Mancala: Difference between revisions

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{{Redirect|Mankala|a type of cooperative in Finland|Cooperative}}
{{Redirect|Mankala|a type of cooperative in Finland|Cooperative}}
{{Distinguish|Mandala|Lake Manzala}}
{{Distinguish|Mandala|Lake Manzala}}
[[File:Yao People Playing "Bawo".jpg|thumb|''[[Bao (game)|Bao]]'' players in Mozambique]]
[[File:Yao People Playing "Bawo".jpg|thumb|''[[Bao (game)|Bao]]'' players in [[Mozambique]]]]


'''Mancala''' ({{langx|ar|منقلة}} ''manqalah'') is a family of two-player [[Turns, rounds and time-keeping systems in games|turn-based]] [[Strategy game|strategy]] [[board game]]s played with small stones, beans, marbles or seeds and rows of holes or pits in the earth, a board or other playing surface. The objective is usually to capture all or some set of the opponent's pieces.
'''Mancala''' ({{langx|ar|منقلة}} ''manqalah'') is a family of two-player [[Turns, rounds and time-keeping systems in games|turn-based]] [[Strategy game|strategy]] [[board game]]s played with small stones, beans, marbles or seeds and rows of holes or pits in the earth, a board or other playing surface. The objective is usually to capture all or some set of the opponent's pieces.


Versions of the game date back past the [[3rd century]] and evidence suggests such games existed in [[Ancient Egypt]]. It is among the oldest known family of games to still be widely played today.
Versions of the game date back past the [[3rd century]] and evidence suggests such games existed in [[Ancient Egypt]]. It is among the oldest known family of games to still be widely played today.
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[[File:MuseoDeBurgos20130911133533SAM 3411.jpg|thumb|upright|A 10th century ivory board from [[Muslim Spain]]]]
[[File:MuseoDeBurgos20130911133533SAM 3411.jpg|thumb|upright|A 10th century ivory board from [[Muslim Spain]]]]


According to some experts, the oldest discovered mancala boards are in [[Ayn Ghazal (archaeological site)|'Ain Ghazal, Jordan]] in the floor of a Neolithic dwelling as early as ~5,870 BCE<ref>{{cite web |title=Mancala |url=https://www.savannahafricanartmuseum.org/2020-workshops/05-2#:~:text=There%20is%20archeological%20and%20historical,floor%20of%20a%20Neolithic%20dwelling. |website=Savannah African Art Museum |access-date=3 May 2023}}</ref> although this claim has been disputed by others.<ref name=":2">{{Cite journal |last=Depaulis |first=Thierry |date=2020-10-01 |title=Board Games Before Ur? |journal=Board Game Studies Journal |language=en |volume=14 |issue=1 |pages=127–144 |doi=10.2478/bgs-2020-0007 |issn=2183-3311|doi-access=free }}</ref> More recent and undisputed claims concern artifacts from the city of [[Gedera]] in an excavated Roman bathhouse where pottery boards and rock cuts that were unearthed dating back to between the 2nd and 3rd century AD.{{cn|date=April 2025}} Among other early evidence of the game are fragments of a pottery board and several rock cuts found in [[Kingdom of Aksum|Aksumite]] areas in [[Matara, Eritrea|Matara]] (in [[Eritrea]]) and [[Yeha]] (in Ethiopia), which are dated by archaeologists to between the 6th and 7th centuries AD.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Natsoulas |title=The Game of Mancala with Reference to Commonalities among the Peoples of Ethiopia and in Comparison to Other African Peoples: Rules and Strategies |journal=Northeast African Studies |date=1995 |volume=2 |issue=2 |pages=7–24 |doi=10.1353/nas.1995.0018 |jstor=41931202 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41931202 |access-date=3 May 2023|url-access=subscription }}</ref>  
According to contemporary archaeology and game studies scholars, the oldest mancala-type games are about 2,000–2,500 years old.<ref name="Depaulis-2021">{{cite journal |last=Depaulis |first=Thierry |date=2021-04-27 |title=Misconceptions in the History of Mancala Games: Antiquity and Ubiquity |journal=Board Game Studies Journal |language=en |volume=15|issue=1 |pages=1–12 |doi=10.2478/bgs-2021-0001 |issn=2183-3311|doi-access=free }}</ref><ref name="de-Voogt-2020">{{cite journal |last=de Voogt|first=Alex|date=2020-10-01 |title=Board Games Before Ur? |journal=Board Game Studies Journal |language=en |volume=14 |issue=1 |pages=127–144 |doi=10.2478/bgs-2020-0007 |issn=2183-3311|doi-access=free }}</ref><ref name="Pankhurst-1982">{{cite journal |last1=Pankhurst |first1=Richard |date=1982 |title=Gabata and Other Board-Games of Ethiopia and the Horn of Africa |journal=Azania |volume=17 |issue=1 |pages=27–42 |doi=10.1080/00672708209511298 }}</ref>  


