of a Sanskrit word gada meaning mace 144 Kalaripayattu edit This section is an excerpt from Kalaripayattu edit nbsp Kalaripayattu IPA kɐɭɐɾip ɐjɐt ɨ also known simply as Kalari is an Indian martial art that originated in Kerala a state on the southwestern coast of India during the 11th 12th century CE Silambam edit This section is an excerpt from Silambam edit nbsp Silambam is an Indian martial art originating in Tamil Nadu South India in the Indian subcontinent This style is mentioned in Tamil Sangam literature The World Silambam Association is the official international body of Silambam Board games editMain category Indian board gamesIndian board games have a long history and have been found etched into the floors and surfaces of ancient temples throughout the country 145 146 147 Carrom edit Main article Carrom nbsp The carrom board Each of the four players must strike from between the two lines on their side of the board Carrom is played on a small board with gameplay similar to pool and billiards cue sports The main unique feature of carrom is that players flick a puck like object with their fingers in order to impact the other pieces on the board with each of the four players having two designated lines on their side of the board between which they must flick shoot their striking piece from 148 Chaturanga edit This section is an excerpt from Chaturanga edit Chaturanga Sanskrit चत र ग caturaṅga pronounced chuh toor anga is an ancient Indian strategy board game It is first known from India around the seventh century CE 149 but its roots may date 5000 years back to the Indus Valley Civilization 150 Pachisi edit This section is an excerpt from Pachisi edit Pachisi p e ˈ tʃ iː z i Hindustani peˈtʃiːsiː is a cross and circle board game that originated in Ancient India It is described in the ancient text Mahabharata under the name of Pasha 151 It is played on a board shaped like a symmetrical cross A player s pieces move around the board based upon a throw of six or seven cowrie shells with the number of shells resting with the aperture upward indicating the number of spaces to move In addition to chaupar 152 there are many versions of the game Barjis ar barsis is popular in the Levant mainly Syria while Parchis is another version popular in Spain and northern Morocco 153 Parques is its Colombian variant Parcheesi Sorry and Ludo are among the many Westernised commercial versions of the game The Jeu des petits chevaux Game of Little Horses is played in France and Mensch argere Dich nicht is a popular German variant It is also possible that this game led to the development of the Korean board game Yunnori through the ancient kingdom Baekje Lambs and tigers edit This section is an excerpt from Lambs and tigers edit nbsp Three variations of empty grids on which this game can be playedThe lambs and tigers game locally referred as the game of goats and tigers Tamil Aḍu puli aṭṭam Telugu Me ka puli aṭa Kannada Aḍu huli aṭa or Telugu Pulijudam is a strategic two player or 2 teams leopard hunt game that is played in south India The game is asymmetric in that one player controls three tigers and the other player controls up to 15 lambs goats The tigers hunt the goats while the goats attempt to block the tigers movements 154 Snakes and ladders edit This section is an excerpt from Snakes and ladders edit Snakes and ladders is a board game for two or more players regarded today as a worldwide classic The game originated in ancient India as Moksha Patam and was brought to the UK in the 1890s It is played on a game board with numbered gridded squares A number of ladders and snakes are pictured on the board each connecting two specific board squares The object of the game is to navigate one s game piece according to die rolls from the start bottom square to the finish top square helped by climbing ladders but hindered by falling down snakes Snooker edit This section is an excerpt from Snooker edit nbsp Four time world champion Mark Selby playing at a practice table during the 2012 Masters tournamentSnooker pronounced UK ˈ s n uː k er SNOO ker US ˈ s n ʊ k er SNUUK er 155 156 is a cue sport played on a rectangular billiards table covered with a green cloth called baize with six pockets one at each corner and one in the middle of each long side First played by British Army officers stationed in India in the second half of the 19th century the game is played with twenty two balls comprising a white cue ball fifteen red balls and six other balls a yellow green brown blue pink and black collectively called the colours Using a cue stick the individual players or teams take turns to strike the cue ball to pot other balls in a predefined sequence accumulating points for each successful pot and for each time the opposing player or team commits a foul An individual frame of snooker is won by the player who has scored the most points A snooker match ends when a player reaches a predetermined number of frames Pallanguzhi edit This section is an excerpt from Pallanguzhi edit nbsp A fish shaped pallankuli