Sittuyin (Burmese: စစ်တုရင်), also known as Burmese chess, is a variant of chess that is a direct offspring of the Indian game of chaturanga which arrived in 8th century AD. Sit is the modern Burmese word for army or war ; the word sittuyin can be translated as representation of the four characteristics of army—chariot, elephant, cavalry and infantry.
In its native land the game has been largely overshadowed by Western (international) chess, although it remains popular in the northwest regions.
Sittuyin is a form of chess otherwise known as Burmese chess. It is of unknown antiquity, but chess is thought to have been brought from India by the seventh century, with the migration of Buddhism. The Burmese game has some similarities with older Indian and Persian forms of chess. But where western chess speeds up the game by giving some of the pieces more powerful moves, Burmese chess keeps the older moves of the pieces but brings them closer into contact at the start of the game. This gives the feeling of a close melee.
Rules for Sittuyin
Sittuyin is played on an unchequered board of eight rows of eight squares. A line joins the each of the extreme diagonals together from corner to corner. Pieces are red and black, and for each side consist of eight soldiers, two chariots, two horsemen, two elephants, a commander and the king.
1. The game begins with the soldiers only set on the board, in the layout shown in the diagram.
2. The red player begins the game by placing his major pieces anywhere behind his soldiers.
3. It is permissible to place a major piece on a square already occupied by a soldier, in which case the soldier is moved to another empty square behind the soldiers line.
4. When the red pieces are all placed, the black player deploys his pieces in the same manner.
5. Once all the pieces have been placed, the movement phase of the game begins, with red making the first move.
6. In his turn a player moves one piece, each piece having its own special mode of movement:
(i). the king may move a single step in one of eight directions to an adjacent square;
(ii). the commander moves one step diagonally, to an adjacent square;
(iii). an elephant may move one step diagonally or one step directly forward, to an adjacent square;
(iv). the horseman moves one step diagonally and then one step horizontally or vertically away from his current position, jumping over any piece in his way;
(v). the chariot moves horizontally or vertically as far as the player wishes, though it cannot jump over other pieces;
(vi). the soldier moves one step forward to the next square, unless capturing, when he moves one step diagonally forward.
7. No piece may land on a square already occupied, unless it is making a capture.
8. If a soldier sits on the diagonal line on the far side of the board, and if the player has no commander in play, then the player may promote the soldier to a commander instead of making a move.
9. A soldier cannot be promoted once he has passed the diagonal line at the far side of the board.
10. A player may capture an enemy piece by moving one of his own pieces onto the enemy's square, at which point the captured piece is removed from play. This is the only time a piece may land on a square that is not currently empty.
11. All pieces can capture pieces within the range of their ordinary move, except the soldier, which must instead move diagonally forward to capture. A soldier cannot move straight forward to capture.
12. The king may not be captured. But if a player's king is threatened with capture, a situation called check, it must be moved or protected on the player's own turn.
13. The game is ended if a player's king is threatened with capture, and he cannot move it to safety or otherwise protect it on his own turn. This is checkmate, and he loses the game.
14. Stalemate is not allowed in sittuyin. A player must leave his opponent with some legal move.
Sources: http://www.cyningstan.com/game/234/sittuyin
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