Monday, December 19, 2016
Mongolian with toys
Mongolian
traditional games can be divided into 2 general types on the basis of
their general form; games which are played using simple and
readily-available materials such s stones sticks, or animal bones and
games which are played using objects created by the artistic means;
namely with painted or carved pieces. The games of the one category are
characterized by a close figurative connection with nature and the
herding lifestyle, often having a ritual of symbolic element to their
playing & by a relative simplicity of their rules of play. The games
of the latter category- which include cards, chess dominoes and
interlocking puzzles -are symbolically associated with social and
artistic activities and are usually more sophisticated requiring greater
intellectual skill in their playing. Of the games played with really
and natural materials, the simplest is "ail ger" (family home). The game
is played with stones, much in the same way as children in western
countries play "house" with dolls a small circle of stone is set up to
represent a ger; further stones are placed inside it to represent
furniture and house hold objects and stones of different shapes and
colors are collected outside the home to represent the families herds.
The most unique Mongolian game is shagai or anklebones, which as the
name suggests, is played using the cleaned and polished anklebones of
sheep. Each of the four sides of the anklebone represents a different
animal; horse, sheep, camel, goat, although there are many games which
can be played with the bones. In earlier times, families which managed
to collect more anklebones than they needed would select an auspicious
day and go to play the game of "multicolored turtle" on the top of a
mountain leaving the bones afterwards as an offering to the mountain or
to the sky. This game is played with a number of bones corresponding to
one of the auspicious number in the Buddhist faith- most often 81 or
108. the placement of the bones represents the five elements and colors
in addition to the body of the turtle itself, which is viewed in
traditional Mongolian iconography as the symbol of the cosmos players
take bones from different parts of the turtle or surrounding five
elements on each turn corresponding to the throw of a die. Once the
players have collected all the parts of the turtle's body the game
concludes with the player in possession of the most bones the winner.
One of the common games played with shagai is the "horse race" for 2 or
more players. Games played using carved or painted pieces include cards,
chess, dominoes and khorol (a game similar to dominoes, using the 12
animals of the zodiac and Buddhist symbols). Of these games chess
remains one of the most popular as well as one of the oldest traditional
games some Mongolian scholars claim that chess sets characteristically
depict nobles, horses, camels, oxcarts and other identifiable elements
of Mongolian life. Mongolian chess is more similar to the European than
the Chinese version of the game, but there are several important
differences in the rules for example: only the pawn in front of the
Queen is only permitted to move one space at a time when moving
diagonal.
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