@@rpb4865 Queen was called Mantri (minister) and bishop were called Senadhipati(commander). The Arabs replaced it with wazir (Arabic term for minister) and camel (as it was a part of their army) Chaturanga became shatranj which then became Chess...
Because the chess is ancient game, chess pieces are associated with armies like cavalry, knights, war elephants, and all, that's why many of those are weird for you.
@@Sai_Banes So? What's the point you're trying to make? Didn't India have Cavalries, Soldiers, War Elephants? Did India have all Modern Warfare technology in ancient times? However Chess is not Indian by Origin, Chaturanga was. Chess is derived from Chaturanga, the pieces assumed their powers in 15th century Spain. Modern rules came in 19th century. "FYI"
The history of chess can be traced back nearly 1500 years, although the earliest origins are uncertain. The earliest predecessor of the game probably originated in India, by the 7th century AD. From India, the game spread to Persia. When the Arabs conquered Persia, chess was taken up by the Muslim world and subsequently spread to Southern Europe. In Europe, chess evolved into roughly its current form in the 15th century.
BRAIN SHOUT so now we know the template project that jaby uses to edit all the other videos. My name is khan trailer edit is still sitting in jaby's edit project timeline
@@Mandalorian_Mando actually the current game of chess is an extension for the chathuranga where moves for queen (minister) and few others are extended.and snake and ladder can be told as created in India it's name back then was vaikuntapali with no big changes for the current version expect for the ethical values it used to teach with each step .in a way it is degraded form of vaikuntapali
*Name* , *place* , *animal* , *thing* Is very simple and exciting game.. 1.you draw four columns for above 4 categories 2. you can play it with any number of friends 3. Then any member playing randomly or in sequence chances give a alphabet 🔤 to the group 4.and you just have to write down any name, place name, animal name, a thing name from the given alphabet 5.who ever finishes first screams *I AM DONE* . 6.so if all written names are correct, 1st finisher gets 5 points for each name i.e 20 points for 1st round (you can decide whatever points you want to assign) Second finisher gets 3 pts for each i.e 12 pts in total And 3rd finisher gets 1 pts/- I.e just 4 pts in total 7. You can keep going on for whatever rounds you want And in the end you sum up the total pts, highest scorer is the winner. 👆🏼 (some steps might be different for other people, but overall idea is the same)
Woken Artist yeah it is slightly different for me when i used to play it. The person who gives the letter is the time keeper i.e the moment that person finishes everyone has to stop no matter how many they got. Then we check how many people wrote the same thing, if no one wrote the same thing as you then you get 5 pts... the more people to get the same name, the lesser the pts because the pts are halved each time till the lowest being 1 then 0.
@@oishikasaha1293 ooh yes! Absolutely.. No its same as u said, i actually missed on this step! Now i recollect, damn it has been Realllllly long time since I have had played this game.
Chess was invented in india in ancient times and kings used to play this as a simulation for war, so indians r used to call rooks as elephants Knights as horses Bishops as camels Queen as minister Pawn as soldier
Chess is a representation of the battlefield. Hence, the pieces are named after the resources used in the battle. That is why- soldier, elephant,horse,camel,king and the queen.
The original name for chess is "Chaturanga" which literally translates to Chatur=Four and Anga= Divisions or parts. It literally refers to the 4 divisions in the army. Infantry, Cavalry, Chariotry (which became Camel Cavalry), and Elephantry. Infantry=Pawns or soldiers Cavalry=Knights or Horses Elephantry=Rook/Castle or Elephant Camel Cavalry=Bishop or camels General=Queen or Minister King is always king This game travelled to the arab and turkish countries and started being called Shatranj instead of chaturanga. Thereafter it travelled to European Countries and during victorian era the naming was standardised and made more suitable for the european folks. Like calling Camel as bishop and Minister as Queen and Horses as Knights. Basically anglicised version of a kingdom with castles, queens, bishops and knights. Indians however still follow the traditional naming because it is how kids are taught at home by either grandparents or relatives.
JABY!! Indian names for all the pieces (basically we use our Hindi words for all these): Rook: Elephant (Haathi in hindi) Bishop: Camel (Oonth in Hindi) Knight: Horse (Ghoda in Hindi) Pawn: Soldier (Sipahi/Sepoy in Hindi) King: King (Raaja) Queen: Queen (Raani in Hindi) OR Commander in Chief (Mantri/Vazir/Senapati in Hindi).