boardPallanguli 157 or Pallankuli 158 159 Tamil பல ல ங க ழ romanized Pallaṅkuḻi Malayalam പല ല ങ ക ഴ romanized Pallaṅkuḻi Kannada ಅಳಗ ಳ ಮನ romanized Alaguli Mane Telugu వ మన గ టల romanized Vamana guntalu Marathi सत क ल romanized Satkoli 160 is a traditional ancient mancala game played in South India especially Tamil Nadu and Kerala This game was later introduced to Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh in India as well as Sri Lanka and Malaysia The game is played by two players with a wooden board that has fourteen pits in all hence it is also called fourteen pits or pathinalam kuḻi There have been several variations in the layout of the pits one among them being seven pits on each player s side The pits contain cowry shells seeds or small pebbles used as counters 161 There are several variations of the game depending on the number of shells each player starts with 162 Card games editMain category Indian card games Ganjifa edit This section is an excerpt from Ganjifa edit Ganjifa Ganjapa or Ganjapha 163 is a card game and type of playing cards that are most associated with Persia and India After Ganjifa cards fell out of use in Iran before the twentieth century India became the last country to produce them 164 The form prevalent in Odisha is Ganjapa Boat racing editMain category Boat races in India Vallam kali edit This section is an excerpt from Vallam kali edit nbsp Aranmula Boat in Uthrattathi Boat RaceVallam kali vaḷḷaṃ kaḷi literally boat game also known as snake boat race is a traditional boat race in Kerala India It is a form of canoe racing and uses paddled war canoes It is mainly conducted during the season of the harvest festival Onam in spring Vallam kali includes races of many kinds of paddled longboats and snake boats Each team spends about 6 lakhs for the Nehru Trophy Boat Race 165 Hiyang Tannaba edit This section is an excerpt from Hiyang Tannaba edit Hiyang Tannaba Meitei ꯍ ꯌ ꯡ ꯇ ꯟꯅꯕ lit boat race 166 is a traditional boat race ceremony performed in Manipur India as a part of the religious festival of Lai Haraoba 167 168 It is generally organized in the month of November at many places including Thangapat moat 166 167 The boats called Hiyang Hiren are regarded as invested with spiritual powers and the game is associated with religious rites 166 169 The Meiteis believe that the worship of the Hiyang Hiren will bring protection from evil spirits 166 Physical exercises editDand edit This section is an excerpt from Push up Hindu push up edit nbsp The Hindu push up also known as a dand This is the most basic version similar to that used by Bruce Lee who referred to it as a cat stretch The most basic form of Hindu push up starts from the downward dog yoga position hands and feet on the floor with the posterior raised and transitions to an upward dog position hands and feet on the floor with the torso arched forwards and the legs close to the floor It is also known as a dand and is still widely known by this title especially in India where it originated from It is a common exercise in Indian physical culture and martial arts particularly Pehlwani 170 171 The famous martial artist Bruce Lee also used it in his training regime and referred to it as a cat stretch 172 It is an effective core strength exercise because it dynamically involves both the anterior and posterior chains in a harmonious fashion There are numerous variations of the Hindu push up although most incorporate the two postures used in the most basic version It may also be known as a Hanuman push up judo push up or dive bomber push up Baithak edit See also Squat exercise Body weight A baithak also known as a Hindu squat or a deep knee bend on toes is performed without additional weight and body weight placed on the forefeet and toes with the heels raised throughout during the movement the knees track far past the toes The baithak was a staple exercise of ancient Indian wrestlers It was also used by Bruce Lee in his training regime 173 It may also be performed with the hands resting on an upturned club or the back of a chair Gada edit This section is an excerpt from Gada mace Exercise equipment edit The gada is one of the traditional pieces of training equipment in Hindu physical culture and is common in the akhara of north India Maces of various weights and heights are used depending on the strength and skill level of the practitioner It is believed that Lord Hanuman s gada was the largest amongst all the gadas in the world For training purposes one or two wooden gada mudgar are swung behind the back in several different ways and is particularly useful for building grip strength and shoulder endurance The Great Gama was known for extensive use of gada Winners in a kushti contest are often awarded with a gada citation needed Other physical activities editYoga edit This section is an excerpt from Yoga edit Yoga ˈ j oʊ ɡ e pronounced joːɡɐ is a group of physical mental and spiritual practices or disciplines which originated in ancient India and aim to control yoke and still the mind recognizing