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The
Origins of Chess
Was Chess
Invented in India?
by Sam Sloan
In the
mid-1950's, the most popular television program for a time was called
the "$64,000 Question". Contestants, who were said to be carefully
screened in advance and were experts, but not professionals, in their
chosen fields, were asked questions of increasing difficulty. This
was the first of the great popular TV game shows. First, there was
the $64 question. If that was answered correctly, the contestant could
quit and take his money, or go for double. The bets went from $64
to $128, $256, $512, $1000, $2,000, $4,000, $8,000, $16,000, $32,000
and $64,000. Most contestants went high on the scale, and the tension
and excitement increased from week to week as they moved towards their
goals. I only saw it happen once that a contestant actually missed
the first $64 question. On that occasion, a boy of around twelve years
old was brought out. His subject was chess. He was, of course, billed
as a prodigy of the game. As usual, the moderator started with a relatively
easy $64 question. "Where was chess invented?", the moderator asked.
"In China," the boy replied. "Wrong!", said the moderator. "The correct
answer is India." With that, the boy was quickly hustled off the stage.
This
supposed child prodigy was never seen or heard from in the world of
chess again. Much later, it was revealed that much of the program
had been rigged. Some contestants were nothing more than actors, who
had been told what answers to give in advance. Many famous people,
including especially Mark Van Doren who appeared on a similar show
called 21, had their reputations destroyed because of this scandal.
However, there is as yet another unexposed scandal about this particular
program. That kid who gave China as the answer to the first question
should be brought back for a try at $128. The answer he gave was correct.
Chess
was not invented in India. Chess was invented in China! When I say
this to my otherwise well informed fellow chess players, they stare
at me with an expression which indicates either horror, dismay or
disgust, or some combination thereof. Finally, after a polite pause,
they usually say, "I'm sorry. You're wrong. Chess was invented in
India. Look it up in H.J.R. Murray." Of course, the fact is that I
have looked it up in H.J.R. Murray. I have also looked it up in the
sources which he cites. This is not so easy, as the aging pages crumble
in my finger tips, but it is not so difficult either. All of the sources
cited by Murray can be found in the New York Public Library and in
similar repositories. I believe that some day relatively soon, Murray's
baseless claim that chess was invented in India will go down as a
classic example of the blind leading the blind.
There
are many other examples of this phenomenon, but this one in particular
is especially egregious. Virtually every educated Westerner, whether
a chess player or not, seems to know or at least accept as a scientifically
proven fact that chess was invented in India. Every source for this
cites Murray. However, Murray, in effect, does not really cite any
source at all. More amazingly than that, the truth about the actual
origins of chess has been staring everyone who has studied the question
in the face for a long time.
This
case is almost as extreme at that of the medieval astronomers. In
the middle ages, there were many astronomers who studied the skies
with the naked eye. They made precise mathematical calculations which
are still considered valid. They figured out in great detail all of
the cycles and epicycles which the heavenly bodies followed in their
movement around the earth, the center of the universe. As their calculations
grew more precise, they had increasing difficulty doing this, but
it was always possible, by postulating a new epicycle within an epicycle,
to come up with a mathematically sound explanation.
One day,
Copernicus was looking at this wealth of data collected by others,
when it occurred to him that all of this could be explained more easily
by saying that the earth moved around the sun, rather than the other
way around. Similarly, in the case at hand, the evidence has always
clearly showed that chess was invented in China and did not arrive
in India until nearly a millennium had passed, or perhaps even considerably
longer. However, because nearly every researcher and author has accepted
uncritically the assumption that chess was invented in India in the
sixth or seventh centuries and moved to other countries later on,
it has been necessary for them to go through a convoluted reasoning
process to explain its appearance in other places at earlier dates.
Chess
has been shown to have appeared in India at a date no earlier than
the sixth century AD, and Indian scholars themselves seem to believe
that the actual date was considerably more recent than even that.
It seems unlikely that there could be any mistake on this, because
there is a wealth of literary material available in Sanskrit going
back to 1500 BC. If chess had existed in the early history of India,
it seems almost certain that it would have been mentioned somewhere.
At the same time, persons who are considered authorities in the field
have long known that the highly similar game of Chinese chess, or
at least a predecessor thereof, is known to have existed in China
at least as far back as the second century, BC.
How do
they reconcile these two facts? In essence, they make two points.
First, they say that the ancient Chinese manuscripts are simply wrong.
The game they were talking about was perhaps Go or perhaps some other
game, but certainly it could not have been chess, because, as everyone
knows, chess was not invented until the sixth century, AD. The second
suggestion is that Chinese chess is a totally different game, unrelated
to western chess. They emphasize that Chinese chess has a river, a
cannon, a knight that cannot jump, and that the pieces in Chinese
chess are written in Chinese characters and are placed on "points"
rather than on squares. The fact that Chinese chess also has a rook,
a king, a pawn and a bishop, all of which occupy the same place on
the board in the starting position and have the same movement and
the same name as in the known medieval predecessor of western chess,
is simply ignored. In some cases, it is clear that the so-called scholars
do not even know the proper rules of Chinese chess.
There
are two references to chess in ancient Chinese literature. The first
was from a collection of poems known as "Chu Chi". The author was
named Chii Yuan. He was the most famous writer in the Chou Dynasty
(1046 - 255 BC). He killed himself by jumping into a lake. The second
is from a famous book of philosophy known as " Shuo Yuan " which cited
Chu Chi. It is from the Han Dynasty (206 BC - 221 AD). Both are well
known to any student of Chinese literature. A more recent reference
to chess came from the Song Dynasty (960 - 1279 AD). There was a famous
poet named Li Ching Zhou. She wrote a book entitled "Hitting Horse
Picture." By that time, the pieces had the same names as now.
In order,
for example, to discover the origin of a language, linguists go through
a process known as linguistic reconstruction. First, they identify
the members of a family of languages by identifying features which
cannot be explained in any other way than to say that they all came
from a common origin. After that, they pinpoint uniform sound changes
which can be shown to have occurred over a wide range of vocabulary
items as the languages were breaking up. Finally, they are able to
develop, in great detail, a proto-language with a description of how
that one original language gradually broke up into the many languages
in that family which exist today. Then, they are able to determine
almost the exact spot in the world where the parent language originated
and the time when it began to spread and divide.