The oldest mention of the game is in the "[[Kitab al-Aghani]]" ("''Book of Songs''") of the 10th-century, attributed to [[Abu al-Faraj al-Isfahani]].<ref>{{cite web |language=French |author=Pierre Lombard |title=Archéologie du "mancala": un jeu traditionnel aux origines controversées |url=https://archeorient.hypotheses.org/7129 |date=February 17, 2017 |doi=10.58079/bcvu |access-date=October 1, 2024}}.</ref> The game may have been mentioned by [[Giyorgis of Segla]] in his 14th century [[Geʽez]] text ''Mysteries of Heaven and Earth'', where he refers to a game called qarqis, a term used in Geʽez to refer to both Gebet'a (mancala) and ''Sant'araz'' (modern ''sent'erazh'', [[Senterej|Ethiopian chess]]).{{Citation needed|reason=for the Qarqis part|date=February 2013}}<ref>{{cite book |first=Richard |last=Pankhurst |chapter=Gäbäṭa |editor-first=Siegbert von |editor-last=Uhlig |title=Encyclopaedia Aethiopica: D–Ha |location=Wiesbaden |publisher=Harrassowitz Verlag |year=2005 |page=598 |isbn=3-447-05238-4}}</ref> Evidence of the game has also been uncovered in Kenya.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Cummings |first=Mike |date=2024-02-01 |title=A local tip helps reveal an ancient 'arcade' in Kenya's highlands |url=https://news.yale.edu/2024/02/01/local-tip-helps-reveal-ancient-arcade-kenyas-highlands |access-date=2024-02-05 |website=YaleNews |language=en}}</ref>
Claims that the findings at [[Ayn Ghazal (archaeological site)|'Ain Ghazal, Jordan]] in the floor of a Neolithic dwelling as early as ~5,870 BCE<ref name="Savannah">{{cite web |title=Mancala |url=https://www.savannahafricanartmuseum.org/2020-workshops/05-2#:~:text=There%20is%20archeological%20and%20historical,floor%20of%20a%20Neolithic%20dwelling. |website=Savannah African Art Museum |access-date=3 May 2023}}</ref> and the initial interpretation by Gary O. Rollefson<ref name="Rollefson-1992">{{cite journal |last1=Rollefson |first1=Gary O. |date=1992 |title=A Neolithic Game Board from 'Ain Ghazal, Jordan |journal=[[Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research]] |issue=286 |pages=1–5 |doi=10.2307/1357113 |jstor=1357113 }}</ref> are unsustainable and have been widely disputed. More recent and undisputed claims concern artifacts from the city of [[Gedera]] in an excavated Roman bathhouse where pottery boards and rock cuts that were unearthed dating back to between the 2nd and 3rd century AD. Among other early evidence of the game are fragments of a pottery board and several rock cuts found in [[Kingdom of Aksum|Aksumite]] areas in [[Matara, Eritrea|Matara]] (in [[Eritrea]]) and [[Yeha]] (in Ethiopia), which are dated by archaeologists to between the 6th and 7th centuries AD.<ref name="Natsoulas-1995">{{cite journal |last1=Natsoulas |title=The Game of Mancala with Reference to Commonalities among the Peoples of Ethiopia and in Comparison to Other African Peoples: Rules and Strategies |journal=Northeast African Studies |date=1995 |volume=2 |issue=2 |pages=7–24 |doi=10.1353/nas.1995.0018 |jstor=41931202 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41931202 |access-date=3 May 2023|url-access=subscription }}</ref>


