In
one of those moments of quiet reflection that sometimes visits us,
I recently found myself wondering why, for the past five years, I
have devoted so much of my life and resources in the pursuit of a
subject that when mentioned in polite conversation, makes eyes glaze
over and lends itself so well to baffled looks and stifled yawns?
I speak
about a great passion in my life - the search for the origins of chess.
My family
and my friends have gotten used to hearing me wax enthusiastically
about the latest archaeological discoveries, be it an ancient spoke-wheeled
chariot unearthed from the peat of a northern English moor or the
location of the tomb of the first emperor of a unified China, and
how those discoveries might possibly be of significance to furthering
our understanding of the origins of chess. Perhaps they are simply
relieved that I have directed my zeal to(wards) endeavors that do
not routinely require the need to wear exotic costumes, employ marital
arts and slaughter three or more bad guys with one fell swoop of my
trusty sword. So, they let me ramble on...
A few
months ago, I spent a lunch hour on two consecutive days explaining
the legend recounted in the Shah-nameh about the introduction of chess
from India into Persia, and the invention of the game of nard, an
ancestor of backgammon. I like to think my audience, a co-worker with
whom I go speed-walking for exercise, was as enthralled in the listening
as I was in the telling of the story. I played it out like an old
fashioned Flash Gordon serial, but in appropriately modern language.
I told her of the Persian king's challenge to his wise guys, er, wise
men, to discover the secrets of how to play the game of chess that
had been presented to the royal court by the Indian envoy, "Yo, dudes.
Figger it out, or I'm gonna off ya, see? One by one, see?"
As you
see, I am a hopeless case. Today I am more enthralled and ensnared
by the coils of supposition, research and discovery than when I first
embarked upon this voyage in December, 1998. Since then, I have exchanged
miles of correspondence with people from around the globe, travelled
out of the country to pursue research opportunities, and spent a small
fortune and countless hours to procure obscure books written for an
obscure audience by equally obscure, long dead or ancient but very
well-preserved scholars. I spend my spare time reading thousands of
words each month in scientific, historical and archaeological journals,
pouring over yellowing and dusty books in public libraries, and searching
through untold web pages on the Internet.
Some
pursue wealth; others pursue power. But our small band of researchers
is in pursuit of the most dangerous thing of all - a thing that has,
throughout the ages, with careless abandon and utter disregard, devoured
and destroyed better men and women than ourselves. We are in pursuit
of an idea! Yes! Don McLean has it exactly right. It is the "idea
of chess" that we pursue so relentlessly. But what is the "idea of
chess"?
Most
chess historians would have us believe that the "idea" of chess started
life rooted in warfare and that the game's reason d'etre has not changed
since 500 CE or so. While a few historians have, from time to time,
attempted to counter this hypothesis by venturing into more esoteric
areas of inquiry, searching for a deeper significance and meaning
to the roots of the game and the moves of its pieces, these attempts
have not changed the general consensus that H.J.R. Murray had it right.
Thus, the idea that "Chess is War" has taken on the same
gloss of certitude, fact, or law, as the theory of evolution. That
most of Darwin's basic tenets have since been quietly discarded if
not disowned outright by the scientific community, in favor of more
current hypotheses seems to have generally escaped the notice of chess
historians.
And so,
many games scholars around the world are busy trying to get to the
root of the invention of chess, the war game. But have they ever stopped
even a moment to question the fundamental assumptions that underlie
their research? What if they - and we, the chessplaying public - have
been lulled into believing that "Chess is War" based on
the psychological proclivities of a late 19th century British school
teacher writing under the all-pervasive aura and influence of the
idea of Inevitable Empire? A writer, moreover, who was just one in
a long procession of writers "towing the line" by extolling
the now discarded virtues of Higher Criticism and Social Darwinism?
This
assertion, "Chess is War", short-circuits and automatically
demeans and disdains any view of chess other than its own. It allows
no counter-argument; it brooks no dissension and no discussion. In
so doing, however, the supporters of "Chess is War" must
ignore the history of other preceding board games which, as archaeological
evidence demonstrates, were invented or instigated as a way to practice
divination and provide a method, as it were, to "grow closer
to one's God". War has precious little to do with the object
of games such as Mehen, Twenty Squares, Senet, Fifty-eight Holes and
Luibo.
Students
of social history know that, in general, what has gone before often
provides the basis for what will come after. While it is possible
that, in a moment of epiphany, the game of chess emerged, full-blown
in a form recognizable to us as such, it is more prudent although
far less exciting to assume, rather, that the idea of chess evolved
out of one or more prior games played by people for thousands of years.
And so, in attempting to reconstruct the idea of chess, it seems a
wise course to closely examine whatever we can of the games that preceded
it.
Several
authors have examined the question of whether ancient games were derived
from practices and methods utilized to divine the will of the gods
and/or discern the future (Pascal Romaine; C.J. Gadd, Joseph Needham);
or to express religious belief (Pavel Bidev; Peter Piccione). Why
then, does it seem that board game scholars are so willing to dismiss
the possibilities that open to the mind when wondering if the idea
of chess might not be rooted in the religious and cultural traditions
and beliefs of one or more ancient societies other than that advanced
by Murray? On an objective basis, it is not likely that we can compete
on a sheer "knowledge of facts" basis with people who have
spent the better part of their lives delving into the study of board
games.
We are
johnnies-come-lately to the subject. On the other hand, it is precisely
because we are "innocent" that we haven't any preconceived
notions to deal with while examining history and culture and exploring
the questions surrounding the idea of chess. Perhaps some believe
we have nothing worthwhile or sensible to contribute to the discussion.
The questions we ask, the subjects we examine and discuss among ourselves,
and the methods (or lack thereof) we employ in our research may, therefore,
strike many with chill horror, or fill some with dismissive contempt.
Sometimes
things are not all that they seem to be - or what we have been told
they are. Just a few weeks after I helped create the first edition
of the "http://www.goddesschesxs.com/"
Goddesschess website, a news story appeared in the June 28, 1999 edition
of Newsweek magazine, "From Both Sides Now," by Sharon
Begley with Thomas Hayden (p. 64). It contained an account of how
a fresh out of school female scientist brought a new perspective to
an area of research thought to be long-settled: Out on the plains
of the western United States, biologists were studying herds of mustangs,
in which the reigning stallion was believed to have the sole right
to procreate. Then a researcher got the bright idea of running DNA
tests on the horses. As paternity tests often do, these proved embarrassing:
fewer than one third of the herd's foals had been sired by the resident
stallion. Instead, mares had snuck over to other herds, mating with
males there. Blinded by the "harem" metaphor of mustang
social structure, researchers had not even looked for such female
behavior.
In May,
2000, Peter Banaschak (1), in urging a new approach in research for
chess historians, stated