For example,
they know that proto-Indo-European originated, or at least began to
spread, 5000 years ago in an area north of the Black and Caspian seas
and south of the Urals, long before written history in that region
existed. The only serious disagreement on this point revolves around
a 200 mile radius from this area. Theories advanced by special interest
groups, such as the Nazi claim that the Indo-European languages were
invented by a blond-haired blue-eyed race on the southern shores of
the Baltic Sea, have been shown to be simply false.
How,
one asks, are they able to be so sure of this, when it all happened
thousands of years before any written history of that area? The way
the place of origin is determined is through words which are similar
in all Indo-European languages and whose similarity cannot be explained
by "borrowing". For example, the words for "birch tree", "horse",
"horse-cart" and "chariot" are common to all the Indo-European languages
from Europe to India. However, horses, horse-carts, and chariots do
not exist naturally in either Europe or India, but they exist in abundance
in areas north of the Black and Caspian seas, along with birch trees,
so this is one of many pieces of evidence pointing to that area. (The
special relevance of the non-existence of horses and chariots naturally
in India will become apparent shortly).
The next
logical step is to apply this process to the game of chess. Fortunately,
just as there are many types of Indo-European languages, there are
also many types of chess. There is western chess, Chinese chess, Japanese
chess ("shogi"), Korean chess, Burmese chess, Cambodian chess, Thai
chess, Malaysian chess, Indonesian chess, Turkish chess and possibly
even Ethiopian chess. Following the above mentioned linguistic process,
the first step is to determine if, in fact, these are all branches
of the same game.
That
is really not difficult. All of the above games have the objective
of checkmating the king. They all have a king in the center, a rook
in the corner, a knight next to it and pawns in front and the moves
of these pieces are identical or nearly identical to that of western
chess. None of them, besides western chess, has a queen, but we know
that the queen was first invented in Italy in the fifteenth century,
long after the other branches of the tree had divided. As to a bishop,
only Japanese chess has a western style bishop, but the Japanese believe
that this coincidence is relatively modern. Other forms of chess have
an elephant, as the Arabic and Persian version of the game did. However,
we know that the modern bishop is a purely western innovation that
was derived from the elephant, most likely in the fifteenth century.
In Japanese chess, each side has only one bishop, and that starts
out at an unlikely spot directly in front of the left side knight.
These dissimilarities indicate either that the Japanese bishop was
developed independently from the western bishop and the similarities
between them are purely a matter of chance, or that westerners brought
the bishop to Japan (or the Japanese took their bishop to the west)
in relatively modern times. The elephants of Chinese chess clearly
turned into the silvers of Japanese chess, while the chariots (rooks)
of Chinese chess were reduced to the lances of Japanese chess. There
are many other similarities between all of these games, but we already
know enough to be absolutely certain that they have a common origin,
so next we need to proceed to determine when and where that origin
took place.
First,
let us dispose with the claim that chess was invented in India. We
know that there are Chinese tracts concerning chess dating back to
the second century BC. Most authors, including H.J.R. Murray, are
actually unaware of this, while other writers on chess history, such
as my good friend Fred Wilson, hastily skip over this and proceed
to a subject they know more about, such as Bobby Fischer's defeat
of Boris Spassky in 1972. One writer, who at least deserves credit
for addressing the question, is Harry Golombek, who, in his "Chess,
a History", states: "I have seen a poem dating from the second century
BC in which, according to the translator, there are two references
to the playing of chess. If the game were indeed played then, it would
completely upset all present-day theories; but there are two possible
explanations for the references, either of which would leave modern
theories untroubled. They could be to the game of 'wei-chi', or 'go',
which is known to be considerably older than chess (or to another
board game, backgammon, for instance). Or they could refer to the
Chinese riverside game of chess, which is in fact not chess at all
as we know it." Golombek, Chess, a History, G. P. Putnam's Sons, New
York, 1976, p. 10.
A few
pages later it becomes clear that, by the "Chinese riverside game
of chess", Golombek means modern Chinese chess, which has a river
in the middle. He proceeds to give the approximate rules for this
game: "The River Game has resemblances to chaturanga and chess which
are quite remarkable. But so are the differences - so much that it
is still unproven whether it is a variant or a derivative from chaturanga,
or whether it stems from some more ancient game (perhaps that described
in 'The Golden Palace') and was then blended with or strongly influenced
by chaturanga, as it made its way to China from India."
"Chaturanga"
is the supposed ancestor of modern chess which was played in India.
Like so many authors, Golombek has a blind spot to the possibility
that chess did not originate in India. On the preceding page, he states:
"Go, a much older game than Chaturanga, bears no resemblance to chess.
Known as wei-chi, there are many references to it in ancient Chinese
literature. I have seen translations of these which, wrongly in my
opinion, render them as chess. An example of this is the "Golden Palace",
an anonymous poem written in the first century BC." Ibid, p. 23. Notably,
when he states that the "river game" may have descended from some
ancient ancestor, such as that described in the Golden Palace, he
overlooks the clear possibility that the ancient game, whatever it
was, may have been the common ancestor of both chaturanga and Chinese
chess. A professional linguist would have noticed this possibility
instantaneously. Golombek, however, is but a mere chess player.
There
are many other examples of this, but let us put these aside and proceed
directly to the source: H.J.R. Murray. Murray's work, "A History of
Chess", was published in 1913. His other volume, "A Short History
of Chess", was first published in 1963, but had been written in 1917
and was found in his papers after his death. Thus, his most recent
work on chess history was written in 1917. In almost every other field
of academic endeavor, a work of such age is, by now, obsolete. However,
surprisingly enough, serious academic researchers have apparently
not been much interested in the history of chess and thus have not
bothered to or even thought of going back to reexamine the underlying
basis to Murray's conclusion. Also surprisingly, in Murray's otherwise
seemingly well documented work, he seems to have only one concrete
source for his claim that chess was invented in India. That source
is H.J. Raverty. "Raverty", I exclaimed when I saw this. I know Raverty
well, because he is the main authority on another totally different
subject in which I happen to have an intense interest. That is the
Pashtu language, which is spoken in Afghanistan and in the North West
Frontier Province of Pakistan. I have Raverty's complete Pashtu-English
Dictionary at home, and I study it often. It is an excellent work,
obviously compiled after years of prodigious effort. However, it is
clear that Raverty was nothing more than a layman and was not a trained
linguist.
For example,
Raverty did not really understand the difference between retroflex
and palatal consonants. That difference happens to be critical in
the Pashtu language and no trained linguist would have made this mistake.
