Royal Game of Ur - Cyningstan
Royal Game of Ur - Cyningstan
The Royal Game of Ur is a modern name for an ancient race game known only from
archaeological excavations. Two players race around a figure-of-8-shaped board, with seven
pieces, according to the throws of three binary lots. It is assumed that the pieces were entered
onto the board at one place and exited at another; the shape of the board and its symmetrical
markings also raise the possibility that each player started and finished on his own half of the
board, the central row only being shared.
In 1926-7 Sir Leonard Woolley was excavating at the royal tombs in Ur, in modern Iraq, and found
among other things the oldest full set of gaming equipment known to exist. This dates from about
2500 BC, comprised a board of twenty squares, two sets of seven pieces, and six dice in the
shape of pyramids. The game was afterwards given the name "the Royal Game of Ur".
Other similar sets were found in the same archaeological dig, some in a less well-preserved state.
The games differed in materials and quality of workmanship, but all shared the same layout of
squares, some decorated with rosettes. Decoration on squares without rosettes varied from board
to board, but some had delightful animal scenes engraved on them.
No rules were found at the time of the excavation, so a number of different historians and
archaeologists devised their own interpretations, and there are versions of this game for sale. In
more recent years, an almost complete set of rules on cuneiform tablets has come to light, dating
from the second century BC and telling us everything about the game apart from the direction the
pieces travelled along the board.
http://www.cyningstan.com/game/151/royal-game-of-ur 2/6
1.2.2018 Royal Game of Ur | Cyningstan
Complete sets of rules were published by R. C. Bell in his book Board and Table Games from
Many Civilizations, and by Irving Finkel in his game for the British Museum shop. The set of rules
in this leaflet takes elements from these but introduces some ideas by H. J. R. Murray and David
Parlett that make the game more logical and elegant.
1. The Royal Game of Ur is played on a board of 20 squares, arranged in 3 rows of 8 with four
squares cut away (as shown in the diagram). Five of the squares are marked. The board can be
thought of as in three distinctive sections: a large block, a small block and the bridge between
them.
2. Each player starts the game with seven pieces in hand, the board being empty.
3. Each player has three binary lots in the form of pyramidal dice with four corners; two corners are
marked. When throwing the dice the score is the number of marked corners pointing upwards, with
none signifying a score of four.
5. The path of a player's pieces starts on his side of the board, in the large block, at the square
nearest the bridge. The piece moves toward the corner with the rosette, before moving to the
adjacent square on the middle row and continuing till it crosses the bridge. Once across the bridge,
it moves to the rosette on the opponent's side, then curves around the small block till reaching the
rosette at the player's own side, from which it is borne off. The path is simpler than it sounds: see
the diagram.
7. If none of his pieces are in play, then he must enter a piece on the first, second, third or fourth
square on the board, according to the score of the dice.
8. If he has pieces already on the board, then instead he may move one of his pieces along its
path by the number of squares indicated on the dice.
9. If the score of the dice was four, the player may after moving a piece, roll and move again.
10. A piece must bear off by an exact throw. For example, if a player's piece sits on the final rosette
of its path, a 1 is required to bear off; if on the adjacent square, a 2, and so on.
http://www.cyningstan.com/game/151/royal-game-of-ur 3/6
1.2.2018 Royal Game of Ur | Cyningstan
11. Only one of a player's pieces may sit in a square at once; pieces cannot sit together in the
same square.
12. If the roll of the dice gives no valid move, then the turn is lost and the opponent's turn begins.
In this case no further roll is granted, even if the dice show four.
13. If landing on an opponent's piece, that piece is removed from the board and must begin its
journey again.
14. A piece sitting on a special marked square is safe; the opponent cannot land on it.
15. The first four squares in a piece's path are also safe, as the opponent's pieces never land
there.
16. The first player whose pieces are all borne off the board has won the game. Any form of binary
lot may be used in place of tetrahedral dice; coins are the most readily available substitute.
Given that no complete and authentic rules exist for this game, the strategy is dependent on the
version that you are playing. The rules used on this site are probably the ones giving most strategic
interest to the game.
In all versions, one should pay attention to the probability of getting a particular throw on the dice.
The chances of getting a 1 are 3 in 8, and similar for a 2. The chances of getting a 3 are 1 in 8, and
the same for 4. Therefore a piece 3 or 4 squares ahead of an enemy is not as vulnerable as a
piece 1 or 2 squares ahead.
Notice that with the paths given in these rules, the protected squares are exactly 4 squares apart
throughout the board, so a roll of 4 not only gives another throw, but can move a piece from one
protected square to the next.
Players will typically gather as many pieces as possible in the starting rows before setting out any
further, as pieces there are safe from capture.
Once a piece enters the middle row, it should be progressed as quickly as possible either to the
first protected square or, if that is missed, across the bridge to the smaller section of the board.
Pieces on the small section of the board are often safely left standing for a turn or two if no enemy
is immediately behind them; this is a good time to attend to other priorities such as capturing
enemies or moving other pieces out of danger.
The central protected square is the most advantageous on the board. A piece sitting here is safe,
and is in a good position to capture enemy pieces as they move past. You will generally want to
keep this square for as long as possible.
Related Pages
Race Games
Games of Asia
Ancient Games
Related Games
The Game of Twenty Squares
http://www.cyningstan.com/game/151/royal-game-of-ur 4/6