THE ORIGIN AND EVOLUTION OF SNAKES & LADDERDS

 


HOW DID IT START?

Snakes and Ladders originated from an ancient Indian didactic game called 'Gyan Chaupar', meaning the game of knowledge. It had several local variations like 'Mokshapat', 'Moksha Patamu', 'Paramapada', 'Sopanam', and other adaptations such as Bengali 'Golok Dham' and the Tibetian 'Sa nam lam sha'.

WHO INVENTED IT?

It's not exactly known when or who invented it, though it's believed the games was played as early as 2nd century BC.
According to some historians, the game was invented by Swami Gyandev in the 13th century AD.

THE ANCIENT INDIAN VERSION

The Indian version ofthe board had 72 to aorund 300 squares wherein snakes were allegries for various vices and ladders represented virtuous activities.
The goal was to reach enlightenment after journeying  through many rebirths and corresponding human experience.


In the original game, the snakes outnumbered the ladders.
The painted cloth was richly illustrated and the playing tokens were made of ivory. The iconography also depicted cosmological elements, with upper regions depicting divine begins.

The game travels to London

Around 1832, a Captain Henry Dundas Robertson presented what he called the 'Shastree's Games of Heaven and Hell' to the Royal Asiatic Society in London where the 128-square 'Gyan Chaupar'board can still be seen.

The earliest traceable board

One of the oldest 'Gyan Chaupar' boards that have been traced so far is now in the British Library, originally in the collection of East India Company officer Richard Johnson.

The board game is patented

Frederick Henry Ayres , a famous toy maker from London, patented the game in 1892. But, the squares of the game-board lost their moral connotations. the game was now being sold in England as a children's game.

Introduction in the US

In 1943, the game was introduced in the US as 'Chutes and Ladders' by Milton Bradley.
Soon after, it was given the name Snakes and Ladders.

Other versions 

Victorian versions of the game include the 'Kismet' board game which is now included in he Victoria and Albert Museum's collection. Other similar gaes included 'Virtue Rewarded', 'Vice Punished', and the 'New Game of Human Life'.
In the20th century, 'Leiterspiel' was widely played in Germany. Developed by J.W. Spear & Sohne, it contained circus animals instead of snakes.


Source; Inshorts




 

 



 


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