Raverty was a nineteenth century British army officer. His main qualification
was in having served in the perpetual wars against Afghanistan during
that period. Apparently a believer in the adage "know thy enemy",
Raverty studied the language, culture and literature of the people
he was fighting. Murray, on the other hand, undoubtedly could not
read a word of Hindi, Urdu or Pashtu, much less Sanskrit, so he had
to rely on those such as Raverty who did.
In 1902,
in the last years of his life, Raverty published an article in the
Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Bengal. The article was entitled
the "History of Chess and Backgammon". Raverty, H.J., "History of
Chess and Backgammon", Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Bengal,
Vol. 71, Part I, p. 47, Calcutta, 1902 . This article for the first
time provided the story which every chess player now knows. The story,
in sum, goes:
There
once was a sage named Shashi in Sind, in the reign of King Rai Bhalit
in North West India. One night Shashi invented a wonderful new game.
The next morning he took it to the king, who marveled at it and asked
what reward he wanted. The king said that any reasonable request would
be granted. Shashi said that he merely requested that one grain of
wheat be placed on the first square of the chess board, two on the
second, four on the third, eight on-the fourth, and so on, until all
64 squares had been filled. The king readily agreed to this request.
We all know the end of that story.
In any
event, according to Raverty, Shashi had a son named Shah, and from
that came the name "Shak" or chess. In the same article, Raverty also
recounts how backgammon was supposedly invented, according to him,
just a short time before chess. It has now been proven that at least
that part of the story is pure nonsense. Although Murray passes the
story about the invention of chess off as a fable, without properly
crediting Raverty (it is Davidson who clarifies the point that Raverty
was the original source for this story), he nevertheless sticks to
it. He says that chess was invented in a single night by a philosopher
who lived in North West India.
In Murray's
time, before the partition of India in 1947, which broke India up
into parts, North West India meant what is now the North West Frontier
Province of Pakistan and, arguably, parts of Afghanistan. This geographical
region happened to be Raverty's area of expertise. Sind, however,
is now the South Eastern most province of Pakistan, and includes Karachi.
Perhaps Murray did not know exactly where Sind was. In any event,
all of present day Pakistan, including Sind, could arguably have then
been called North West India. It so happens that Pakistan is a country
that I know something about. I wrote a dictionary of a language spoken
there and have traveled and lived extensively in that region, especially
in the North West Frontier Province of Pakistan as well as in Afghanistan.
The people there are primarily desert dwellers. They are great merchants
and traders. Their caravans can easily penetrate all the way from
Arabia to China. However, to say that these people, the vast majority
of whom even today cannot read and write, invented a game like chess,
is ridiculous, and I am sure that my many friends in Pakistan will
agree with me.
The Indians
themselves are perplexed by the claim that chess was invented by them.
Here is what was said in the Indian Historical Quarterly, a serious
scholarly journal: Chakravarti, Chintaharan, "Sanskrit Works on the
Game of Chess", Indian Historical Quarterly, Calcutta, June, 1938,
Vol. 14, No. 2, Part I, p. 275. "Though the game of chess is generally
supposed by scholars to be of Indian origin and reference to the game
is said to be found in various Indian works from a very early period,
Sanskrit works dealing with it and describing its complexity are comparatively
rare. As a matter of fact, no early Indian work on the subject is
known and until recently the work of scholarship had very few descriptions
of the game." This journal also cites certain claims that chess was
referred to in various writings by ancient Indian authors. However,
it states that this was a common trick in those times. When one wanted
to gain an audience for one's ideas, one claimed that such-and-such
famous long deceased person said or wrote it. The journal then proceeds
to list a number of famous authors who supposedly wrote about chess,
and dismisses all of these claims. In conclusion, it is unable to
find even one source in Indian literature regarding chess dated earlier
than Sulipani in the fifteenth century, AD (more than 900 years after
Murray says that chess was invented there)!!
In short,
each and every source cited by Murray, Davidson, Forbes, Golombek,
Eales and others, which supposedly establishes that chess was written
about in India during the first millennium AD, is discredited. The
conclusion is: "This may appear to be rather curious and apparently
raises a point of doubt with respect to the genuineness of the work."
It seems unlikely that there could be any mistake on this point. H.
J. R. Murray cites two works from the seventh century and two more
from the ninth century, which he claims contain references to chess.
Murray says that references to chess are contained in Harshacharita
by Bana and in Vasavadatta by Subhandu. These citations are followed
uncritically by Golombek, Eales and others. However, these are the
famous classical works in Indian literature. If they really contained
references to chess, then every Indian school boy would know about
it.
Murray
also states that chess is discussed in pre-Persian (Pahlavi) in the
Karnamak and in the "Chatranj Namak". The Karnamak is a lost work
which Murray could not possibly have read and which is not certain
ever to have existed. The "Chatranj Namak" seems to be a work purely
invented by Murray of which nobody else has ever seen or even heard.
More recent works cited by Murray, Haravijaya of Ratnakara and Kavyalankara
of Rudrata, do not, according to scholars, contain any references
to chess. Murray states that the famous traveler Al-Beruni observed
chess being played in India in the year 1030. However, Arab scholars
who have studied the works of Al-Beruni in their original language
state that these works contain no references to chess. "Chaturanga"
was the Indian word for the familiar 8x8 checker board, on which many
games were and still are played. The use of the term "Chaturanga"
in Indian litearture does not prove that the game we now know as chess
was played on that board. It appears that Murray, a mere school teacher
without any scholarly credentials, never read these works himself,
but relied instead on material published in Germany in the late nineteenth
century. (Murray never seems to cite his actual source).
In short,
the claim that chess was referred to in classical Indian literature
has hardly any sounder basis than the claim that chess was played
by the Pharaohs of Egypt and that Alexander the Great was a strong
chess player. The fact that chess is not very popular in India even
today is also significant. Hindus are great philosophers, but are
not much interested in games playing. India only joined F.I.D.E. (the
International Chess Federation) recently and did not send teams to
international competitions until a few years ago. The only great Indian
chess player in history, Sultan Khan, did not come from what is now
India at all. He was a Muslim from near to Lahore, Pakistan, and his
claim to greatness is derived in part from the fact that he came from
what was considered to be a non-chess playing country.
There
are other sources for the claim that chess was invented in India,
but they are all based on Murray. Prior to Murray, the main authorities
emphasized Persia as the most likely spot for the origin of chess.