a detached witness consciousness untouched by the mind Chitta and mundane suffering Duḥkha There is a wide variety of schools of yoga practices and goals in Hinduism Buddhism and Jainism and traditional and modern yoga is practiced worldwide Mallakhamba edit This section is an excerpt from Mallakhamba edit nbsp A mallakhamba team performs on the pole 2015Mallakhamba or mallakhamb is a traditional sport originating from the Indian subcontinent in which a group of gymnasts perform aerial yoga and gymnastic postures using wrestling grips in concert with a stationary vertical pole The word mallakhamb also refers to the pole used in the sport 174 The pole is usually made from sheesham Indian rosewood polished with castor oil 175 Other popular versions of mallakhamba are practiced using a cane or a rope instead of a pole 176 The origins of pole dancing can be traced back to the sport of mallakhamba 177 The name mallakhamba derives from the terms malla meaning wrestler and khamb which means a pole Literally meaning wrestling pole the term refers to a traditional training implement used by wrestlers 178 Kite flying edit This section is an excerpt from Fighter kite India edit Fighter kites are known as patang in India 179 180 In many others kite flying takes place mainly during specific festivals particularly the spring festival known as Basant during Makar Sankranti and more recently on Indian Independence Day 181 Events involving animals edit nbsp A Kambala participant driving his two bulls forward Kambala edit Main article Kambala Kambala involves one person racing a pair of bulls across a paddy field 182 Jallikattu edit This section is an excerpt from Jallikattu edit Jallikattu or sallikkattu also known as eru taḻuvuṭal and mancuvirattu 183 is a traditional event in which a bull Bos indicus such as the Pulikulam 184 or Kangayam breeds 185 is released into a crowd of people and multiple human participants attempt to grab the large hump on the bull s back with both arms and hang on to it while the bull attempts to escape Participants hold the hump for as long as possible attempting to bring the bull to a stop In some cases participants must ride long enough to remove flags on the bull s horns 186 187 Jallikattu is typically practised in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu as a part of Pongal celebrations on Mattu Pongal day which occurs annually in January Polo edit This section is an excerpt from Polo edit nbsp Players playing poloPolo is a ball game that is played on horseback a traditional field sport and one of the world s oldest known team sports 188 The game is played by two opposing teams with the objective of scoring using a long handled wooden mallet to hit a small hard ball through the opposing team s goal Each team has four mounted riders and the game usually lasts one to two hours divided into periods called chukkas or chukkers Miscellaneous games editAntakshari edit This section is an excerpt from Antakshari edit Antakshari also known as Antyakshari अ त क षर transl The game of the ending letter is a spoken parlor game played in India 189 Each contestant sings the first verse of a song often Classical Hindustani or Bollywood songs that begins with the consonant of Hindi alphabet on which the previous contestant s song ended Raja Mantri Chor Sipahi edit This section is an excerpt from Raja Chor Mantri Sipahi edit nbsp Shuffled chitsRaja Mantri Chor Sipahi transl King Minister thief and soldier is a type of role playing game that is a popular pastime in India It involves four players each player takes up the role of either the king Minister thief or soldier and the Minister Mantri has to guess the identity of the thief Along with other such games its popularity has decreased in the 21st century 190 Toys editBhatukali edit See also House game Bhatukali involves children playing with a mock set of kitchen items with the intention of being taught how to do kitchen related work 191 192 193 Bhatukali dates back to ancient times as evidenced by its presence in literary works such as the Dnyaneshwari and Kama Sutra 194 Dug dugi edit Dug dugi is a type of rattle for children to play with A dug dugi has a core with strings on either side attached to small stone like objects once the dug dugi is shaken the stones hit the core from either side to make sound 194 195 196 Gulel edit Children often play with a slingshot gulel in Hindi which traditionally was also used for hunting purposes 194 Pambaram edit This section is an excerpt from Pambaram edit Pambaram Tamil பம பரம Malayalam പമ പര also called the Lattu Urdu لٹو Latim Bengali ল ট ম Bhawra Marathi भ वर Buguri Kannada ಬ ಗ ರ or Bongaram Telugu బ గర is a traditional throwing top used mainly in India and Bangladesh 197 Regional games editMain articles Traditional games of Andhra Pradesh Punjabi sports India Traditional Punjabi Sports and Games Sports in Tamil Nadu Traditional Sports Bengali traditional games Tripuri games and sports List of traditional Naga games and sports Sports in Maharashtra Indigenous sports