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A gunman fires his gun as men carry the coffins with the bodies of Pierre Mouawad, an official with the anti-Hezbollah Lebanese Forces party, and his wife during their funeral in Yahshush, in Lebanon, on Tuesday. (PTI)

Cambridge study links chess to medieval racial unity

LONDON, April 7: A new study from the University of Cambridge suggests that chess, often called the “game of kings,” acted as a powerful equalizer during the medieval era by valuing intellectual skill over race or social status.
Historian Dr. Krisztina Ilko, in her research Chess and Race in the Global Middle Ages, draws on global evidence to show how chess subverted racial stereotypes and hierarchies, allowing players to engage as equals based on strategy and logic rather than physical or societal attributes.
Tracing chess’s origins, Ilko notes that the Arabic shatranj and Middle Persian chatrang derive from the Sanskrit chaturanga, reflecting the four limbs of the ancient Indian army: infantry, cavalry, chariots, and elephants.
Chess’s emphasis on intellect over power enabled people from diverse backgrounds to compete fairly, and the board’s contrasting colors allowed medieval observers to project ideas of race onto the game without imposing social hierarchies.
Illustrations from the 14th-century Persian epic Shahnama depict chess’s transmission from India to Iran.
While previous scholars interpreted the Indian ambassador’s darker skin as a sign of defeat, Ilko argues it symbolized his foreign identity and his role as a transmitter of Indian knowledge, positioning him as a champion rather than a subordinate.
The study highlights that although medieval society had entrenched racial structures, intellectual skill offered a way to challenge these norms.
Chess boards became a microcosm of the wider world, facilitating interaction between civilizations through orderly, strategic play.
Ilko emphasizes that the game fostered intellectual exchange and cross-cultural engagement, presenting a medieval world far more diverse and interactive than often portrayed in dominant religious narratives.
Chess’s enduring global popularity, Ilko argues, reflects its timeless appeal and its historical role in bridging divides.
Her work, which will be expanded in the upcoming book The Pawns of History: A New Approach towards the Global Middle Ages, sheds light on a more playful, diverse, and intellectually rich view of the Middle Ages. (AP)

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