More than that, for various historical reasons, Murray himself indicates
that for his thesis to be correct, chess could not have been invented
earlier than the Huri domination of North India in around 500 A.D.
Murray, H.J.R., A Short History of Chess with B. Goulding-Brown and
H. Golombek, Oxford at the Clarendon Press, p. 1 (1963). After citing
a source dated 600 A.D., Davidson states, "So runs the earliest reference
to chess in all literature." Unfortunately, Murray's problem seems
to have been that, not only could he not read Hindi or Urdu, but he
could not read Chinese either.
Raverty,
in his article, says that Shuli, one of the first great players and
a follower of the inventor, Shashi, died in 946. He also mentions
various unfamiliar historical figures, such as King Rai Bhalit, who
lived in the time of Shashi, sometimes spelled Sassi, Sissa, Sahsih
or even Shashi. (The spelling "Shashi" is most accurate for an English
speaker, because the two /sh/ sounds are both retroflex). Raverty
also says that Shashi was the son of Dahir, a ruler of Sind who fell
in battle in the year 712 A.D. during the Akasirah Dynasty. This would
indicate an origin of chess in the eighth century.
The other
sources are similar to Murray. For example, there is Professor D.
W. Fiske, who says: "Chess is an ancient game which is first mentioned
in documents dating back to the early years of the seventh century
A.D. and associated with North West India and Persia. Before the seventh
century of our era, the existence of chess in any land is not demonstrable
by a single shred of contemporary evidence." Fiske, D.W., The Nation,
1900. Then, there is Davidson, another well known author on the history
of chess. He says: "The trail of chess leads back to about A.D. 500.
Then we strike a barrier behind which historical research has not
penetrated. All we know is that during the sixth century, inhabitants
were playing chaturanga, a game substantially like modern chess."
Davidson, H.A., A Short History Of Chess, Greenberg, New York, 1949,
p. 22.
From
the above sources, we can reasonably conclude that chess appeared
in India no earlier than the sixth century A.D., and perhaps considerably
later. However, we also know that Chinese chess was written about
at a much earlier date. Next, we must deal with the contention, since
it has been made, that Chinese chess is really not related to western
chess. In this regard, we must use the well established evidence concerning
the origins of modern western chess.
We know
from the writings of Lucena (of "Lucena position" fame) that the modern
form of chess was invented or at least codified in Italy during the
period from 1475 to 1497 A.D. and spread like wildfire across Europe.
This game brought together three features which medieval chess did
not have: the modern queen, the modern bishop and en passant pawn
capturing. One move castling and automatic pawn promotion had not
been codified yet. Nevertheless, these changes were enough to enable
Ruy Lopez in 1561 to publish his famous opening analysis.
The oldest
game in "The Oxford Encyclopedia of Chess Games" is dated 1490, and
even that does not play legally according to the rules of modern chess.
Levy, David and O'Connell, Kevin, The Oxford Encyclopedia of Chess
Games, Oxford University Press, 1983. The game in Europe prior to
1475 was still substantially identical to that played by the Persians,
Indians and Arabs in the seventh century. Indeed, the terms Persian
chess, Indian chess, Arabic chess and medieval chess are here used
more or less interchangeably, since there seem to be no known lasting
differences between the games.
Four
handed chess, which some, starting with Forbes, believe was the original
game, (Forbes, Duncan, The History of Chess, W.H. Allen 5 Co., London,
1860) has been proven to have been merely an unsuccessful variant.
In other words, the game, or at least the most popular form thereof,
remained the same for about 800 years. Then, suddenly, three major
changes were made more or less simultaneously and the old game was
almost immediately forgotten. Actually, during those 800 years, there
were constant experiments with different types of pieces, such as
griffins, unicorns and other strange animals, just as there are even
today. No doubt, the modern bishop and the modern queen were first
thought of long before 1497. However, it was not until approximately
that date that all of these elements were combined into the same game
at the same time. The process seems to have been essentially Darwinian,
with innumerable mutations, but only the rare superior ones ultimately
surviving.
The original
Persian or Indian game had exactly the same pieces with the same movement
as the medieval game, but the pieces had slightly different names.
The piece in the corner was not a rook, but a chariot. (Remember what
was said about Indo-European languages). Next, came the horse. (The
knight is purely a European term). After that, came the elephant.
(It is still an elephant in Russian and in several other languages
to this day. Also, in Spanish, it is the "alfil", which comes from
the Arabic "Al-Fil", meaning "the elephant". "Al" means "the" and
"fil" means "elephant". It was, of course, the Arabs who brought chess
to Spain). The elephant jumped two squares diagonally, no more and
no less. Next, came the chancellor or minister, which moved only one
square diagonally. Finally, in the center, came the king, which moved
like our king. The Persian name for the game was, and still is, Shatranj.
The board was 8x8 colorless squares.
Now,
let us examine Chinese chess. The name in Mandarin for Chinese chess
is pronounced Shaingchi. This is sometimes spelled "Hsiang-chi", and,
under the pinyin spelling system in the People's Republic of China,
it is spelled "Xiangqi". However, in that system, "X" is pronounced
"SH" (retroflex) and "Q" is pronounced "CH" (retroflex). The Chinese
name, Shiangchi, sounds very similar to the Persian name, Shatranj.
Indeed, they are about as similar as a Persian word and a Chinese
word can sound. Shiangchi also sounds something like "Shakmat", the
Russian word for chess, like "Shogi", which is Japanese chess, and
like Chaturanga, the Indian name. Every linguist will agree that this
is strong, if not conclusive, evidence pointing to the conclusion
that these are all versions of the same game.
Next,
let us look at the pieces, from left to center. The piece in the corner
in Chinese chess is called the chariot. (Modern Chinese players sometimes
call it the car). The name is also chariot in Persian chess. The movement
is also the same. It moves like our rook. The next piece over is the
horse ("asp" in Persian, of which I know a little). It is also a horse
in Chinese chess. The movement is the same in both games, except that
the horse cannot jump in Chinese chess. (The Chinese say that this
restriction was a more modern innovation, to reduce the power of the
horse). The third piece is the elephant. Again, the name is the same
in Persian and Chinese, as well as in Arabic, Russian and many other
languages. The move is also the same. Both move exactly two squares
diagonally. In Chinese chess, the elephant cannot jump over an intervening
piece. Some say that it could jump in Persian or Indian chess, but
that is not clear.