Sports in Manipur and Sport in Meghalaya Traditional games Yubi lakpi edit This section is an excerpt from Yubi lakpi edit Yubi lakpi is a seven a side traditional football game played in Manipur India using a coconut which has some notable similarities to rugby Despite these similarities the name is not related to the game of rugby or Rugby School in England it is in fact of Meitei origin and means literally coconut snatching 198 Emma Levine an English writer on little known Asian sports speculates Perhaps this was the root of modern rugby Most Manipuris are quite adamant that the modern world stole the idea from them and made it into rugby this game which has been around for centuries is so similar to rugby which evolved a great deal later that it must be more than a coincidence 199 Dhopkhel edit This section is an excerpt from Dhopkhel edit nbsp Dhopkhel is played by both indigenous Assamese men and womenDhopkhel also transliterated dhop khel and dhoop khel Assamese ঢ পখ ল is a traditional ball game played in the Indian state of Assam The game is played between two teams of 11 on a 125 m 80 m field bounded by four flags The players take turns throwing the ball at the opponent to knock them out of the game while seeking to catch the ball and avoid being tagged by other players It is a test of speed stamina and acrobatic skills 200 See also editHistory of India List of Indian inventions and discoveries Traditional games of Bangladesh Traditional games of Pakistan Traditional games of Andhra PradeshPortals nbsp India nbsp SportsReferences edit Bharatan Nisha 2020 12 16 List Of Top 25 Traditional Desi Indian Games For Kids MomJunction Retrieved 2022 11 01 India has a sports history going back a thousand years businessindia co Retrieved 2023 01 30 a b Kabaddi How to play India s 4000 year old indigenous sport Olympics com a b c Nag Utathya 24 June 2022 Kho Kho a kabaddi like sport linked with Indian epic Mahabharata know all about it Olympics com a b Love Adam Dzikus Lars 26 February 2020 How India came to love cricket favored sport of its colonial British rulers The Conversation Retrieved 2022 12 31 Venugopal Vasudha 2017 05 19 Modi government to promote traditional sports The Economic Times ISSN 0013 0389 Retrieved 2023 12 02 Will take traditional sports international says sports minister Anurag Thakur The Economic Times 2022 12 09 ISSN 0013 0389 Retrieved 2023 12 02 Journal of Health Physical Education Recreation American Alliance for Health Physical Education and Recreation 1960 a b c d e f g Satyam Amitabh Goswami Sangeeta 2022 04 18 The Games India Plays Indian Sports Simplified Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 93 5435 256 0 Gilli danda among 75 Bharatiya sports set to be introduced in schools Hindustan Times 2022 07 30 Retrieved 2022 11 04 IATSG formed to promote traditional sports and games uniindia com Retrieved 2023 12 22 unesdoc unesco org https unesdoc unesco org ark 48223 pf0000261062 eng Retrieved 2023 12 22 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help The Evolution of Kho Kho Mats in India A Historical Overview News18 2023 05 29 Retrieved 2023 08 06 a b c d Arasu S T 2020 07 04 Galah Panjang and its Indian roots On the sport Be part of it Retrieved 2022 11 01 World Chess Day 2022 History Significance And Quotes About The Game News18 2022 07 20 Retrieved 2023 01 14 Myths surrounding the origin of the ancient Indian game kabaddi HT School Retrieved 2023 08 28 Shah Mat The Global Origins of Chess in War and Diplomacy History Hit Retrieved 2023 08 28 a b Historical Picture of Physical Activities and Sports in Ancient India https www ijnrd org Dr R S Hiremath Prasad Salian and Dr Ashok Kumar Arasu S T 2010 02 18 History of Kabaddi www sportskeeda com Retrieved 2023 10 21 Upmanyu Kabir 2017 07 31 What Are The Origins of Kabaddi And How d it Get so Big so Fast TheQuint Retrieved 2023 10 21 NBA prez got me thinking seriously about kabaddi The Indian Express 2014 03 23 Retrieved 2023 10 21 a b A Historical Study of the Origin and Features of Some Selected Folk Games in North Bengal Badal Roy https ir nbu ac in kabaddi sport Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2023 01 09 Chandran Somesh 2015 07 28 The bond between yoga and kabaddi Gautama Buddha s recreational sport www sportskeeda com Retrieved 2023 10 08 Sharma Amol 2010 08 25 Ancient Sport of India Touts Ties to Buddha and Male Cheerleaders Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved 2023 10 08 Four life skills only Kabaddi can teach you The Indian Express 2015 05 04 Retrieved 2023 11 10 Desk The Bridge 2021 12 01 Sports Exotics Kabaddi s Million Dollar Spots thebridge in Retrieved 2023 11 10 JAFFER MEHRU 2022 09 23 Kabaddi Kabaddi Kabaddi www thecitizen in Retrieved 2023 11 10 Chandran Somesh 2015 07 28 The bond between yoga and kabaddi Gautama Buddha s recreational sport www sportskeeda com Retrieved 2023 11 10 The history of hunting and its role in wildlife conservation The Indian Express 2023 03 03 Retrieved 2023 10 08 a b Pattanaik Devdutt 2020 12 11 