Eastern Slavs spread it to Kievan Rus about the same time. Muslims brought chess to North Africa, Sicily, and Spain by the 10th century. The oldest recorded game, found in a 10th-century manuscript, was played between a Baghdad historian, believed to be a favourite of three successive caliphs, and a pupil. Introduction to EuropeĪ form of chaturanga or shatranj made its way to Europe by way of Persia, the Byzantine Empire, and, perhaps most important of all, the expanding Arabian empire. Chinese chess, the most popular version of the Eastern game, has 9 files and 10 ranks as well as a boundary-the river, between the 5th and 6th ranks-that limits access to the enemy camp and makes the game slower than its Western cousin. About 750 ce chess reached China, and by the 11th century it had come to Japan and Korea. In the East, carried by Buddhist pilgrims, Silk Road traders, and others, it was transformed into a game with inscribed disks that were often placed on the intersection of the lines of the board rather than within the squares.
The game spread to the east, north, and west, taking on sharply different characteristics. The initial positions of the pawns and knights have not changed, but there were considerable regional and temporal variations for the other pieces. A game of shatranj could be won either by eliminating all an opponent’s pieces (baring the king) or by ensuring the capture of the king. Shatranj resembled chaturanga but added a new piece, a firzān (counselor), which had nothing to do with any troop formation. Some historians say chaturanga, perhaps played with dice on a 64-square board, gradually transformed into shatranj (or chatrang), a two-player game popular in northern India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, and southern parts of Central Asia after 600 ce. Chaturanga was flourishing in northwestern India by the 7th century and is regarded as the earliest precursor of modern chess because it had two key features found in all later chess variants-different pieces had different powers (unlike checkers and go), and victory was based on one piece, the king of modern chess. One of those earlier games was a war game called chaturanga, a Sanskrit name for a battle formation mentioned in the Indian epic Mahabharata. Game pieces found in Russia, China, India, Central Asia, Pakistan, and elsewhere that have been determined to be older than that are now regarded as coming from earlier distantly related board games, often involving dice and sometimes using playing boards of 100 or more squares. There is no credible evidence that chess existed in a form approaching the modern game before the 6th century ce. The origin of chess remains a matter of controversy.
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