The games have also existed in [[Eastern Europe]]. In [[Estonia]], it was once very popular (see "[[Das Bohnenspiel|Bohnenspiel]]"), and likewise in  Bosnia (where it is called Ban-Ban and still played today), Serbia, and Greece ("Mandoli", Cyclades). Two mancala tables from the early 18th century are to be found in [[Weikersheim Castle]] in southern Germany.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.afrostylemag.com/ASM16/mancala_effect.php|title=Afrostyle Magazine|website=afrostylemag.com|access-date=2018-01-17}}</ref> In western Europe, it never caught on but was documented by [[Oxford University]] orientalist Thomas Hyde.<ref>Thomas Hyde, ''De ludis orientalibus'' [Of Eastern Games, 2 vols.] (Oxford University Press, 1694). https://www.worldcat.org/title/de-ludis-orientalibus-libri-duo-quorum-prior-est-duabus-partibus-viz-1-historia-shahiludii-latine-deinde-2-historia-shahiludii-heb-lat-per-tres-judaeos-liber-posterior-continet-historiam-reliquorum-ludorum-orientis/oclc/174276156?referer=di&ht=edition Reference to Hyde's discussion of ''mancala'' and other games in Vesna Bikić and Jasna Vuković, "Board Games Reconsidered: Mancala in the Balkans", ''International Journal of the History of Sport'' 27/5 (Mar. 2010): 798–819. Download citation https://doi.org/10.1080/09523361003625857</ref>
The oldest mention of the game is in the "[[Kitab al-Aghani]]" ("''Book of Songs''") of the 10th-century, attributed to [[Abu al-Faraj al-Isfahani]].<ref name="Lombard-2017">{{cite web |language=French |author=Pierre Lombard |title=Archéologie du "mancala": un jeu traditionnel aux origines controversées |url=https://archeorient.hypotheses.org/7129 |date=February 17, 2017 |doi=10.58079/bcvu |access-date=October 1, 2024}}.</ref> The game may have been mentioned by [[Giyorgis of Segla]] in his 14th century [[Geʽez]] text ''Mysteries of Heaven and Earth'', where he refers to a game called qarqis, a term used in Geʽez to refer to both Gebet'a (mancala) and ''Sant'araz'' (modern ''sent'erazh'', [[Senterej|Ethiopian chess]]).<ref name="Pankhurst-2005">{{cite book |first=Richard |last=Pankhurst |chapter=Gäbäṭa |editor-first=Siegbert von |editor-last=Uhlig |title=Encyclopaedia Aethiopica: D–Ha |location=Wiesbaden |publisher=Harrassowitz Verlag |year=2005 |page=598 |isbn=3-447-05238-4}}</ref> Evidence of the game has also been uncovered in Kenya.<ref name="Cummings-2024">{{Cite web |last=Cummings |first=Mike |date=2024-02-01 |title=A local tip helps reveal an ancient 'arcade' in Kenya's highlands |url=https://news.yale.edu/2024/02/01/local-tip-helps-reveal-ancient-arcade-kenyas-highlands |access-date=2024-02-05 |website=YaleNews |language=en}}</ref>


In the United States a traditional mancala game called Warra was still played in [[Louisiana]] in the early 20th century, and a commercial version called [[Kalah]] became popular in the 1940s. In [[Cape Verde]], mancala is known as "ouril". It is played on the Islands and was brought to the United States by Cape Verdean immigrants. It is played to this day in Cape Verdean communities in New England.
The games have also existed in [[Eastern Europe]]. In [[Estonia]], it was once very popular (see "[[Das Bohnenspiel|Bohnenspiel]]"), and likewise in [[Bosnia]] (where it is called Ban-Ban and still played today), [[Serbia]], and [[Greece]] ("Mandoli", Cyclades). Two mancala tables from the early 18th century are to be found in [[Weikersheim Castle]] in [[southern Germany]].<ref name="Afrostyle">{{Cite web|url=http://www.afrostylemag.com/ASM16/mancala_effect.php|title=Afrostyle Magazine|website=afrostylemag.com|access-date=2018-01-17|archive-date=2023-05-23|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230523171727/https://afrostylemag.com/ASM16/mancala_effect.php|url-status=dead}}</ref> In western Europe, it never caught on but was documented by [[Oxford University]] orientalist Thomas Hyde.<ref name="Hyde-1694">{{cite book|author=Thomas Hyde|title=De ludis orientalibus|year=1694|publisher=Oxford University Press}} Reference to Hyde's discussion of ''mancala'' and other games in Vesna Bikić and Jasna Vuković, "Board Games Reconsidered: Mancala in the Balkans", ''International Journal of the History of Sport'' 27/5 (Mar. 2010): 798–819. Download citation https://doi.org/10.1080/09523361003625857</ref>


