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It is among the oldest known board game, with evidence of boards existing from around 1400 BC, most notably several cut into the roof of the temple at Kurna[?], Egypt.
Despite this no mention occurs in literature until towards end of the 10th Century[?] when the author Abu al-Faraj Ali of Esfahan mentioned it in his 24 volume work Kitab-al Aghani[?] ("Book of Song").
However this work made no mention of the rules of the game, and we have to wait until the middle of the 13th Century[?] AD to find a set of rules in the Alfonso X manuscript belonging to the Libro de los juegos which he commissioned (the book contained translations of many Arabic games).
Spanish settlers[?] in New Mexico introduced a four-player variant of Alquerque to the Zuni Indians[?].
Figure 1: Empty board | Figure 2: Starting position |
Before starting, the pieces (12 black and 12 white) are placed as shown in figure 2. The game is played in turns, with one player taking white and the other black.
The idea of the game is to eliminate the opponent's pieces.
This set of rules was developed by RC Bell[?] in his book Board and Table Games of Many Civilizations[?], and were presented alongside an argument that the Alfonso rules wern't detailed enough to be able to play the game.
His rules are an extension to the Alfonso rules, they are that:
Bell also includes a scoring system for rating games.
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