The reaction of these two ladies is awesome. They dint laugh on all punches which is quite honest. But when they laughed I laughed too. You should invite them more often.
As you know Chess (shatranj (originally chaturanga) )was originated in India and they were used to play with 4 players and assumed at a battle like the situation with different types of military forces at that time so Rooks were elephants forces Bishops were camels forces Knights were horses forces Queen was Minister( vizier ) Pawns were soldiers (foot soldiers) so Chess was originated as a military strategy game that's why Indians still call chess pieces differently then rest of the world does.
Just like flush toilets. We introduced sanitation system and forgot to use it 😂😑 except in chess it's given a different name for the pieces as it travelled around the world.
Kenny's calling that chess piece guggu reminded me of Sushant Singh Rajput, Ankita Lokhande called him guggu on that Jhalak show once. This is so random.😂
@@husenakhambat8065 you know what ...i really hate this reactors scince i've seen gareeb's n carry' s videos on them but ....i like them just because they're watching bolly wood honestly...tell me what do you think...!!!☺
The game with the box-the person you're doing to marry, the shack/mansion- we played that in school. It wasn't called Match though. Now it's bothering me not knowing what it was called.
the most powerful soldier is knight but for those who know how to use it,.a check from knight means king must move he cant defend by putting auxiliary support.
In India(BHAAARAT🤣🤣) we call pieces a bit differently in hindi.... These are all english translations for hindi names: Knight- HORSE Rook- ELEPHANT Bishop- CAMEL
I like how westerners change the original names of places/things and then act confused when someone uses the original name . Whats crazier is that they have the confidence to later tell us that we are wrong . I need that level of confidence in life .
Yes castle or keep or rook in India is called elephant because Indian war elephants were used as mobile keeps in battle which is filled with archers and supported other land units blocking movement of enemy by a range.....
SNAKES AND LADDERS -2ND CENTURY A.D in INDIA known by its ancient name as MOKSHA PATAM .IT symbolises KARMA AND KAMA ( WORK THAT ONE DOES OR DESTINY AND DESIRES) CHESS - 6 th CENTURY in INDIA known by its SANSKRIT NAME- CHATURANGA in the GUPTA EMPIRE - this was also a time CHINESE TRAVELLERS like Fa Hein and Hieun TSANG HAD DISCOVERED the way to INDIA and took back along with them all that they learnt
That chess game exist. It's "Battle v chess". All the players are animated. You should try it. I did play this game when I was kid, it was fun like you did. When I got a personal laptop I searched this game for lot & found it. It's now more animated than earlier.
My nomination for the best impromptu Jaby joke of the year: Jaby (calling out): Acharaaa... •Door creaks• Eden: Wow! She came fast. Jaby: That's what I like to hear! 😂😂😂
Some commonly used nomenclatures for Chess pieces other than the King and the Queen:- Pawn - Soldier / Infantry Bishop - Camel Knight - Horse Rook - Elephant
it makes sense somehow.... Rooks (elephants) are corner defense knights (horses) and bishops (camels) are near king (king) and queen (queen) when we look at old war strategies
Jaby, some westerners took the Indian original game and changed it all. Its was a indian war game called chaturanga so the pieces were named after animals used in a typical indian war. THe british messed it up by calling it differently.. Vazier or Minister became queen, Camel became Bishop, Elephant became Rook. Soldier became Pawn. Horse became Knight.
Chess, Ludo and Snakes and Ladders were all invented in India and have been played since ancient times. Chess is called Shatranj and various pieces are Elephants, Horses, Camels, King, Queen and soldiers - basically different units of a traditional Indian army.
Snakes and ladders is the Indian version of chutes and ladders The chess was invented in India and the different peices were named after the infantry and cavalry like horse,elephant, soldier etc
IDIOT, CHUTES AND LADDERS IS A COPY OF THE INDIAN GAME. SNAKES AND LADDERS WAS INVENTED IN 6TH CENTURY ANCIENT INDIA KNOWN AS MOKSHA PATAM .it was taken up by the BRITISH and sold as chutes and ladders
Name Place Animal Thing is a game where a person picks a letter randomly and everyone has to write a name, place, animal and things' name..you get points if you get all of it
Chess is ancient and widely popular in India, the pieces got various shapes and names among different communities. For example rook pieces are carved like elephants and bishops look like ministers(right-hand of a king) in some traditions.