Historians may have found evidence of mancala in [[The Slave Community|slave communities]] of the [[Americas]]. The game was brought to the Americas by enslaved Africans during the [[trans-Atlantic slave trade]]. The game was played by enslaved Africans to foster community and develop social skills. Archeologists may have found evidence of the game mancala played in [[Nashville, Tennessee]] at the [[The Hermitage (Nashville, Tennessee)|Hermitage Plantation]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Christiano |title=Gaming among Enslaved Africans in the Americas, and its Uses in Navigating Social Interactions |journal=Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects /College of William & Mary - Arts & Sciences |date=2010 |pages=8–12 |url=https://scholarworks.wm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5862&context=etd |access-date=3 May 2023}}</ref>
In the [[United States]], a traditional mancala game called Warra was still played in [[Louisiana]] in the early 20th century, and a commercial version called [[Kalah]] became popular in the 1940s. In [[Cape Verde]], mancala is known as "ouril". It is played on the Islands and was brought to the United States by Cape Verdean immigrants. It is played to this day in Cape Verdean communities in New England.{{Citation needed|date=August 2025|reason=This paragraph does not cite any sources.}}


Recent studies of mancala rules have given insight into the distribution of mancala. This distribution has been linked to migration routes, which may go back several hundred years.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SmmUAgAAQBAJ&q=mancala+africa&pg=PA475|title=African Folklore: An Encyclopedia|first1=Philip M.|last1=Peek|first2=Kwesi|last2=Yankah|date=March 7, 2004|publisher=Routledge|via=Google Books|isbn=9781135948733}}</ref>
Historians may have found evidence of mancala in [[The Slave Community|slave communities]] of the [[Americas]]. The game was brought to the Americas by enslaved Africans during the [[trans-Atlantic slave trade]]. The game was played by enslaved Africans to foster community and develop social skills. Archeologists may have found evidence of the game mancala played in [[Nashville, Tennessee]] at the [[The Hermitage (Nashville, Tennessee)|Hermitage Plantation]].<ref name="Christiano-2010">{{cite journal |last1=Christiano |title=Gaming among Enslaved Africans in the Americas, and its Uses in Navigating Social Interactions |journal=Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects /College of William & Mary - Arts & Sciences |date=2010 |pages=8–12 |url=https://scholarworks.wm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5862&context=etd |access-date=3 May 2023}}</ref>
 
Recent studies of mancala rules have given insight into the distribution of mancala. This distribution has been linked to migration routes, which may go back several hundred years.<ref name="Peek-2004">{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SmmUAgAAQBAJ&q=mancala+africa&pg=PA475|title=African Folklore: An Encyclopedia|first1=Philip M.|last1=Peek|first2=Kwesi|last2=Yankah|date=March 7, 2004|publisher=Routledge|via=Google Books|isbn=9781135948733}}</ref>


== Etymology ==
== Etymology ==


The word ''mancala'' ({{langx|ar|[[wikt:منقلة#Arabic|مِنْقَلَة]]|minqalah}}) is a [[tool noun]] derived from an [[Semitic root|Arabic root]] ''naqala'' ({{lang|ar|[[wikt:نقل#Arabic|ن-ق-ل]]}}) meaning "to move".<ref>{{cite web|title=English words from Arabic|url=http://www.zompist.com/arabic.html|website=zompist|access-date=2015-12-03}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Mancala|url=http://lexbook.net/en/mancala|website=Lexbook|access-date=2015-12-03|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151208125337/http://lexbook.net/en/mancala|archive-date=2015-12-08|url-status=usurped}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Cannon|first1=Garland|last2=Kaye|first2=Alan S.|title=The Arabic contributions to the English language : an historical dictionary|date=1994|publisher=Harrassowitz|location=Wiesbaden|isbn=3-447-03491-2|pages=81|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8sFZAAAAMAAJ|access-date=2015-12-03}}</ref>
The word ''mancala'' ({{langx|ar|[[wikt:منقلة#Arabic|مِنْقَلَة]]|minqalah}}) is a [[tool noun]] derived from an [[Semitic root|Arabic root]] ''naqala'' ({{lang|ar|[[wikt:نقل#Arabic|ن-ق-ل]]}}) meaning "to move".<ref name="zompist">{{cite web|title=English words from Arabic|url=http://www.zompist.com/arabic.html|website=zompist|access-date=2015-12-03}}</ref><ref name="Lexbook">{{cite web|title=Mancala|url=http://lexbook.net/en/mancala|website=Lexbook|access-date=2015-12-03|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151208125337/http://lexbook.net/en/mancala|archive-date=2015-12-08|url-status=usurped}}</ref><ref name="Cannon-1994">{{cite book|last1=Cannon|first1=Garland|last2=Kaye|first2=Alan S.|title=The Arabic contributions to the English language : an historical dictionary|date=1994|publisher=Harrassowitz|location=Wiesbaden|isbn=3-447-03491-2|pages=81|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8sFZAAAAMAAJ|access-date=2015-12-03}}</ref>


