DOMINOES A FORM OF DICE


It is readily apparent that the 21 individual domino pieces represent the possible throws with 2 dice, and that the domino pieces may be regarded as conjoined dice. Of this the Korean dominoes furnish the best material evidence. Consonant with many other Korean objects, they are typical of an earlier age of Chinese culture than that now existing in China.

Their material, color of spots, and the manner in which the "one" spots are incised and made larger than the other shots, complete their resemblance to 2 conjoined dice. If we accept this theory the bone faced bamboo dominoes may be regarded as directly related to the preceding,  [Page 533] the wooden backs being substituted as a matter of economy.

Figure 26

Dominoes made entirely of wood would naturally follow, and the long dominoes used in the south of China might be regarded as a later type. Even they bear a suggestion of their origin in the spots with which their ends and tops are decorated.

The names of the dominoes are the same as those of the corresponding throws with the 2 dice, and the pieces are divided, like the dice-throws, into the series of man and , in which they rank in the same order as the dice. The correspondence extends to the game as well, the most characteristic domino game, tá t'ín kau, closely resembling the most characteristic dice game, chák t'ín kau. Indeed, if dominoes are invented for the purpose of a game, they doubtless had their origin in the game with 2 dice. This game with 2 dice, shéung luk, which, according to one Chinese authority, is said to have come from India, finds a parallel in an Indian dice game.

Figure 24

Figure 25

Figure 24 Figure 25

Several kinds of dice are employed in games in India. One (Figure 24) called pase (plural of pasa) are used in the game called chausar, and consists of rectangular bone or ivory prisms, marked on 4 sides with 1, 2,  5, and 6 spots. These dice are sometimes made shorter and pointed at the ends (Figure 25). Their origin I assign to the staves referred to on page 507.

Figure 27

Another kind of Indian dice, called by the Arabic name of k'ab, or kabat, from k'ab, "ankle," "ankle bone," are used in the game of k'abatain, 2 dice being thrown. Either natural astragali, consisting of the knuckle bones of a goat, or dice marked on 4 sides with "three," "four," "one," and "six " spots, or cubical dice regularly marked on the 6 sides (Figure 27) are employed. The "four" spots on these dice are usually marked in red, and often both the "three" and four" are marked in this color.1

Figure 28

Thus cubical dice appear to be [Page 534] directly connected with the knuckle bones. The Arabic name for the knuckle bone and the die is the same, k'ab, and, like the knuckle bones, which are commonly thrown in pairs, natural pairs from the right and left leg being used, cubical dice are also thrown in pairs. Carrying out the resemblance, cubical dice in India are sold in pairs, and by varying the arrangement of the "threes" and "fours"2 are actually made in pairs, rights and lefts, like the knuckle bones.

If this is the true history of the descent of the cubical dotted die, its evolution must have occurred at a very early time, as the regularly marked stone die from the Greek colony of Naucratis, Egypt (Figure 28), assigned by the discoverer, Mr. Flinders Petrie to 600 BC, bears witness.

Figure 29

Figure 29
Ancient Roman Dice of Ivory
From Specimens in the Museum of the University
of Pennsylvania

Now, the 4 sides of the knuckle bone (talus) (Figure 30), which were designated among the Romans as supinum, pronum, planum, and tortuosum, and correspond with the numbers "three," "four," "one," and " six,"  receive in the Mohammedan East the names of ranks and conditions of men. The Persians, according to Dr. Hyde,3 name them, respectively, duzd "slave" dihban "peasant," vezir "viceroy," and shah, or padi-shah "king." 

Figure 30

Figure 30
Four Sides of a Knuckle Bone (after Hyde)

Similar names are given by the same author as applied to them by the Arabs, Turks, and Armenians. From this it appears that the names and rank given to the significant throws, "three," "four," "one," and "six," with knuckle bones and dice in western Asia find their counterparts in the names and rank of the same throws in China, the names of the classes of human society found among the Arabs being replaced in China with the terms for the cosmic powers: "Heaven" ("six"), "Earth" ("one"), and "Man" ("four"), and the "Harmony" ("three-one"), that unites them.

Figure 31

It will also be observed that the use of 2 dice, which appears to follow that of the natural pair of knuckle bones, and is displayed in the Indian k'abatain, and the ancient and widely diffused game of backgammon, is paralleled by the use of 2 dice in China, where sheung luk (Japanese, sugoroku) [Page 535] is a common name for dice play. It has been observed  that the "threes" and "fours" are marked ín red on Indian dice while in China the "ones" and "fours" are so marked. The Wak kan sai relates that in the game of Sugoroku the throws receive the following names:

  • Chio ichi, "double one."
  • Chio ni, "double two."
  • Shiu san, "vermilion three."
  • Shin shí, "vermilion four."
  • Chio go, "double five."
  • Chio roku, "double six."