Next,
there is the advisor, minister or chancellor. Again, both have substantially
the same name in both Chinese and Persian chess. The movement is also
the same: one square diagonally. However, here is one significant
difference. Chinese chess has two advisors or guards and, for this
reason, there are nine pieces across, not eight as in Persian and
western chess. Also, in Chinese chess, the advisors and the king cannot
leave a central area known as the "nine palaces". Finally, in the
center in both games is the king.
In
view of all this, how is it possible, then, that any reasonable and
informed person could contend that these two games are not related?
The answer is that detractors seize primarily upon the existence of
the cannon and the river. The cannon is a unique piece. It moves like
a rook, but captures only by jumping over an intervening piece and capturing
the piece beyond it. Not only does this piece not exist in western chess,
but it does not exist in Japanese chess or in any other version of the
game, except for Korean chess. The explanation for this is simple. The
cannon is an innovation which the Chinese say was invented no earlier
than the tenth century A.D., after the other branches of the game had
spread out and broken up. As to the river, far too much emphasis has
been placed upon it.
The river
is simply an artificial boundary between the opposing forces, with
no real independent significance except that it provides a reference
point and performs essentially the same function as having white and
black colored squares in western chess. The chariots, horses and cannons
can move back and forth across the river freely. Aside from marking
the center of the board, only two rules have any bearing on the river.
The first is that the elephants cannot cross the river, and are thus
purely defensive pieces. The second is that the pawns acquire the
power to move sideways upon crossing the river. Pawn promotion, as
such in western chess, does not exist in Chinese chess. Without this
rule, pawns in Chinese chess would become dead upon reaching the back
rank. In Chinese chess, they can then move sideways and often play
a major role in checkmating the enemy king in the endgame.
Finally,
it is clear that the creation of the river is just another relatively
recent innovation. Even the highly similar game of Korean chess does
not have a river, because it does not need one, although Korean chess
is also played on a 9x10 board. The obvious reason for this is that,
in Korean chess, the elephant has a different type of move, and is
not restricted to just one side of the board, while the pawns can
move sideways immediately and do not need first to reach enemy territory.
The fact
is that Chinese chess, like western chess, evolved gradually and the
rules changed over a long period of time. The Chinese have studied
this subject with more zeal than their western counterparts and know
far more about the history of their game. I met with Mr. Liu Guo Bin,
the Director and Chief Arbiter of the Chinese Chinese Chess Federation
at 9 Tiyuguan Road, Beijing, China, last April, 1985, and it turns
out that he is one of the authorities on this subject. He says that
the modern rules of Chinese chess were finalized in the Song Dynasty,
which existed at around 1000 A.D. There is disagreement on this point,
but the fact is that the Chinese have studied carefully the history
of their game, whereas we have obviously neglected ours.
The Chinese
written language has not changed much in 2000 years, even though the
spoken language has naturally been in a state of flux. The same characters
were used to write the name of Chinese chess then as now. When a westerner
such as Golombek asserts that the Chinese do not know their own language
and have mixed up chess with go in their ancient histories, he is
merely presenting a half-baked opinion unworthy of consideration.
At the same time, the Chinese themselves must share part of the blame,
because they have not protested more vigorously, except in publications
written in their own language.
There
are two great Chinese games: "Shiang-chi" and "Wei-chi". Wei-chi is
the game known in Japan as go. It seems well established that wei-chi
is a truly ancient game, dating back perhaps as much as 4000 years,
but originally played on a smaller board. (Interestingly, detractors
from this theory assert that the ancient writers were talking about
chess, not go). The symbol for "wei" is a Chinese character which
has a meaning similar to the word pronounced "go" in the Japanese
language (which also uses Chinese characters). This accounts for the
difference in the two names. The other game, Shiang-chi, uses the
Chinese character pronounced "Shiang", which means, or meant, "elephant".
The Chinese character for "chi", which can be thought of as meaning
"game", is the same in both games. Thus, "Shiang-chi" means "elephant
game".
Japanese
chess is called shogi in Japan. As mentioned before, this is pronounced
similarly to Shiang-chi and even to Shatranj. However, different Chinese
characters are used in Japanese. Since the word for "elephant" is
pronounced much differently in Japanese, the Japanese, in typical
fashion, looked for a word which was pronounced as close as possible
to "Shiang". They came up with "Sho", which means "general". The name
"general-game" is a good description for the game of shogi, so the
name stuck. (The Japanese call our western game "International Shogi"
and Chinese chess "Chinese Shogi").
There
are, however, two significant differences between Chinese chess and
Persian or western chess which I have not dealt with up to now. The
first is that in Chinese chess (and in Korean chess) the pieces are
placed on the intersections or "points", whereas in western chess
(and in Japanese chess) the pieces are placed on squares. We know
the reason for this. The reason is that in the much older game of
go, the stones were placed on the points, so when a new game was invented,
this convention was followed. However, we cannot be certain whether,
in the original chess game, the pieces were placed on the points or
on the squares. This does not, however, at all disprove the common
origin of the two games. Instead, it rather provides the explanation
for another difference.
The modern
Chinese chess board has 9x10 points. That happens to equal a board
of 8x9 squares, including the river in the middle. If the river is
eliminated (and the river cannot really be called squares), then we
have actually 8x8 squares on a Chinese chess board, just the same
as in western chess. Again, this tends to indicate a common origin,
and we simply cannot be certain whether the complex Chinese version
of chess was the first and then was reduced to the simplified Persian
version, or visa-versa. (Incidentally, Chinese chess is definitely
more complex than western chess, as much as this statement may hurt
the pride of westerners. There are more different kinds of pieces
on the board in Chinese chess, more possible legal and/or reasonable
moves in the average position, and the games last longer, sometimes
for hundreds of moves, in Chinese chess.
Japanese
chess is yet again more complicated than both of them.) There is,
as yet, another tantalizing clue to be derived from the observation
that Chinese chess is played on the points in order to follow a convention
from go. Go has the peculiar property in that it can be played on
any size board, except that preferably the number of points should
be odd (to reduce the possibility of draws). Over history, go has
been played on boards of many different sizes. Today, three sizes
are in common use: 19x19 (the standard), 13x13 and 9x9. The 9x9 size
is now used primarily to teach children and beginners, but it is a
complex and challenging game in its own right. It so happens that
a 9x9 go board also equals an 8x8 chess board.