== General gameplay ==
== General gameplay ==
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[[File:Newone - ô ăn quan.jpg|thumb|Game of [[Ô ăn quan]] on New Year's Day ([[Tết]]) at [[Vinhomes Times City]], Ha Noi]]
[[File:Newone - ô ăn quan.jpg|thumb|Game of [[Ô ăn quan]] on New Year's Day ([[Tết]]) at [[Vinhomes Times City]], Ha Noi]]


The name is a classification or type of game, rather than any specific game. Some of the most popular [[List of mancala games|mancala games]] (concerning distribution area, the numbers of players and tournaments, and publications) are:
The name is a classification or type of game, rather than any specific game. Some of the most popular [[List of mancala games|mancala games]] (concerning distribution area, the numbers of players and tournaments, and publications) are:
* [[Bao (game)|Bao]] – played in most of [[East Africa]] including [[Kenya]], [[Tanzania]], [[Comoros]], [[Madagascar]], [[Malawi]], as well as some areas of [[Democratic Republic of the Congo|DR Congo]], and [[Burundi]].<ref>Hyde (1694), pp. 226-232</ref>
* [[Bao (game)|Bao]] – played in most of [[East Africa]] including [[Kenya]], [[Tanzania]], [[Comoros]], [[Madagascar]], [[Malawi]], as well as some areas of [[Democratic Republic of the Congo|DR Congo]], and [[Burundi]].<ref name="Hyde-1694" />
* Gebeta (Tigrinya: ገበጣ) – played in Ethiopia and Eritrea (especially in Tigray).
* Gebeta (Tigrinya: ገበጣ) – played in [[Ethiopia]] and [[Eritrea]] (especially in [[Tigray Province|Tigray]]).
* [[Kalah]] – [[William Julius Champion Jr.|North American]] variation, the most popular variant in the [[Western world]].
* [[Kalah]] – [[William Julius Champion Jr.|North American]] variation, the most popular variant in the [[Western world]].
* [[Omweso]] (''mweso'') – played in [[Uganda]], some players and tournaments also in the [[UK]].
* [[Omweso]] (''mweso'') – played in [[Uganda]], some players and tournaments also in the [[UK]].
* [[Oware]] (''awalé, awélé, awari'') – [[Ashanti people|Ashanti]], but played world-wide including Europe ([[England]], [[France]], [[Catalonia]], [[Portugal]]), where it is mostly played (but not exclusively) by expatriates; close variants in [[West Africa]] (e.g., [[Ayoayo|Ayo]] by [[Yoruba people|Yorubas]] ([[Nigeria]]), Ouri ([[Cape Verde]])) and Warri in the [[Caribbean]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/28302/oware|title=Oware|website=BoardGameGeek}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.oware.org/history.asp|title=Oware – Played all over the world|website=oware.org}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AuZLAAAAYAAJ&q=Oware+game+Akan|title=African Games of Strategy: A Teaching Manual|date=February 7, 1982|publisher=African Studies Program, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign|via=Google Books}}</ref>
* [[Oware]] (''awalé, awélé, awari'') – [[Ashanti people|Ashanti]], but played world-wide including [[Europe]] ([[England]], [[France]], [[Catalonia]], [[Portugal]]), where it is mostly played (but not exclusively) by expatriates; close variants in [[West Africa]] (e.g., [[Ayoayo|Ayo]] by [[Yoruba people|Yorubas]] ([[Nigeria]]), Ouri ([[Cape Verde]])) and Warri in the [[Caribbean]].<ref name="BGG" /><ref name="Oware.org" /><ref name="Irwin-1982" />
* [[Pallanguzhi]] – played in Tamil Nadu, India.
* [[Pallanguzhi]] – played in [[Tamil Nadu]], [[India]].
* [[Ovvaḷugoṇḍi]] – played in Maldives
* Ovvaḷugoṇḍi – played in [[Maldives]]
* [[Songo (game)|Songo]] – played in [[Cameroon]], [[Equatorial Guinea]] and [[Gabon]], also among expatriates in [[France]].
* Songo – played in [[Cameroon]], [[Equatorial Guinea]] and [[Gabon]], also among expatriates in [[France]].
* [[Southeast Asian mancala|Sungka]] – Popular variants are known as [[Southeast Asian mancala|Congklak]] (a.k.a. ''congkak'', ''congka'', ''tjongklak'', ''jongklak'') and [[Southeast Asian mancala|Dakon]] (or {{lang|jv|dhakon}}) – played in [[Indonesia]], [[Singapore]], [[Malaysia]], [[Philippines|the Philippines]] and [[Brunei]]; boards are often sold in fairtrade shops in [[Germany]] and other European countries.  
* [[Southeast Asian mancala|Sungka]] – Popular variants are known as [[Southeast Asian mancala|Congklak]] (a.k.a. ''congkak'', ''congka'', ''tjongklak'', ''jongklak'') and [[Southeast Asian mancala|Dakon]] (or {{lang|jv|dhakon}}) – played in [[Indonesia]], [[Singapore]], [[Malaysia]], [[Philippines|the Philippines]] and [[Brunei]]; boards are often sold in fairtrade shops in [[Germany]] and other European countries.
* [[Toguz korgool]] or Toguz kumalak – played in Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan, tournaments also in Europe.
* [[Toguz korgool]] or [[Toguz kumalak]] – played in [[Kyrgyzstan]] and [[Kazakhstan]], tournaments also in Europe.
* [[Eson Khorgol]] (Mongolian: "nine balls"), also Eson Xorgol, played by the Kazakh minority in the aimag province of Bayan Ölgii in north-western Mongolia. The game was first described in 1963.  
* Eson Khorgol (Mongolian: "nine balls"), also Eson Xorgol, played by the [[Kazakhs|Kazakh]] minority in the aimag province of [[Bayan-Ölgii Province|Bayan Ölgii]] in north-western [[Mongolia]]. The game was first described in 1963.
 