Of thrill seekers and deer hunters The Economic Times ISSN 0013 0389 Retrieved 2023 10 08 a b Singh Upinder 2017 10 23 Even in ancient India the state was usually at war with the forest and its inhabitants Scroll in Retrieved 2023 10 08 What Political Violence in Ancient India Tells Us About Our Past and Present The Wire Retrieved 2023 10 08 Sinha Kanad 2017 Envisioning a No Man s Land Hermitage as a Site of Exemption in Ancient and Early Medieval Indian Literature Medieval Worlds medieval worlds Volume 6 2017 20 39 doi 10 1553 medievalworlds no6 2017s20 ISSN 2412 3196 Lodh Sayan 2020 01 01 Portrayal of Hunting in Environmental History of India Academia Chopra P N 1952 Games Sports and Other Amusements During Mughal Times Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 15 268 273 ISSN 2249 1937 JSTOR 45436494 How polo blossomed as the sport of kings during the Mughal period The Times of India ISSN 0971 8257 Retrieved 2023 10 08 History of the legendary game Polo The Economic Times 2010 12 05 ISSN 0013 0389 Retrieved 2023 10 08 Academy M A P 2023 01 15 What is Pachisi Ancient Indian board game Mughal emperor Akbar enjoyed ThePrint Retrieved 2023 10 08 InpaperMagazine From 2011 03 27 Past present Mughals and indoor games DAWN COM Retrieved 2023 10 08 Alter Joseph S 1992 the sannyasi and the Indian wrestler the anatomy of a relationship American Ethnologist 19 2 317 336 doi 10 1525 ae 1992 19 2 02a00070 1 INDIAN COLONIAL EMIGRATION https www gandhiashramsevagram org Disappearance of Traditional games by the imitation of Colonial Culture through the Historical parameters of Cultural Colonialism Md Abu Nasim https dergipark org tr The Revenge of Plassey Football in the British Raj puviarasu LSE International History 2020 07 20 Retrieved 2022 12 31 Leng Ho Keat Pyun Do Young Lin Yen Chun 2023 07 14 Special issue sports and leisure management in Asia Managing Sport and Leisure 1 3 doi 10 1080 23750472 2023 2207865 ISSN 2375 0472 Cleophas Francois 2021 08 24 How colonial history shaped bodies and sport at the edges of empire The Conversation Retrieved 2023 10 04 Krishnaswamy Revathi 1999 2 The Economy of Colonial Desire University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 90422 8 a b Sen Ronojoy 2015 10 27 Nation at Play A History of Sport in India Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 53993 7 1 Imperial Culture and Hunting in Colonial India academic oup com Retrieved 2023 10 08 Mani Fiona 2012 05 01 Guns and shikaris The rise of the sahib s hunting ethos and the fall of the subaltern poacher in British India 1750 1947 Graduate Theses Dissertations and Problem Reports doi 10 33915 etd 594 3 Hunting as Sport in Colonial India Codes of Sportsmanship Firearms Race and Class in Hunting academic oup com doi 10 1093 oso 9780199489381 003 0004 Retrieved 2023 10 08 Reviving traditional games of India The Hindu 2012 06 10 ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 2023 01 21 Strengthen Sport for All Movement Through Traditional Sports amp Games https www ssf or jp Suresh Deshpande Sayyad M Quadri Mills James H Sen Satadru 2004 Confronting the Body The Politics of Physicality in Colonial and Post colonial India Anthem Press ISBN 978 1 84331 033 4 Brunner Michael Philipp 2018 01 02 Manly Sikhs and Loyal Citizens Physical Education and Sport in Khalsa College Amritsar 1914 47 South Asia Journal of South Asian Studies 41 1 33 50 doi 10 1080 00856401 2018 1389235 ISSN 0085 6401 S2CID 149127674 Bromber Katrin Krawietz Birgit Maguire Joseph 2013 Sport Across Asia Politics Cultures and Identities Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 88438 9 Development of physical education and sport in British and post Independence period in India https www journalofsports com Dr Mitesh Kumar How kabaddi went from local to global on the sidelines of the Olympics https olympics com Utathya Nag Mahabir Dr Kumar Disappearing Ancient Games In The Caribbean Academia Department of Sport and Recreation Annual Report 2007 2008 https www kzndsr gov za Desk NewsonRadar 2023 10 04 Asian Games Indian connect in Malaysia s men s kabaddi team News On Radar Retrieved 2023 10 05 2021 Khelo India Youth Games Inclusion of indigenous sports to add to colour diversity https olympics com Naveen Peter Five traditional games feature in 4th edition of KIYG The Times of India 2022 05 07 ISSN 0971 8257 Retrieved 2023 08 29 National Games Record 43 disciplines get nod beach football to debut lagori is demo sport The Times of India 2023 05 17 ISSN 0971 8257 Retrieved 2023 10 06 The games that we lost The New Indian Express Retrieved 2023 08 28 Pro Kabaddi leagues rising fortunes rub off on prospects of the rural game Business Standard 2022 10 06 Retrieved 2022 12 31 The rise and rise of kabaddi an ancient Indian sport The Economist ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved 2023 09 01 Kadiyala Abhishek 2022 11 16 Influx of foreign talent in Kabaddi hints towards a new trend ThePrint Retrieved 2024 01 06 a b Saini Lavanya Lakshmi Narayanan amp Abhishek 2022 09 17 Ultimate