Ail ger: it’s
a Mongolian traditional game played with stones, a bit similar to the
way occidental children play “mummies and daddies” with dolls. They draw
a small circle of stones to represent the yurt. Inside it, they place
other stones to represent furniture and domestic objects. Stones with
different colours and shapes are placed outside the yurt to represent
the animals. The game of ail ger has a very important symbolic side and
any traveller who comes across such a game should add a stone to
symbolise a new animal, which will symbolically increase the size of the
cattle and bring good luck.
Shagai: shagai or knucklebones is the most original Mongolian game. It’s played with sheep’s knucklebones cleaned and polished.
Each one of the four sides of the
knucklebone represents a different animal: horse, sheep, camel, and
goat. Many games can be played with knucklebones, but the aim is
generally to throw and pick them, with different consequences according
to which side they fall on.
Besides being a pastime for breeders
families, shagai also has an important symbolic value. An important
family that owns many animals will gradually get many knucklebones,
which symbolises prosperity of the family. In olden times, the families
that had get more knucklebones than their need used to choose a good day
to go and play the “multicoloured turtle” on top of a mountain; then
they used to give the bones as offering to mountain and sky.
Horse race: one of the most common games of Mongolia with shagai.
Several knucklebones are lined to
represent the track, and other bones are placed aside to represent the
horses. Players throw the knucklebones and move their horse each time a
knucklebone falls on the side of the horse. The first player who reaches
the end of the track and comes back wins.
The multicoloured turtle: this
game best symbolises richness in Mongolia. Besides being a real game,
this game is also supposed to bring luck and prosperity to the family
and fertility to the cattle if you play for the new year.
It’s played with a number of bones that
correspond to the number of good luck in the Buddhist belief: 81 or 108.
The place of the bones symbolises the five elements and colours, and
the body of the turtle symbolises cosmos according to Mongolian
traditional iconography. The players take the bones from the different
parts of the turtle or from the five elements. The gam is finished when
all the parts of the turtle are collected. The player who’s taken most
knucklebones is the winner.
Chess: the most popular of these games, and also one of the oldest. Some persons of letters say that chess come from Mongolia.
The pieces of Mongolian chess represent
aristocrats, horses, camels, and other elements related to Mongolian
life. They’re more similar to occidental chess than to Chinese chess,
but there are remarkable differencies in the rules. For example, only
the pawn placed outside the queen can move two squares for the first
move, and the queen can move only one case when it moves in diagonal
direction.
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