The cards game is called challenge. One person throws a set of cards say: 2Aces and then you can challenge it or add your aces (or fake it). You have to finish cards as soon as possible.
"Snakes and Ladders" is an allegory for life to teach 'Karma Siddhanta' (Not to be confused by the western perspective of 'Karma') in Indian philosophy that is significantly talked about in 'Bhagavad Gita'. The game itself is divided into three steps - Rolling the dice ('Karma' - action), outcome that is uncertain ('Phal' - Fruits) and our perception of the outcome (Ladder - Joy and Snake - Sorrow, also represents other dualities like Right and Wrong, Good and Bad etc.). 'A person has right only over action and never over it's outcome (because it's uncertain). So, never let it's outcome be the cause of the action. And never be action less.' This is called 'Karma Yoga'. The action is not driven by it's outcome because there is no perception of the outcome because the 'Karma Yogi' is beyond the perspectives. That which is beyond the perspective is 'Paramatma' or 'Moksha'. A perspective ('Atma') is often defined by it's dimensions (I - 'Kama', Others - 'Dharma' and a bridge between I and others - 'Arth'), also termed as ego or desire (therefore an emphasis on 'no desire' in Hinduism, Jainism, Buddhism, Sikhism and Sufism). So, the journey is from 'Atma' to 'Paramatma', i.e., from perspectives to that which transcends. But the journey is often confused to be from 1 to 100. I still remember cheating with my siblings and friends after being eaten by that giant snake. Had I been honest, I might have learnt something then. Because when that snake shows up in reality, there's no option of cheating.
Name place thing animal is one fun game. One from the group starts saying alphabets, someone else says stop. And the letter he stops at will be decided. Everyone writes a name, place, thing, animal starting with that letter. Whoever finishes first taps in and counts till 5 where everybody has to stop. If you made it, you get 10 points for each name, if you dont, you dont get any. If two people writes the same, they both get 5.
Chess began in India known as Shatranj Pieces are known as below Pawn= soldier/sainik/pyada Knight=horse/ghoda Rook=elephant /hathi Bishop=camel/oont Queen=Wajir/rani/queen King=badshah /raja/king Hope this help foreigners to recognise real chess.
Alternate names (rather original Indian names before pieces were catholicized when chess traveled to Europe and a cross added to the king) Knight - Horse Bishop - Camel Rook - Elephant
Chess was invented in india and it’s soul purpose was to teach the art of war. Soldiers, elephants, horses, camels, king, queen etc. they all are the part of army. Its all about tactics and war. It’s known as “shataranj” in India. When it was introduced to the rest of the world, people change the names to their ease.
Name /place/ animal/thing 2-4 (2 teams ) players play it and a letter is chosen and you have to name a name place animal and a thing woth that letter. You get 1 point for each..
Okay, I will explain Name,Place,Animal,Thing. So you get a letter (H for example.) And you have to well come up with the name,place,animal,thing. :eg - Howard, Holland, Hawk, Hat. And we get points. But, if two people have written the same thing they both have to cross it out so they won't get any points. At the end whoever has the most points win. :)
Chess was invented in india (Used in making real war strategies). And in india they use animals in battle So, traditionally King = King Queen = Commander/General Bishop = Camel (Camel Riders) Knight = Horse (Horse Riders) Rooq = Elephant (Elephant Riders) Pon = Common Soldier But so much is messed up with history, originally it was known as Chaturanga
The malayalam film Lucifer reached the top point in the southern part of Indian film industry called Mollywood.Film had reached 200 crores ₹.2,85,62,000.00United States Dollar. And it have a huge reference to ILLUMINATI . ∆
Chess was invented in India. Its debatable when but according to my knowledge it was during the Mauryan Empire. The game was invented to actually strategize and coordinate military types such as cavalry, foot soldiers etc. What chess we know today is the Anglicization of the elements of a battle army. Pawn - Soldier Rook - Elephant Knight - Horse Bishop - Camel Queen - Military chief/Wazir King - Raja (Hindi for King) In India, most hobby chess players use the local name (in their own mother tongue) instead of the Anglicized names. However, its not uncommon to see people knowing or using the Anglicized names as well. BTW just look up Vishwanathan Anand.