Although more than 800 names of traditional mancala games are known, some names denote the same game, while others are used for more than one game. Almost 200 modern invented versions have also been described.{{citation needed|date=August 2025}}
Although more than 800 names of traditional mancala games are known, some names denote the same game, while others are used for more than one game. Almost 200 modern invented versions have also been described.


== Psychology ==
== Psychology ==


Like other [[Board game#Psychology|board games]], mancala games have led to psychological studies. Retschitzki has studied the cognitive processes used by awalé players.<ref>{{cite book |last=Retschitzki |first=J. |year=1990 |title=Stratégies des Joueurs d'Awélé |publisher=Édition L'Harmattan |location=Paris |isbn=2738406173 }}</ref> Some of Restchitzki's results on memory and problem solving have recently been simulated by Fernand Gobet with the [[CHREST]] computer model.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Gobet |first=F. |year=2009 |title=Using a cognitive architecture for addressing the question of cognitive universals in cross-cultural psychology: The example of awalé |journal=Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology |volume=40 |issue=4 |pages=627–648 |doi=10.1177/0022022109335186 |s2cid=145345443 }}</ref> [[Alexander de Voogt|De Voogt]] has studied the psychology of Bao playing.<ref>{{cite book |last=Voogt |first=A. J. de |year=1995 |title=Limits of the Mind: Towards a Characterisation of Bao Mastership |location=Leiden |publisher=CNWS Publications }}</ref>
Like other [[Board game#Psychology|board games]], mancala games have led to psychological studies. Retschitzki has studied the cognitive processes used by awalé players.<ref name="Retschitzki-1990" /> Some of Restchitzki's results on memory and problem solving have recently been simulated by Fernand Gobet with the [[CHREST]] computer model.<ref name="Gobet-2009" /> [[Alexander de Voogt|De Voogt]] has studied the psychology of Bao playing.<ref name="Voogt-1995" />


== Competition ==
== Competition ==
 
Several groups of mancala games have their own tournaments. A medley tournament including at least two modalities has been part of the [[Mind Sports Olympiad]], including in the in-person event and the online Grand Prix.<ref name="MSO-2023" />
Several groups of mancala games have their own tournaments. A medley tournament including at least two modalities has been part of the [[Mind Sports Olympiad]], including in the in-person event and the online Grand Prix.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://msodb.playstrategy.org/Report/GameMedals?gameCode=MN |title=Results for Mancala |work=Mind Sports Olympiad |access-date=2023-10-14}}</ref>


=== Mancala at the Mind Sports Olympiad ===
=== Mancala at the Mind Sports Olympiad ===

Latest revision as of 00:49, 9 October 2025

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File:Yao People Playing "Bawo".jpg
Bao players in Mozambique

Mancala (Template:Langx manqalah) is a family of two-player turn-based strategy board games played with small stones, beans, marbles or seeds and rows of holes or pits in the earth, a board or other playing surface. The objective is usually to capture all or some set of the opponent's pieces.

