Hiashatar
Mongolian Grand
Chess

Introduction
Hiashatar is a medieval chess variant deriving from Mongolia. The pieces
move as in orthodox chess, with the exception of the additional piece, the Bodyguard
(also called 'Senior Adviser' or 'Warrior'). It slides one or two steps in any
direction. The Bodyguard has about the same value as a rook + two pawns (my
estimate). A Bodyguard cannot checkmate (or capture) the enemy king. The
Bodyguard can stymie the movement of enemy pieces, except the horse. This
implies that an enemy piece can only move one square at a time so long its
movement occurs on the squares immediately surrounding the Bodyguard. The horse,
being so important in Mongolian life, is not affected by the stymieing powers of
the Bodyguard. The pawns move as in orthodox chess, inclusive of the initial
double-step and 'en passant'. The pawn can also make an initial triplicate step,
which means that 'en passant' can also be performed when the enemy pawn stops on
the rank behind the friendly pawn. Pawns promote only to queen. Castling does
not exist. The positions of white king and queen are interchanged (compared with
standard chess). In Hiashatar, the restrictions for checkmating, which are
characteristic of Shatar (8x8 Mongol Chess), are absent.
Thanks to its
stymieing capability the Bodyguard is immune against long-range attacks from
enemy queen, rook, and bishop. This also means that these pieces cannot easily
guard friendly pieces being threatened by an enemy Bodyguard. This makes the
Bodyguard a very useful attacking piece in the middlegame. If the Bodyguard is
placed centrally during the middlegame, it effectively stymies the long-range
enemy pieces. The horse, however, remains a serious threat to the Bodyguard. The
Bodyguard's inability to threaten the enemy king is a serious deficit. There is
no castling in Hiashatar, and removing the king from its exposed position in the
centre is not always necessary, thanks to the effective protective capability of
the Bodyguard. In an additional variant the Bodyguard stymies also friendly
pieces, and can capture only on the nearest square. This is possibly an
authentic historical variant.
The word 'Hiashatar' means 'Bodyguard
Chess' (Shatranj). This game is still played in Mongolia, although Fide-chess is
taking over more and more. Hiashatar is said to have appeared 500 years ago. A
legend tells us about it in the following way.
Long long ago a khan was living. He was forced to fight many wars. It helped
him to understand that even most intensive training is not enough for a victory.
Therefore he included into his army the authorized representatives responsible
for safety. Other rulers found this innovation to be helpful too, and they made
the same. And once a certain wise man under influence of these innovations has
transformed the game of shatar, having entered into it particular bodyguards -
the new figures responsible for safety of king.(1)
The Mongol
names for the pieces are these:
King - 'noyon' (prince, duke)
Queen - 'bers' (fantastic animal resembling a big dog)
Knight - 'mori'
(horse)
Rook - 'tereg' (chariot, vehicle)
Bishop - 'teme' (camel)
Pawn - 'fu' (child, young)
Bodyguard - 'hia' (senior adviser, warrior,
bodyguard)
Examples
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References
(1)
http://www.oocities.com/kisslook/eng/mongeng.html
(2)
http://history.chess.free.fr/hiashatar.htm
You
can download my free Hiashatar program
here (updated 2012-03-29),
but you must own the software
Zillions of Games to be able to
run it.
Don't miss my
other
chess variants. |
© M. Winther 2006