Kho Kho Welcome revival or departure from roots sportstar thehindu com Retrieved 2022 11 06 Khosla Varuni 2023 01 17 Ultimate Kho Kho S1 claims total reach of 41 million viewers from India mint Retrieved 2023 01 20 M Hari Kishore 2022 05 10 Pro Panja League Asia s biggest arm wrestling league to commence ranking tournament in Gwalior on July 22 www sportskeeda com Retrieved 2023 07 24 The Evolution of Kho Kho Mats in India A Historical Overview News18 2023 05 29 Retrieved 2023 08 28 From Handball To Panja Why Sports Leagues Are Taking Off In India Forbes India Retrieved 2023 08 28 Taneja Nidhima 2023 01 27 Pro kabaddi kho kho leagues chase IPL viewership India rediscovering regional sports ThePrint Retrieved 2023 08 28 Desk The Bridge 2022 05 24 Live Gaming Traditional Indian Games Go Digital thebridge in Retrieved 2023 11 26 Traditional Indian games are redefining digital gaming industry in India News18 2015 06 12 Retrieved 2023 11 26 How Tech Has Changed Traditional Indian Games www uniindia com Retrieved 2023 11 26 Kam Matthew Mathur Akhil Kumar Anuj Canny John 2009 04 04 Designing digital games for rural children a study of traditional village games in India Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems CHI 09 New York NY USA Association for Computing Machinery 31 40 doi 10 1145 1518701 1518707 ISBN 978 1 60558 246 7 I G N Staff 2008 07 31 Gameshastra Announces an Agreement with SCEA to Develop a Game Using Traditional Indian Sports IGN Retrieved 2023 12 01 Aditya Wadhawan Jan 20 2023 Bharatiya Games initiative to popularise traditional Indian sports ecosystem in schools Times of India The Times of India Retrieved 2023 01 21 Gilli danda among 75 Bharatiya sports set to be introduced in schools Hindustan Times 2022 07 30 Retrieved 2023 01 21 Ultimate Kho Kho league launched in India The Indian Express 2019 04 03 Retrieved 2023 10 26 Traditional sports return to playgrounds of schools The Times of India 2023 11 22 ISSN 0971 8257 Retrieved 2023 11 26 CM Bhupesh Baghel inaugurates Chhattisgarhiya Olympic in Raipur Hindustan Times 2023 07 17 Retrieved 2023 08 11 Chengappa C C 2021 02 08 India s rural Olympics Village in Punjab hosting traditional sports events since 1933 thebridge in Retrieved 2023 10 10 Brewster Paul G 1955 A Collection of Games from India with some Notes on Similar Games in other Parts of the World Zeitschrift fur Ethnologie 80 1 88 102 ISSN 0044 2666 JSTOR 25840313 About Gilli Danda and Dandi Biyo www topendsports com Retrieved 2022 10 31 Krishnamohan Theviyanthan 25 September 2014 Gilli Danda A dying Indian traditional game www sportskeeda com Retrieved 2022 11 04 a b Jadia Varun 2016 05 08 15 Forgotten Indian Childhood Games That Need to Be Revived Before They Are Lost Forever The Better India Retrieved 2022 11 04 Mahajan Esha July 27 2011 Play space shrinking but slum kids are game The Times of India Archived from the original on September 9 2011 Retrieved May 5 2019 Ball Badminton Federation of India Archived from the original on 7 July 2011 Retrieved 11 May 2011 neeru 2015 11 16 Marbles D Source Retrieved 2022 11 01 Pareek Shreya 2014 05 15 10 Popular Games You Probably Didn t Know Were Played In Ancient India The Better India Retrieved 2022 11 06 Kumar V Saravana 2016 11 24 Benefits of Traditional Indian Games Importance amp Advantages of Traditional Games for Children ParentCircle www parentcircle com Retrieved 2023 01 03 a b Lock and Key to Pittu 13 outdoor games every 90s kid would remember InUth 2017 09 06 Retrieved 2023 08 06 Kabaddi to Gilli Danda to Kho Kho Traditional games played in India mykhel com AK Ananya 2018 08 10 10 Games You Played If You Were Born In The 90s India Campus Times Pune Retrieved 2022 10 31 Gosain Srishti 2016 03 10 12 Games Every 90s Kid Played And We Miss These LifeCrust Retrieved 2023 08 04 Bandar Qilla Baander killa Dost Pakistan Retrieved 2023 08 04 Sudevan Praveen 2022 10 27 How Pro Kabaddi made kabaddi the most watched sport in India after cricket The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 2023 12 05 Hard Bound Lab Manual Health and Physical Education p 41 a b kho kho Indian sport Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2022 07 16 Peter A Hastie 2010 Student Designed Games Strategies for Promoting Creativity Cooperation and Skill Development Human Kinetics p 52 ISBN 978 0 7360 8590 8 Nag Utathya 24 June 2022 Kho Kho a kabaddi like sport linked with Indian epic Mahabharata know all about it Olympics com Awasthi Shailendra 2010 01 01 Now officially a sport Langdi takes giant leap Indian Express Retrieved 9 August 2013 Vishal Karule ल गड न घ ल परद शव र ल Zee 24 Taas Cite error The named reference Atya patya S r tiwari was invoked but never defined see the help page a b Cite error The named reference Atya patya GazetteGOM 201302809 was invoked but never defined see the help page Cite error The named reference Atya patya Hoiberg2000 was invoked but never defined see the help page Cite error The named reference Atya patya BromberMaguire2013 was invoked but never defined see the help page