This
is especially significant, because the original chess boards in India
and Persia did not have white and black colored squares. (This, too,
is a modern innovation). Murray says that on the original otherwise
barren 8x8 chess boards, there were mysterious "markings". Is it possible
that these "markings" were the handicap points in go? (Unfortunately,
there is another disturbing possibility. Old Persian art work, such
as that shown by Golombek (pp. 31, 36, 53), shows the names of the
pieces written in Arabic on the board, rather than stand-up pieces.
Other than that, I have not been able to locate any markings.
It seems
almost unbelievable, but perhaps Murray did not understand what these
Arabic "markings" were.) In short, it is easy to postulate that when
chess came from China to India, it was played on a 9x9 go board. When
the Indians (or Persians or Arabs, which ever came first), who knew
nothing of go, saw this, they simply and naturally moved the pieces
off the points and on to the squares. Thus, a 9x9 go board became
an 8x8 chess board. However, then there was one piece too many, so
the Indians simply eliminated one of the chancellors. They also added
three pawns, to fill up the empty spaces in front.
(Chinese
chess now has only five pawns, but it may have had more in earlier
versions of the game). In this manner, it is possible that they converted
Chinese chess to Indian chess in one stroke. The other remaining difference
is that western chess uses stand up pieces, whereas most oriental
versions of chess, including Chinese chess, Korean chess and Japanese
chess, use flat tiles with Chinese characters printed on them. (There
are minor differences between these three types of tiles: Chinese
pieces are circular, Korean pieces are octagonal, and Japanese pieces
are pentagonal). Thus, the Chinese horse or the Korean horse or the
Japanese horse simply has the Chinese character for horse written
on the piece, whereas the western game has an actual carved figure
of a horse. Which came first? Again, we cannot know the answer. However,
it should be noted that the old Persian and Arabic art work pertaining
to chess does not show physical pieces on the chessboard, but rather
has the names of the pieces written in Arabic on the board, just as
the Chinese pieces are now written in Chinese.
The first
evidence of actual physical pieces does not appear until the game
reached Christian Europe. This may explain the fact that archeologists
have not had much success at digging up truly old chess sets, considering
how popular chess is known to have been. Quite possibly, the names
of the pieces were merely written on paper, and the chessboards themselves
were drawn in the dust. Second, some Chinese historians believe that
the original pieces in Chinese chess were stand-up western style pieces.
They state that ancient tombs have been unearthed from the Song dynasty
which contain stand-up pieces. The theory is that, because China has
always been a poor country, the people could not afford to buy individually
carved pieces, so they finally settled for simple disks with the Chinese
characters hand written on them. In addition, this enabled the pieces
to be used for other games.
For example,
one variation which is still played in the park in Chinatown in San
Francisco is a gambling game in which the players start with the pieces
face down, to conceal the type of piece from the opponent. Gradually,
as the game proceeds, the pieces are turned over and their character
revealed. Similarly, the Japanese have put this feature to good use,
because the reverse side of most of their pieces contains another
piece to which the top piece can promote.
Here,
there is one remaining aspect which I have avoided thus far. This
is the Soviet claim that chess was invented in Soviet Uzbekistan.
Everyone scoffs at this, because of the well known Soviet penchant
for claiming that everything was invented in Russia. However, the
actual Soviet tendency is to assert that everything was invented by
the Russians, a Nordic race which originally came from Scandinavia.
The Uzbeks,
on the other hand, are not one of the Soviet's favored races. Uzbeks
are Turks, who are the arch-enemies of the Russians. Actually, the
Uzbeks are a Mongolian-type people who came to what is now called
Uzbekistan only in fairly recent historical times, and who learned
to speak Turkish from other races. Whoever was there before was wiped
out by the hordes of Genghis Khan (said to be an ancestor of my daughter,
Shamema, but that is another story). In any event, Uzbekistan, which
is located in a much larger area once known as Turkistan, is but a
caravan journey from both India and China, and it cannot be entirely
ruled out as a possible source for both games.
On the
other hand, Uzbekistan is primarily a desert area, like Afghanistan,
and its inhabitants were always primarily nomads. It is hard to believe
that they invented a game like chess. It seems more likely that they
brought it by caravan from some other place. The current claim for
Uzbekistan as a source for chess is based primarily on what appears
to be possibly pieces from an old chess set featuring, among other
things, the figure of an elephant, which was dug up in 1972. It has
been dated to the second century AD (which, predictably, caused an
uproar among those who are certain that chess had not been invented
yet).(Dickens, A.S.M., British Chess Magazine, July, 1973)
However,
long before that, in fact before the establishment of the modern Soviet
empire, Uzbekistan had been mentioned as a possible place for the
source of chess. ( See Savenkov, I.T., The Evolution of the Game of
Chess, Moscow, 1905, (in Russian) cited by Murray) Actually, whenever
the existence of chess in Uzbekistan is mentioned, it is most often
stated that this is evidence for an origin of chess in nearby China.
Nobody seems to believe that the much maligned Uzbeks are capable
of inventing such a game. Uzbekistan is still a far more likely source
for the origin of chess than India. This becomes apparent when we
adopt the linguistic approach by looking at the names of the pieces.
The major
pieces are the chariot, the horse and the elephant. Horses, as stated
before, do not exist naturally in India. Tame horses can be found,
but not wild horses. The Aryans from central Asia are believed to
have used horses and chariots 4000 years ago to conquer India. In
more modern times, the British easily conquered India and what is
now Pakistan by attacking them with horses. The Indian armies fled
in fright, because they had never seen horses before. I have never
been to Uzbekistan (except on the Afghan side), but I have recently
spent a month in nearby Kashgar, on the Chinese side of the boarder,
and I saw nothing but thousands, perhaps millions, of horses, many
of them wild. In short, horses exist in great numbers north, but not
south, of the Hindu Kush and Himalayan mountains.
They
also exist all across northern China. Two of the pieces in both Chinese
chess and Persian chess and also in supposedly ancient Indian chess
involve horses, namely the horse and the chariot. A game of Indian
or Pakistan origin would more likely have involved a camel. At the
same time, elephants existed in India and probably in China, but not
in Persia, Pakistan or Uzbekistan, although the Persians had heard
of elephants. By this process, we seem to have eliminated Persia,
India, Pakistan and Uzbekistan as possible places for the origin of
chess, leaving only China. Actually, many Chinese themselves believe
that their name, "elephant game", for Chinese chess, points strongly
to an Indian origin. However, other Chinese say that
(1) elephants
existed in ancient China, but died out due to climatic changes and
(2) although
the character "Shiang" in "Shiang-chi" means or meant elephant, it
also meant other things previously, and when the meaning of that character
changed, so did the name of the game.
