Royal Game of Ur

Royal Game of Ur
Created 2600–2400 BC
Period/culture Early Dynastic III
Registration 1928,1009.378

The Royal Game of Ur, also known as the Game of Twenty Squares, refers to an ancient game represented by two gameboards found in the Royal Tombs of Ur in Iraq by Sir Leonard Woolley in the 1920s. The two boards date from the First Dynasty of Ur, before 2600 BC, thus making the Royal Game of Ur one of the oldest examples of board gaming equipment found, although Senet boards found in Egyptian graves predate it as much as 900 years. The Ur-style Twenty Squares gameboard was also known in Egypt as Asseb, and has been found in Pharaoh Tutankhamen's tomb, among other places. Discovery of a tablet partially describing the gameplay has allowed the game to be played again after over 2000 years, although reconstructions of the detailed rules have differed widely.

One of the two boards from Ur is exhibited in the collections of the British Museum in London.[1]

Gameplay

Rules tablet
Rules tablet dated 177 BC (British Museum ref:33333,b )

The Royal Game of Ur was played with two sets, one black and one white, of seven markers and three tetrahedral dice. After around 1000 BC, the layout of the twenty squares was altered to make the end course for the markers a straight line. The rules of the game as it was played in Mesopotamia are not completely known but there have been a number of reconstructions of gameplay, based on a cuneiform tablet of Babylonian origin dating from 177–176 BC by the scribe Itti-Marduk-Balāṭu. It is universally agreed that the Royal Game of Ur, like Senet, is a race game.

Both games may be predecessors to the present-day backgammon.

Graffito boards

A graffito version of the game from the palace of Sargon II. (Now in the British Museum in London)

A graffito version of the game was discovered on one of the human-headed winged bull gate sentinels from the palace of Sargon II (721–705 BC) in the city of Khorsabad,[1] now in the British Museum in London (see illustration). Similar games have since been discovered on other sculptures in other museums.

References

  1. 1 2 "Assyrian guardian figure". BBC. Retrieved 2010-09-10. Bored guards have scratched a gaming board on the plinth. The game is a version of the 'Game of Twenty Squares', which was played at Ur in southern Iraq in about 2,600 BC.

Further reading

  • Becker, A., "The Royal Game of Ur" in Finkel, ed., 2008 pp. 11–15.
  • Bell, R. C., Board and Table Games from Many Civilisations Revised edition, two volumes bound as one. New York, Dover Publications, 1979.
  • Botermans, Jack, et al., Le monde des Jeux, Paris, Cté Nlle des Editions du Chêne, 1987.
  • CHN "Iran's Burnt City Throws up World’s Oldest Backgammon"], Iranian Cultural Heritage News Agency 4/12/2004 (sic: ambiguous date).
  • Finkel I., "La tablette des régles du jeu royal d'Ur", Jouer dans l'Antiquité, Catalogue de l'Exposition, Marseille, Musée d'Archéologie Méditerranéenne, 1991.
  • Finkel, I., Games: Discover and Play Five Famous Ancient Games, London, British Museum Press, 1995.
  • Finkel, I. L., "On the Rules for The Royal Game of Ur" in Finkel, ed., 2008 pp. 16–32.
  • Finkel, I. L. ed., Ancient Board Games in Perspective: Papers from the 1990 British Museum colloquium with additional contributions, London, British Museum Press, 2008.
  • Lhôte, J.-M., Histoire des jeux de société, Paris, Editions Flammarion, 1994.
This article is about an item held in the British Museum. The object reference is ME 120834.
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