A game of chor police The New Indian Express 15 Fun Games That 90s Kids Used To Play www scoopwhoop com May 28 2014 Suspected Far from Home Greater Kashmir February 27 2015 15 Forgotten Indian Childhood Games That Need to Be Revived Before They Are Lost Forever May 8 2016 Chaudhuri Zinnia Ray The reckless kids of Mahim win a street photographer a prestigious international award Scroll in a b Suresh Gautam 2022 ल क स ह त य ज य क त य धर द न चदर य Lok Sahitya Jyon Ki Tyon Rakh Dini Chadariya in Hindi New Delhi K K p 141 OCLC 1035812603 Heather Ford 2022 Ethnographies of the Digitally Dispossessed In Elisabetta Costa Patricia G Lange Nell Haynes Jolynna Sinanan eds The Routledge Companion to Media Anthropology Routledge doi 10 4324 9781003175605 ISBN 9781003175605 Vidya Vindu Singh 2021 अवध ल कग त व र सत Awadhi Lokgeet Virasat in Hindi Prabhat Prakashan Gyan Vigyan Educare pp 210 211 ISBN 9789384344399 Mistry Dhan K 1959 The Indian Child And His Play Sociological Bulletin 8 1 86 96 doi 10 1177 0038022919590105 ISSN 0038 0229 JSTOR 42864548 S2CID 220049396 neeru 2015 11 16 Vish Amrit D Source Retrieved 2022 11 15 Sariya Tasneem 2021 02 10 Top 10 Traditional Games of India that Defined Childhood for Generations Caleidoscope Indian Culture Heritage Retrieved 2022 11 15 neeru 2015 11 16 Kokla Chappaki D Source Retrieved 2022 11 17 a b c GAMES webcache googleusercontent com Retrieved 2023 07 25 The lesser known Indian sports webcache googleusercontent com Retrieved 2023 10 18 Britannica Student Britannica India 7 Vols Popular Prakashan ISBN 978 0 85229 762 9 Satyam Amitabh Goswami Sangeeta 2022 04 18 The Games India Plays Indian Sports Simplified Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 93 5435 256 0 Tree Climbing Monkey Indian Traditional Games How to Play 2020 08 12 Archived from the original on 2020 08 12 Retrieved 2022 11 16 Games People Play ed www daijiworld com Retrieved 2023 08 28 Chatterjee Sukumar 2016 11 18 Grandpa s Tales of Ahmednagar Part 1 Notion Press ISBN 978 1 946280 21 3 www wisdomlib org 2018 10 16 Suraparambi Suraparambi 1 definition www wisdomlib org Retrieved 2023 07 25 Importance of Play Aarti C Rajaratnam a b c The Gazetteers Department AHMADNAGAR webcache googleusercontent com Retrieved 2023 07 25 Knowing Bangladesh Independent m theindependentbd com Retrieved 2023 08 10 Singh Neetu 2018 05 21 व ख ल ज हम ख ब भ त थ ल क न अब बस तस व र म द खत ह इसम स आपक पस द द क न स ह Gaon Connection in Hindi Retrieved 2023 08 10 a b Brewster Paul G 1951 Four Games of Tag from India Midwest Folklore 1 4 239 241 ISSN 0544 0750 JSTOR 4317307 The Rig Veda Mandala 6 Hymn 75 5 Monsoon Wedding Mohabbatein actors bring arm wrestling to masses Hindustan Times 2023 07 10 Retrieved 2023 07 24 Pehlwani Alter Joseph S May 1992a The sannyasi and the Indian Wrestler The Anatomy of a Relationship American Ethnologist 19 2 317 336 doi 10 1525 ae 1992 19 2 02a00070 ISSN 0094 0496 a b Alter Joseph S 1992b The Wrestler s Body Identity and Ideology in North India Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 07697 4 یاوری موسی 26 February 2019 گتکا ہماری ثقافت ہے اور ہم نے اسے قائم رکھنا ہے BBC News اردو in Urdu Sadaqat Muhammad March 17 2019 Gatka a centuries old art of self defence DAWN Retrieved October 7 2021 Donn F Draeger and Robert W Smith 1969 Comprehensive Asian Fighting Arts Kodansha International Limited Ananda Lal The Oxford companion to Indian theatre Oxford University Press 2004 ISBN 9780195644463 p 129 Heritagetched in stone The New Indian Express Retrieved 2023 10 11 Mohapatra Samhati Old temples a cache of ancient board games The Times of India ISSN 0971 8257 Retrieved 2023 10 11 Know Your City Ancient game patterns inscribed beneath Krishna s butter ball come to light The Indian Express 2022 08 29 Retrieved 2023 10 11 11 Basic Carrom Board Rules For Beginners India Today NE 2022 05 13 Retrieved 2022 11 06 Murray H J R 1913 A History of Chess Benjamin Press originally published by Oxford University Press ISBN 0 936317 01 9 OCLC 13472872 Greenberg Henry J 30 September 2015 The Anti War Wargame a Comprehensive Analysis of the Origins of the Game of Chess 1989 1990 iUniverse ISBN 9781491773536 Retrieved 21 June 2021 Finkel 2004 citing Falkener 1892 p 257 as the originator of the term Swiss Committee for UNICEF 1982 Games of the World National Committees for UNICEF pp 28 29 Parcheesi in Tangier Morocco John Lux Aug 11th 2014 http tangierhotels net blog parcheesi tangier morocco Archived 2017 12 01 at the Wayback Machine Desk The Bridge 2022 07 26 Aadu Puli Aatam The tiger and goat game in Tamil Nadu s temples The Bridge Home of Indian Sports Retrieved 2023 10 11 Pronunciation of snooker Macmillan Dictionary London UK Macmillan Publishers Archived from the original on 15 April 2012 Retrieved 19 March 2012 American pronunciation of snooker Macmillan Dictionary op cit Archived from the original on 12 May 2013 Retrieved 19 March 2012 Russ Laurence 1984 Mancala Games Reference Publications p 60 ISBN 978 0 917256 19 6 Narayanan Vasudha Nammaaolvaar 1994 The Vernacular