For example,
when "Shiang" is combined with another Chinese character, it means
a constellation of stars in the sky, and for that reason "Shiang-chi"
is sometimes said to be an astrological game. Also, the elephant is
one of the weakest pieces in almost all versions of chess. Since the
elephant itself is a strong animal, this lends support to the Chinese
assertion that this character meant something else in ancient history.
Finally,
there is one point, perhaps the most important point, which concludes
my case. This is that Chinese chess is the most popular game in the
world, with hundreds of millions of active players. It is far more
popular than western chess on a man-for-man basis. Everywhere one
goes in the People's Republic of China, one constantly finds games
of Chinese chess being played. One sees games on the train, in the
bus, in hotels, offices and other common meeting places, and even
on the sidewalk on the street. It is clearly more popular than western
chess on a population basis. The game is also ingrained in the Chinese
culture. Virtually every male person in the world of Chinese origin
knows the rules of Chinese chess and has played at least one or two
games, having been taught during childhood. If one wants to play a
game of Chinese chess in China, all one needs to do is to put down
a board and pieces on the sidewalk and an opponent will materialize
instantaneously. After a minute or two more, a crowd will have gathered
to watch the game (and to make unsolicited comments and suggestions
on the moves).
Furthermore,
there are several varieties of Chinese chess, some of which have died
out but others of which are still played. The enormous popularity
of Chinese chess is a point overlooked by almost every western source.
Golombek states, for example, than when chess entered China, it was
eclipsed by the more popular game of go. (Golombek, Chess, a History,
Id., p. 22.)
Actually,
the reverse was true. Chinese chess is the more recent of the two
games. Nowadays in China, the number of players of Chinese chess is
vastly greater than the number of players of go. Go is the game of
the intellectual elite. Chess is the game of the masses. In addition,
going back to the fable of Shashi about the invention of chess, in
which the inventor wanted one grain of wheat on the first square of
the chess board, two on the second and so on, we know at least that
the person who invented the fable was both a chess player and a mathematician
who realized that 2 to the 64th power was a very large number. We
also know from our own experience that this is the general case.
Many
chess players are mathematicians and most mathematicians are chess
players. The connection between chess and mathematics is well known.
Right now every mathematics department in every university in the
United States is clamoring to get its fair share of mathematicians
now being sent out by the People's Republic of China in great numbers.
The Chinese involvement with mathematics is part of their culture
and history and is not a recent development. It is difficult for a
westerner to grasp the full significance of this, because in the western
world, people are accustomed to doing things because of personal preference
rather than because of their cultural or religious background.
It is
hard for a westerner to understand or believe that, to the extent
that chess was played in India at all, it was played by Muslims but
not by Hindus. However, throughout Asia, a man's religion is a far
greater factor than his personal preference in determining what he
eats, how he dresses, what kind of job he has or what he does in his
spare time. From all this, there seems to be no other choice but to
conclude that chess originated in China. From this starting point,
we can work out how chess must have developed and spread over the
centuries.
China
has always tended to be an isolationist country, throughout its recorded
history. It built the Great Wall in ancient times and even now is
still reluctant to allow in tourists. Marco Polo is famous, not so
much because he went to China, since the physical trip was not so
difficult, but because he lived to return and tell about it. Only
during the short Mongol reign of Kublai Khan were a few foreigners
allowed to enter and leave China. Before and after that, the door
was closed. In view of this well known history, it seems unlikely
that a game of foreign origin could have entered China from India
and become so enormously popular so quickly. Instead, it is more logical
that it was invented in China at a date no later than the second century
BC, and that it took at least 800 years before it penetrated to other
countries.
It reached
Persia by around 650 A.D. It arrived there at an opportune time, as
Islam had just started and begun to spread. The Arabs carried chess
along with the Koran all the way across North Africa into Spain and
France, within less than one hundred years. This is the reason that
chess seems to have popped up everywhere almost simultaneously. (Murray,
on the other hand, felt that the game spread rapidly from a single
source because of its great intrinsic merit). At the same time, going
in the opposite direction, the Arabs penetrated into China, as a result
of which Islam is still today the second most popular religion there.
Perhaps, this is also how the Arabs learned of chess, rather than
from the Persians or the Indians.
There
is Muslim tradition which has it that only a few years after the death
of Mohammed in 642 A.D., the Caliphs Omar and/or Ali already knew
of the game and perhaps played it themselves. (Some more present day
Muslims, however, maintain that chess playing is a sin and such a
thing could never have happened). In any event, it is a proven historical
fact that in the Ommayad period of Syrian rule in the eighth century
which started with the death of Ali, chess was popular throughout
the Muslim world. Needless to say, an endorsement of the caliph (or
of Ali, the first Imam, depending upon which branch of Islam one happened
to belong to) was sufficient to insure that all Muslims would take
up the game.
Chess
also spread from China in the opposite direction. The traditional
view is that it reached Japan in the Nara period, which was from 704
to 790 A.D. If this is true, it would also be strong evidence against
an Indian origin, because it is unlikely that it could have been invented
in India during the sixth century, crossed Kashmir to China (the supposed
route), and then crossed all of China and the Sea of Japan, to reach
Japan in only about one hundred years.
Actually,
there are so many differences between Chinese chess and Japanese chess
that the authorities in Japan do not believe that it came directly
from China, or even from Korea. (Korean chess is relatively similar
to Chinese chess). Instead, they believe that the evolutionary process
took much longer, certainly hundreds and perhaps even a thousand of
years. It was not until around the fifth century A.D. that even go
reached Japan from China, although go had flourished in China for
more than two thousand years already, and Confucius mentioned it in
the fifth century BC.
Japanese
chess evolved in the opposite way from western chess. In western chess,
the pieces gradually got stronger. In Japanese chess, the pieces gradually
got weaker but more aggressive, since they generally lost their defensive
capabilities. The piece in the corner became the Japanese lance, which,
like the rook, can move forward, but, unlike the rook, cannot move
sideways or backward. (One of the characters on the Japanese lance
is still the same as the Chinese character for chariot). The horse
from Chinese chess became the "kiema" in Japanese chess, which moves
in the pattern of a knight, but only forward, not sideways or backward.
