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10 x 10 Draughts - 65cm

In Europe and America, Draughts (or Checkers) is almost always played on an 8 x 8 chequerboard. However, there is a superior game called Polish Draughts or International Draughts that is played on a 10 x 10 board. Particularly popular in France and Africa and often played at international competition level, 10 x 10 draughts significantly increases the complexity of the game, especially when played using "Super Jumps".

10 x 10 chequerboards and pieces are increasingly difficult to obtain but Masters Traditional Games has sourced the following 10 x 10 high quality draughts boards.

10 x 10 Chequerboard

Designed for use with our Jester Chess sets are these enormous, high quality 10 x 10 chequerboards. The boards are inlaid with Maple and are very large - more than 2 feet square. There are 3 types:

  • Maple & Mahogany (red brown)
  • Maple & Walnut (medium brown)
  • Maple & Wenge (dark brown)

Boards are 65cm (25.5 inches) across with 5cm (2 inch) squares.

Draughts / Checkers


These boxwood draughts should be suitable for the 65cm boards above. They are good quality contoured wooden draughts that come in a simple pine box with a sliding lid.

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10 x 10 Chequerboard (Mahogany/Maple, 2 feet square)

£43.39 £49.90 4 + transit time

10 x 10 Chequerboard (Walnut/Maple, 2 feet square)

£43.39 £49.90 4 + transit time

10 x 10 Chequerboard (Wenge/Maple, 2 feet square)

£43.39 £49.90 4 + transit time

40 x 35mm boxwood contoured draughts in a pine box

£17.30 £19.90 1 + transit time Apologies - out of stock.. Date new stock due: unknown. Email us to be notified when new stock is available.
For an immediate quote and ETA, add to the basket & select your location.

 

 

 

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The Origin of Draughts

Draughts is a very ancient game indeed, the origins of which, like Chess, aren't completely clear. However, early forms of Alquerque, its venerable ancestor, have been found in Egypt dating at least as early as 600BC. Alquerque boards can be seen carved into the stone slabs which form the roof of the great temple at Kurna, Egypt, which was built in 1400BC (of course, they might have been carved at any point since). The game of Alquerque was played like Draughts on a 5 x 5 point board with the pieces starting in a non-symmetrical pattern. The game clearly had staying power - it is mentioned under the name of Quirkat in the Arabic work Kitab-al Aghani, the author of which died in 976 AD and was first brought to Europe by the Moors during their invasion of Spain. It was recorded as Alquerque in the Alfonso X Manuscript which was written between 1251 - 1282 at the command of Alfonso X, King of Leon and Castile.

The Madagascan game of Fanorona is a descendant of Alquerque. It seems to have been invented around 1680 AD and is still played today.

Sometime later, around 1100, possibly in the South of France, somebody decided to play Alquerque on a Chess board instead of the standard Alquerque board. The game was played with 12 pieces on each side and was called Fierges or Ferses at first although this changed to Dames later. The game did not force a player to take enemy pieces when the opportunity presented itself. The compulsory rule forcing a player to take whenever possible was introduced in France around 1535, the resulting new game being called Jeu Force. At this point the old game without huffing became known as Le Jeu Plaisant De Dames or Plaisant for short. Jeu Force is the game played in England today under the name of Draughts and the game was taken to America and called Checkers.

Most of the rest of Western Europe took to playing a different development of Le Jeu Plaisant De Dames which appeared in Paris in 1727 and which is now the internationally recognised game of Polish Draughts or Continental Draughts. This game is superior in complexity to English draughts by virtue of the fact that it is played on a board ten squares by ten squares and that capturing moves have an extended scope. It isn't believed to have been invented in Poland at all and they apparently know it as 'French Draughts' there! Polish Draughts was probably the name given in order to make it sound slightly different to West European ears in the same way as for Chinese Checkers and Russian Billiards. Some areas of South East Asia go one better and play on a board of twelve by twelve squares and 24 pieces each side. The Canadian Draughts variant is also played upon a board this size.

You can learn more about the History of Draughts from The Online Guide to Traditional Games.

 

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