Veda Revelation Recitation and Ritual Univ of South Carolina Press p 16 ISBN 978 0 87249 965 2 Subrahmanian N 2000 Tamil Social History Institute of Asian Studies p 298 25 June 2006 The Hindu 2006 06 25 Archived from the original on 2012 03 26 Retrieved 2013 01 27 The Antigua connection The Hindu 2006 The Hindu 2006 06 18 Archived from the original on 2007 12 06 Retrieved 2013 01 27 Rustic board game The Hindu Sep 2006 The Hindu 2006 09 20 Archived from the original on 2007 06 21 Retrieved 2013 01 27 Many different spellings and transliterations can be found such as Ganjafa Ghendgifeh Gunjeefa Ganjapa Kanjifa Kanjifah and so on In arabic the spellings كنجفة or جنجفة or غنجفه can be found The Persian word is ganjifeh گنجفه In Hindi the term is ग ज फ At the start of the 21st Century production in India was still ongoing in the town of Sawantvadi in the west and Odisha in the east for example See Abram 2003 53 and Crestin Billet 2002 189 Neethu amp Athul 2021 11 24 Vallam Kali The famous festival of boat race in Kerala Our Backpack Tales Retrieved 2023 12 01 a b c d Garg Chitra November 10 2007 Travel India A Complete Guide to Tourist Lotus Press ISBN 9788183820844 via Google Books a b Students Britannica India Select essays Encyclopaedia Britannica India November 10 2000 ISBN 9780852297629 via Google Books sports indiapress org Chatterjee Suhas November 10 2000 A Socio Economic History of South Assam Printwell Publishers Distributors ISBN 9788170445180 via Google Books 7 fitness trends to take to in 2019 Hindustan Times 12 January 2019 Retrieved 2022 05 27 Mujumdar D C 1950 The Encyclopedia of Indian Physical Culture p 460 plate 131 Lee Bruce Preliminaries in The Tao of Jeet Kune Do California Ohara Publications 1975 p 29 Lee Bruce Preliminaries in The Tao of Jeet Kune Do California Ohara Publications 1975 p 29 Games sports and cultures Dyck Noel Oxford Berg 2000 p 96 ISBN 1 85973 312 3 OCLC 44485325 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Sport in the USSR Issues 1 12 Issues 286 297 pp 9 Sport across Asia politics cultures and identities Bromber Katrin Krawietz Birgit Maguire Joseph New York Routledge 2013 p 137 ISBN 978 0 415 88438 9 OCLC 800447515 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Kapur Mallika 2017 09 11 Aarifa Bhinderwala India s pioneering pole dancer CNN Retrieved 2023 08 15 Mallakhamb History Indian Gymnastic Pole Information In English Mumbai India 12 September 2018 Pattum Archived 26 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine Indian Traditional Games High up in the sky Sunny Sebastian The Times of Inda Lord of the strings Kite wars mark India s day of independence Retrieved 17 August 2016 Rongmei Precious Here s what you need to know about the Kambala Race The Times of India Retrieved 2022 11 01 Ramakrishnan T Governor clears ordinance on jallikattu The Hindu Retrieved 2017 02 26 Valerie Porter Lawrence Alderson Stephen J G Hall D Phillip Sponenberg 9 March 2016 Mason s World Encyclopedia of Livestock Breeds and Breeding 2 Volume Pack CAB International p 275 ISBN 9781845934668 Ramesh C Mariayyah P Senthilkumar A Rajendran K 2014 A Study of Sports and Recreational Activities of Pura Village People and their Attitude Towards these Activities Journal of Recent Research and Applied Studies 1 7 89 94 Anugula Himakiran Banning Jallikattu Will Decimate India s Indigenous Cattle Breeds The Wire Retrieved 17 January 2017 What is Jallikattu This 2 000 year old sport is making news in India Here s why The Economic Times Retrieved 17 January 2017 THE HISTORY OF POLO argentinapolo com S K Rait Sikh women in England their religious and cultural beliefs and social practices Trentham Books 2005 ISBN 978 1 85856 353 4 playing antakshri a group singing game Friendship on paper Remember these games from childhood 18 August 2015 Zeitschrift fur Ethnologie in German Reimer 1955 Bose Mandakranta 2000 02 10 Faces of the Feminine in Ancient Medieval and Modern India Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 535277 1 Bombay India 1954 Gazetteer of Bombay State Government Central Press a b c 10 traditional Indian toys that are good for play and the planet Yahoo News 2021 03 01 Retrieved 2023 07 30 Learning with toys More fun and creativity The New Indian Express Retrieved 2023 10 09 9 Traditional Indian Games And Toys On The Verge Of Extinction IndiaTimes 2015 06 29 Retrieved 2023 10 09 Oliver Valerie History of Spin Top www yoyomuseum com Retrieved 2017 04 16 Levine p 275 Levine pp 275 6 Traditional Sports in India Retrieved 28 February 2013 Further reading editIndigenous Sports of India Connecting Past to the Present INDIGENOUS GAMES IN INDIA THEN amp NOWExternal links edithttps bharatiyakhel in the official Indian government website for traditional Indian games Khel Book Association of Traditional Sports and Games India UNESCO TSG Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Traditional games of India amp oldid 1194009101, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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