Burmese Chess
Introduction
Burmese Chess (Sittuyin) is still played
in parts of Burma. It is a descendant of Indian Chaturanga and is
believed to be quite old. The pieces are red and black and are usually carved.
The red pawns are carved as demons, the black as monkeys, in reference to the
battle of the demons versus the god Rãma and Hanuman's monkeys.
The
objective is checkmate. The king, chariot (rook), and horse
(knight), move as in orthodox chess. The pawns also move as in orthodox
chess, but have no initial double move. The General (equivalent: queen)
moves one step diagonally in all directions. The Elephant (equivalent:
bishop) moves one step diagonally in all directions, or one step forwards. Pawns
promote to General only, and only if the General is missing from the board. Pawn
promotion occurs only on the marked squares on the enemy side of the board.
Promotion occurs not immediately, but when the pawn leaves the square. Note!
When leaving the square, a pawn is not allowed to promote if that implies
capturing an enemy King or General. Alternatively, the pawn can promote on the
spot, that is, promote without moving. It is possible for a pawn to move past
the squares where he can promote: in that case, promotion is no longer possible
for that pawn.
In
the first phase the pieces are dropped on the board, either behind the pawn
chain, or on a friendly pawn. In the latter case the removed friendly pawn must
immediately be relocated to another empty position. Before dropping begins, the
pawns are positioned as in this image. The rooks must be dropped on the first
rank, which is reserved for the rooks only. After all the pieces have been
dropped the play begins. Stalemate is not allowed in Burmese Chess. Should you
put the opponent in a stalemate position, you must take the move back.
Don't underestimate the curiously moving Elephant,
although it is slow. It is very suitable for giving mate. Together with a king,
or some other piece, it can often give mate in the endgame. Knights and bishops
can seldom achieve this. The Elephant has about the same value as a knight.
Passed pawns are much less dangerous in Burmese Chess than in orthodox chess.
Play aggressively with the General, because when it is exchanged, you can
promote a pawn and get a new one.
Note! According to the
standard rules of the Burmese Chess Federation, pieces are always dropped behind
the pawn chain and Red drops all his pieces first. This variant has also been
implemented.
Discussion
Both the rules and the board markings vary
somewhat. The board pattern in the main variant of this implementation is the
most common (above), but the board pattern according to the Burmese Chess
Federation has also been implemented (X pattern). There is a rule, referenced by
Murray, which allows relocation of pieces also after the dropping phase, until a
pawn is moved. But this will surely create an erratic game as relocation of the
king, or a rook, would alter the strategical conditions dramatically. This rule
is omitted (as it also is in some renditions). I find the rule of "on the
spot" promotion quite logical. However, the rule that disallows giving
check with the promotion move, is incomprehensible. This rule is referenced in
The Chess
Variants pages, but is not mentioned in Murray. This rule is omitted.
Instead I have prohibited promotion whilst capturing an enemy King, or
an enemy General. Prohibition of King capture is natural, but why disallow the
capture of an enemy General? The point seems to be that such a move would help
to improve defensive possibilities, making the game too drawish. One can put the
General en prise, and when the general is removed the player is allowed
to promote a pawn. Thus, he can often capture the General back, as the attacking
piece not seldom is a General. The rule is also designed to give greater potency
to the General.
Sources differ concerning the rule of promotion.
Should pawns be forced to promote when reaching a marked square (if the General
is missing) or should promotion occur only when leaving the square? Three
variants have been implemented. As stated above, when leaving the square, a pawn
is not allowed to promote if that implies capturing an enemy King or General. In
the two additional variants promotion is allowed upon entering a marked square.
In these cases, should the pawn's capture-destination be a marked square, then,
naturally, capture of the General is allowed, and promotion may occur. Although,
in some circumstances, the newly promoted General's capturing move is
prohibited, we cannot prohibit the pawn's natural move. If that were the case,
then a King, or General, could step onto a square which is formally threathened
by a pawn, and pawn-capture would be prohibited. This would be illogical. For
this reason, pawn promotion upon leaving a marked square, is never
obligatory, in any variant.
Burmese Chess is attractive. It reminds me
of very complex practical endgames in orthodox chess. The dropping phase ensures
that the strategical variegation is practically endless. Eight standard
positions have also been added as variants.
References
Murray, HJR (1913). A History of Chess. Oxford: At the Clarendon Press.
See also:
The Chess
Variants pages
You can download my free Burmese Chess program
here (updated
2012-04-19), but you must own the software
Zillions of Games to be able to
run it (I recommend the download version).
© M. Winther 2006