Chess came from India, experts claim
Jeremy Page in Delhi
March 12, 2007

THE riddle of the origins of chess has baffled enthusiasts and historians for decades, with countries from China to Ireland claiming to have invented the game.

Now a research team claims to have moved a step closer to proving that chess originated around the northern Indian city of Kanauj in the 5th century.

The team of four believes that terracotta figures found in the area are not toys, as long assumed by Indian experts, but pieces used in a strategic board game called chaturanga.

Chaturanga is generally considered to be the predecessor of chess, which evolved into its current form when transferred to Europe in the 15th century, but its precise origins remain a mystery. Renate Syed, an Indologist from Munich University, who was on the team, has already claimed to have found textual proof that an Indian king transferred chaturanga to Persia in the 6th century.

That thesis caused some consternation in Iran, where many historians argue that the Persians invented the game, which they called chatrang, and transferred it to India. It also ruffled feathers in China, where many believe that chess originated from a board game called xiangqi, which is mentioned in documents from the Warring States Period (403-221BC).

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