Perhaps the name "kiema" is derived from "ma", which is the spoken
word for horse in Chinese. (The "horse" itself in Japanese chess is
a totally different piece, the promoted bishop, and was added at a
much later date). The elephant in Chinese chess became the "silver"
in Japanese chess, which moves one, not two, squares diagonally and
also can move one square straight forward. The chancellor became the
Japanese "gold", a somewhat different but also weak piece. The king
remained a king and the pawns remained pawns. The Japanese pawns move
and capture the same as Chinese pawns, one square straight forward,
and do not capture diagonally as they do in western chess.
Since
these differences, which are far greater than the differences between
western chess and Chinese chess, cannot be explained by a simple jump
over to Japan, the Japanese believe that the game took an unlikely
route down the Malay Peninsula and then jumped to Japan from there.
In support of this idea is the fact that Burmese and Thai chess have
a piece which moves just like a silver in Japanese chess. Finally,
the Japanese believe that the period between the thirteenth and fifteenth
centuries brought about the re-introduction of the rook and the introduction
of the bishop. This accounts for the strange placement of the rook
and the bishop in shogi as compared with other chess-type games. Kimura,
Yoshinori, "An Introduction to Shogi Ð Past and Present", Western
Shogi Quarterly, North American Shogi Federation, No. 3, p. 3, Fall,
1985.
Most
of this evolution is believed to have taken place inside Japan itself.
The Japanese experimented wildly, and came up with more than thirty
different kinds of pieces in a game called "great shogi" and twenty-one
pieces in "middle shogi", as compared to just eight for modern shogi,
seven for Chinese chess, seven for Korean chess and six for western
chess. There was also "big shogi" and many other kinds of shogi, several
of which enjoyed considerable popularity at one time or another.
The end
result was the present game, traditionally called "small shogi", which
contains numerous features which no other popular form of chess has,
including the fact that captured pieces become part of the enemy army
and can reenter the game and that six of the eight types of pieces
have the option of promoting to a different piece, once moving in
enemy territory. The
Japanese pieces also lost their color and became pentagonal rather
than circular.These vast changes cannot be explained by any normally
glacially slow evolutionary process. The only possible explanation
is the Japanese fascination with experimenting and improving upon
any idea introduced into that country.
Chinese
chess also reached Korea, but relatively few changes were made. The
names and Chinese characters for the primary pieces remained the same:
chariot, horse and elephant. The move of the elephant changed radically,
however. Now, it moves like a giant knight, three up and two over,
which is more fitting for an elephant. The pieces are not circular
but octagonal and are colored green and red rather than red and black.
The initial starting point of the king is one square forward, and
the horse and the elephant sometimes switch places in their starting
position.
Chess
also spread to other areas subject to Chinese influence. Going south,
it entered Burma, Laos, Vietnam and Cambodia. From there it reached
Thailand and Malaysia and crossed to the island of Java in Indonesia,
where chess relics have been found. (Chien Chun Ching, "Research in
Chinese chess from the Tang and Song Dynasties", p. 86, Hong Kong,
1984 (in Chinese).
Although
Chinese chess itself is still played in Vietnam, other variations
of the game took hold in most of the other countries. Some of these
have now died out or, as in the case of Malaysian chess, have been
radically modified in recent times so as to conform more closely to
the rules of modern western chess. ("Rules in Malay Chess", Royal
Asiatic Society - Striates Branch Journal, Singapore, No. 49, p. 87-92
(1907), also No. 8, p. 261 (1917)).
However,
many, such as Korean chess, are still played with fanatical zeal in
the country where they settled. Finally, and quite possibly last of
all, chess reached the west. It was probably taken by caravan across
the Gobi desert to Uzbekistan, where the oldest known physical pieces,
including a stand up elephant dating to the second century A.D., have
been found. From there it crossed Afghanistan, reaching Persia by
the seventh century A.D. At that time, Persia had the dominant culture
in the region. Even the Indian language, Hindi, is substantially derived
from Persian.
The history
of that region tells us that in those days, most things passed from
Persia to India, not the other way around. Chess also crossed from
Persia to Ethiopia, where a little known form of the game, in which
both sides move simultaneously and as quickly as possible, is still
played. "Ethiopian Chess", Journal of the School of Oriental and African
Studies, London, 1912. (One suspects, however, that this is not really
chess as we understand it.)
There
is sound basis for the claim that western chess is actually the most
recent version of the game. The first serious modern chess writer
who could put up a good game was apparently Lucena in 1497. (Actually,
his endgame studies, such as the famous one in the rook and pawn endgame,
applied equally well to medieval chess). Ruy Lopez, who was clearly
writing about the modern version of the game in 1561, was probably
no better than a class C player by present day standards. Even McDonnell,
of LaBourdonnais - McDonnell fame, was perhaps no better than class
A, and that was in 1834 and he was the best player in England. It
is clear that prior to Morphy in 1860, no player in chess history
had ever reached the modern grandmaster standard. By contrast, in
Japan in the year 1604 there were players who, if alive today, could
play for the championship against the top professionals in shogi,
without the need for any openings brush-up. Similarly, in go, the
best players in history lived more than one hundred years ago, not
today. See, for example, "Invincible: The Games of Shusaku, the greatest
Japanese go genius who ever lived", translated by John Power, The
Ishi Press, Chigasaki, Japan, 1983. Only because western chess is
so new is it that one needs the latest "Encyclopedia of the Chess
Openings" to keep up with the latest developments. Two hundred years
from now, knowledge of the latest developments in opening theory may
not be nearly so important as it is today.
© 2000
Sam Sloan. About Sam Sloan: Sam Sloan, also known as Mohammad Ismail
Sloan, especially in the Middle East, is a rated chess expert (or
candidate master). He is also officially ranked as a shodan at shogi
(Japanese chess) by the Shogi Renmei (the Japan Shogi Association)
in Tokyo. He lived in Japan for one year, where he was associated
with The Ishi Press, Inc., a leading publisher of books on go, shogi
and other oriental games. He has traveled extensively in the People's
Republic of China, where he learned to play Chinese chess, and in
Pakistan, Afghanistan and India. He studied linguistics as a graduate
student at New York University, and is the author of a Khowar-English
Dictionary, which is a dictionary of a language spoken only in North
West Pakistan, where he is a well known personality. He can speak
Khowar, Pashtu and Spanish, as well as some Persian, Arabic and Mandarin
Chinese. He has been to 62 countries in the world, including almost
all of the countries mentioned herein. He is the President and Chief
Executive Officer of Berkeley Computer Chess, Inc. and has three children:
Peter, Mary and Shamema.
Sulekha
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