Versions of the game date back past the 3rd century and evidence suggests such games existed in Ancient Egypt. It is among the oldest known family of games to still be widely played today.

History

File:MuseoDeBurgos20130911133533SAM 3411.jpg
A 10th century ivory board from Muslim Spain

According to contemporary archaeology and game studies scholars, the oldest mancala-type games are about 2,000–2,500 years old.[1][2][3]

Claims that the findings at 'Ain Ghazal, Jordan in the floor of a Neolithic dwelling as early as ~5,870 BCE[4] and the initial interpretation by Gary O. Rollefson[5] are unsustainable and have been widely disputed. More recent and undisputed claims concern artifacts from the city of Gedera in an excavated Roman bathhouse where pottery boards and rock cuts that were unearthed dating back to between the 2nd and 3rd century AD. Among other early evidence of the game are fragments of a pottery board and several rock cuts found in Aksumite areas in Matara (in Eritrea) and Yeha (in Ethiopia), which are dated by archaeologists to between the 6th and 7th centuries AD.[6]

The oldest mention of the game is in the "Kitab al-Aghani" ("Book of Songs") of the 10th-century, attributed to Abu al-Faraj al-Isfahani.[7] The game may have been mentioned by Giyorgis of Segla in his 14th century Geʽez text Mysteries of Heaven and Earth, where he refers to a game called qarqis, a term used in Geʽez to refer to both Gebet'a (mancala) and Sant'araz (modern sent'erazh, Ethiopian chess).[8] Evidence of the game has also been uncovered in Kenya.[9]

The games have also existed in Eastern Europe. In Estonia, it was once very popular (see "Bohnenspiel"), and likewise in Bosnia (where it is called Ban-Ban and still played today), Serbia, and Greece ("Mandoli", Cyclades). Two mancala tables from the early 18th century are to be found in Weikersheim Castle in southern Germany.[10] In western Europe, it never caught on but was documented by Oxford University orientalist Thomas Hyde.[11]

In the United States, a traditional mancala game called Warra was still played in Louisiana in the early 20th century, and a commercial version called Kalah became popular in the 1940s. In Cape Verde, mancala is known as "ouril". It is played on the Islands and was brought to the United States by Cape Verdean immigrants. It is played to this day in Cape Verdean communities in New England.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Historians may have found evidence of mancala in slave communities of the Americas. The game was brought to the Americas by enslaved Africans during the trans-Atlantic slave trade. The game was played by enslaved Africans to foster community and develop social skills. Archeologists may have found evidence of the game mancala played in Nashville, Tennessee at the Hermitage Plantation.[12]

Recent studies of mancala rules have given insight into the distribution of mancala. This distribution has been linked to migration routes, which may go back several hundred years.[13]

Etymology

The word mancala (Template:Langx) is a tool noun derived from an Arabic root naqala (Script error: No such module "Lang".) meaning "to move".[14][15][16]

General gameplay

Most mancala games have a common gameplay. Players begin by placing a certain number of seeds, prescribed for the particular game, in each of the pits on the game board. A player may count their stones to plot the game. A turn consists of removing all seeds from a pit, "sowing" the seeds (placing one in each of the following pits in sequence), and capturing based on the state of the board. The game's object is to plant the most seeds in the bank. This leads to the English phrase "count and capture" sometimes used to describe the gameplay. Although the details differ greatly, this general sequence applies to all games.

If playing in capture mode, once a player ends their turn in an empty pit on their own side, they capture the opponent's pieces directly across. Once captured, the player gets to put the seeds in their own bank. After capturing, the opponent forfeits a turn.

Equipment

File:Tropenmuseum Royal Tropical Institute Objectnumber 699-2 Speelbord voor mancala spel.jpg
Mancala board and clay playing pieces

Equipment is typically a board, constructed of various materials, with a series of holes arranged in rows, usually two or four. The materials include clay and other shapeable materials. Some games are more often played with holes dug in the earth, or carved in stone. The holes may be referred to as "depressions", "pits", or "houses". Sometimes, large holes on the ends of the board called stores, are used for holding the pieces.

