Board and Table Games from Many CivilizationsCourier Corporation, 2012 M04 30 - 464 páginas There are many authoritative books on card games and chess, but only a handful on the dozens of other games known to mankind. This excellent handbook by R. C. Bell is a basic reference to board and table games from around the world, and one of the two or three finest books ever written on the subject. Originally published in two volumes in the 1960's, it is now available for the first time in a corrected, one-volume edition. Mr. Bell's encyclopedic work provides the rules and methods of play for 182 different games: Ma-jong, Hazard, Wei-ch'I (Go), backgammon, Wari, Continental draughts, Pachisi, Japanese chess, Bidou, Domino Loo, Cribbage, and many others. Volume one is divided into chapters devoted to race games, war games, games of position, Mancala games, dice games, and domino games; volume two follows the same arrangement and then proceeds to games with numbers, card games requiring boards, and games requiring manual dexterity. Additional information is furnished on making boards and pieces, and on gaming-counters. Game players, toymakers, and historians of culture will welcome this guided tour of games from Egypt, Meso-America, the Orient, India, Persia, Rome, Africa, Victorian England, and many other societies. Over 300 illustrations, both photographs and line drawings, add an illuminating counterpoint to the text. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 31
Página
... ORTHOGONAL MOVE RANK REPLACEMENT ROW SHORT LEAP Capture by trapping an enemy piece between two of one's own. The piece moves diagonally across the board. The singular of dice. A piece is en prise when it is liable to capture at the ...
... ORTHOGONAL MOVE RANK REPLACEMENT ROW SHORT LEAP Capture by trapping an enemy piece between two of one's own. The piece moves diagonally across the board. The singular of dice. A piece is en prise when it is liable to capture at the ...
Página 50
... orthogonally. No piece could move backwards. When the game was played by four, North and West played against South and East. Each player had six pieces making a total of twelve perforated and twelve plain, and each side had one Priest ...
... orthogonally. No piece could move backwards. When the game was played by four, North and West played against South and East. Each player had six pieces making a total of twelve perforated and twelve plain, and each side had one Priest ...
Página 52
... orthogonally or diagonally, to the next point of intersection. A capture is made by jumping over an enemy piece on to a vacant point beyond and any number of pieces may be captured in one move by a series of jumps similar to the move of ...
... orthogonally or diagonally, to the next point of intersection. A capture is made by jumping over an enemy piece on to a vacant point beyond and any number of pieces may be captured in one move by a series of jumps similar to the move of ...
Página 53
... . Each piece had a different type of move. FIG. 44. Moves of the pieces in Shaturanga. The pieces. FIG, 43. An Ashtapada board (from Hyde, De Ludis Orientalibus) The RAJAH moved orthogonally or diagonally one square in any.
... . Each piece had a different type of move. FIG. 44. Moves of the pieces in Shaturanga. The pieces. FIG, 43. An Ashtapada board (from Hyde, De Ludis Orientalibus) The RAJAH moved orthogonally or diagonally one square in any.
Página 54
... orthogonally forwards, sideways, or backwards any number of unoccupied squares. The elephant could not jump over a piece (fig. 44). The HORSE moved one square orthogonally and one square diagonally (the knight's move in modern chess) ...
... orthogonally forwards, sideways, or backwards any number of unoccupied squares. The elephant could not jump over a piece (fig. 44). The HORSE moved one square orthogonally and one square diagonally (the knight's move in modern chess) ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Board and Table Games from Many Civilizations, Volúmenes1-2 Robert Charles Bell Vista previa limitada - 1979 |
Términos y frases comunes
Alquerque alternately as-Suli Author’s collection Awari backgammon banker Black Board and pieces called capture cards centre century Chess in Iceland Chinese dominoes circle colour count counters cowries cribbage Culin diagonally Diagram disc discard Domino Whist double draughts drawing edition eight empty enemy piece English draughts face Fiske gambling hand Hasami Shogi History of Chess Hnefatafl hole Iceland illustrations Initial position ivory jump king lifted London loses Ludus Duodecim Scriptorum Ludus Latrunculorum MANCALA marked markers Men’s Morris nine opening player Opening position opponent orthogonally pair passes Patolli pawn pays pieces move pips Plate player throws player’s pieces players place pool position of pieces Queen quong RACE GAMES rajah round Rules Scarne score seeds sequence Shatranj shown in fig side Squails stake sticks stones tailpiece takes tallies tangram teetotum three dice tiles trick turn of play Wei-ch’i winner wins the game