From this it would appear that the dice anciently used in Japan and China had the "three" and "four" marked in red4 like the Indian k'abat, instead of the "one" and "four", as in present custom - an additional argument in favor of the Indian origin of the Chinese dice. Two questions remain to be answered.  (Page 536)

Figure 32

Where and for what purpose were the dice-throws united in the domino form, and why was the number of the domino pieces increased from 21 to 32. Dominoes are unknown in India as a native game, but as it seemed possible that they might have had their origin there for use in fortune telling, the writer made a careful examination of the principal East Indian systems of fortune telling with dice, but the results did not throw any light upon the origin of dominoes.5 The Tibetan astrologers, according to Schlagintweit,6 use dice which are either cubes like European ones, or rectangular parallelopipedons, sometimes comparatively very long; the latter, in consequence of their form, having two sides blank. This description agrees with the preceding Indian dice used in fortune telling, which I regard as derived from the game with staves, but the faces of a die (Figure 32), which Schlagintweit  figures as used by the Tibetans for astrological purposes, suggests a domino in the duplication of its spots.7

Figure 33

The astrological associations of the domino game have not thrown light as yet upon the question of its origin. They have been referred to in connection with the method of telling fortunes, and it has been observed that the disks accompanying the bamboo dominoes from Fuhchau bear the names of the cyclical animals. It will also be noticed that the terms ün and ngáng, "weak" and "strong," applied to the pairs in the game of k'ap t'ái shap, (p. 513), are the same as those used to designate the broken and undivided lines in the Yik King, and that [Page 537] the diagram (Figure 33)8 which is given by Legge9 as the accepted form of the Lok Shü, or "Lo writing," which is referred to in the Yik King as one of the sources of inspiration for its broken and undivided lines,10 is composed of light and dark circles similar to the domino dots.

I may suggest, in conclusion  that dominoes may have been first used as counters or tallies in a dice game or in a method of fortune telling with dice. They existed in their present form in China in the year 1120 AD, according to the Chinese records, with similar astrological associations as at the present day. They are clearly descended from dice, and particularly from that game with two dice which appears to have been introduced into China from western Asia.

Notes:

  1. This account of k'ab was communicated to the writer by the Hon. Syad  Mohamed Hadi, of Sultanpur, India. Two sets of ivory dice, received by the writer from Lucknow, are cubical, and marked on their 6 sides with from 1 to 6 spots, in the same manner as our common dice. The "fours" alone are in red.

  2. If a Chinese die be turned ace up and revolved toward the person holding it so that the "two," "three," and "six" are disclosed in succession, it will he found that the "three" is usually to the left and the "four" to the right, while the opposite is more usually the case on European dice. In the Indian dice here referred to, this arrangement is alternate, one having a "three" on the right and the other on the left.

  3. De Ludis Orientalibu, p. 147.

  4. A pair of miniature Japanese ivory dice, presented to the writer by Prof.  Henry H. Giglioli, of  Florence, Italy, have the "threes" and "fours" marked in red.

  5. Report of the Proceedings of the Numismatic and Antiquarian 'Society of Philadelphia, 1890-91, p. 65.

  6. Buddhism in Tibet, London, 1863, p. 315.

  7. Col. W.W. Rockhill informs me that he never saw dice used in Tibet except for fortune telling. According to Col. Rockhill, the Tibetan name fur dice is sho, and a person who throws dice, mo jyab ken. He tells me that he always saw four dice used m Tibet and North China. These dice have no "six." There is a picture of the god Pal-dan-hlamlo holding a bag of dominoes or dice in the superb Tibetan collection deposited by him in the US National Museum.

  8. This diagram coincides with the most renowned of the arithmetical squares which are used as charms both by Hindus and Mohammedans in India. It is usually written as below, an inversion of the Chinese arrangement.
    6  1  8
    7  5  3
    2  9  4

    This square appears in its numerical form on the Tibetan charts, reproduced by Shlagintweit, where it is arranged in the Chinese order. It is believed in India, said one of my Mohammedan informants, that to write this charm will bring good luck and money by honest means. The object for which it is used is always written beneath it. He told me that his grandfather wrote it every day after prayers and would place beneath it the words rizk, "bread." or chardj, "expenses." Such numbered diagrams are cut in squares, each containing a number. These are made into pills with wheaten bread and thrown into a pond or river to be eaten by fish. Another Indian, a Hindu, says that this magic square is called in Hindustani Pundra no yuntra, or the "15 yuntra." It is written both with numerals and with dots. In the latter case the set of dots from 1 to 9 frequently are made each of a different color and certain names are given to them.

    It is not improbable that this diagram was burrowed by the Chinese from India, and that, too, at a much later period than is usually assigned to it by the Chinese. The writer found a copy of it - in Arabic numerals, among the written charms in a soldier's kit captured in Tonquin - in the Municipal Museum of the city of Havre. The spots, like those on the dice, are doubtless survivals of a primitive system of notation, like that which existed in Mexico at the time of the Conquest.

  9. Legge, Rev. Dr. James, The Yé King, Oxford, Introduction, p. 18.

  10. Ibid., Appendix III, Sec. 1 par. 73.


Last update January 31, 2010