Playing pieces are seeds, beans, stones, cowry shells, half-marbles or other small undifferentiated counters that are placed in and transferred about the holes during play.

Board configurations vary among different games but also within variations of a given game; for example Endodoi is played on boards from 2×6 to 2×10. The largest are Tchouba (Mozambique) with a board of 160 (4×40) holes requiring 320 seeds, and En Gehé (Tanzania), played on longer rows with up to 50 pits (a total of 2×50=100) and using 400 seeds. The most minimalistic variants are Nano-Wari and Micro-Wari, created by the Bulgarian ethnologue Assia Popova. The Nano-Wari board has eight seeds in just two pits; Micro-Wari has a total of four seeds in four pits.

With a two-rank board, players usually are considered to control their respective sides of the board, although moves often are made into the opponent's side. With a four-rank board, players control an inner row and an outer row, and a player's seeds will remain in these closest two rows unless the opponent captures them.

Objective

The objective of most two- and three-row mancala games is to capture more stones than the opponent; in four-row games, one usually seeks to leave the opponent with no legal move or sometimes to capture all counters in their front row.

At the beginning of a player's turn, they select a hole with seeds that will be sown around the board. This selection is often limited to holes on the current player's side of the board, as well as holes with a certain minimum number of seeds.

File:Kalah sowing 2.png
Sowing on a kalah board. The player picks up all four seeds from hole A, and places one of them in B, one in C, one in D and the fourth in E

In a process known as sowing, all the seeds from a hole are dropped one by one into subsequent holes in a motion wrapping around the board. Sowing is an apt name for this activity, since not only are many games traditionally played with seeds but placing seeds one at a time in different holes reflects the physical act of sowing. If the sowing action stops after dropping the last seed, the game is considered a single lap game.

Multiple laps or relay sowing is a frequent feature of mancala games, although not universal. When relay sowing, if the last seed during sowing lands in an occupied hole, all the contents of that hole, including the last sown seed, are immediately re-sown from the hole. The process usually will continue until sowing ends in an empty hole. Another common way to receive "multiple laps" is when the final seed sown lands in your designated hole.

Many games from the Indian subcontinent use pussakanawa laps. These are like standard multi-laps, but instead of continuing the movement with the contents of the last hole filled, a player continues with the next hole. A pussakanawa lap move will then end when a lap ends just before an empty hole.

If a player ends their stone with a point move they get a "free turn".

Capturing

Depending on the last hole sown in a lap, a player may capture stones from the board. The exact requirements for capture, as well as what is done with captured stones, vary considerably among games. Typically, a capture requires sowing to end in a hole with a certain number of stones, ending across the board from stones in specific configurations or landing in an empty hole adjacent to an opponent's hole that contains one or more pieces.

Another common way of capturing is to capture the stones that reach a certain number of seeds at any moment.

Also, several games include the notion of capturing holes, and thus all seeds sown on a captured hole belong at the end of the game to the player who captured it.

Names and variants

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File:Newone - ô ăn quan.jpg
Game of Ô ăn quan on New Year's Day (Tết) at Vinhomes Times City, Ha Noi

The name is a classification or type of game, rather than any specific game. Some of the most popular mancala games (concerning distribution area, the numbers of players and tournaments, and publications) are:

Although more than 800 names of traditional mancala games are known, some names denote the same game, while others are used for more than one game. Almost 200 modern invented versions have also been described.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Psychology

Like other board games, mancala games have led to psychological studies. Retschitzki has studied the cognitive processes used by awalé players.[20] Some of Restchitzki's results on memory and problem solving have recently been simulated by Fernand Gobet with the CHREST computer model.[21] De Voogt has studied the psychology of Bao playing.[22]

Competition

Several groups of mancala games have their own tournaments. A medley tournament including at least two modalities has been part of the Mind Sports Olympiad, including in the in-person event and the online Grand Prix.[23]

Mancala at the Mind Sports Olympiad

Games Gold Silver Bronze
London 2015
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Online Grand Prix 2023
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See also

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References

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Further reading

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  • Deledicq, A. & A. Popova (1977). Wari et solo. Le jeu de calcul Africain. Paris: Cedic.
  • Murray, H.J.R. (1952). A History of Board-Games other than Chess. Oxford at the Clarendon Press.
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  • Voogt, A.J. de (1997). Mancala Board Games. British Museum Press: London.

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