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Desert Dust

*** STILL UNDER CONSTRUCTION ****

 

Pieces

Melek: Melek is Arabic for "king," and the Melek moves exactly like the King.

The piece I use for the Arabic King is identical to the usual King, with the cross replaced with the star-and-crescent symbol of Islam.

Sultana: The Sultana combines the moves of the Queen and the Camel.

The Caliph and Canvasser needed a counterpart with a Queen's move, so I created this piece. Like "queen," the word "sultana" is applied equally well to a female monarch as to a ruler's consort.

Emir: The Emir slides orthogonally like a Rook, moves to any adjacent space, or leaps like a Camel.

This is borrowed from Robert Shimmin's game Scheherezade. An emir is the equivalent of a prince, as a secular monarch or his sons.

Caliph: The Caliph slides diagonally like a Bishop, or leaps like a Camel.

This piece has been around for a while. A caliph is the highest-ranking official in a system of Muslim-state theocratic politics.

Hakim: The Hakim slides orthogonally like a Rook, or leaps like a Camel.

This is just a renamed version of the Canvasser. The word in Arabic (accent on the first syllable) translates as "governor" or "ruler," and is used as a contemporary title for (among other things) judges.

Sultan: The Sultan moves to any diagonal space, or leaps like a Knight or Camel.

Also borrowed from Scheherezade. In the Muslim-state system, the Sultan is the next rank down from Caliph.

Grand Vizier: The Grand Vizier can moves to any adjacent space, or leaps like a Camel or two spaces diagonally.

Also borrowed from Scheherezade. A vizier is a political advisor or minister in Near East countries, making a Grand Vizier the approximate equivalent of a Prime Minister.

Snake: The Snake moves one space forward or backward, then may continue outward like a Bishop.

I'm actually not sure where the Snake originated, other than that it's a modern invention. It gets its name from its diagram's resemblance to a snake's tongue; in fact, some variants call it the Snaketongue.

Astrologer: The Astrologer leaps like a Camel, and then may continue outward like a Bishop.

This piece is borrowed from Daniel Zacharias's game Tiger Chess. The pre-Islamic Middle East was filled with astrologers, most notably Egypt and Persia.

Raven: The Raven slides orthogonally like a Rook, or leaps outward like a Nightrider.

This piece has been around for a while, though mostly as a chess-problem piece.

Mamluk: The Mamluk moves one space orthogonally, or leaps like a Camel.

Borrowed from Apothecary Chess - Classic by Aurelian Florea (who spells it "mameluk"). Mamluks were slave-mercenaries in service to Arab and Ottoman empires.

Satrap: The Satrap moves one space or leaps two spaces diagonally, but cannot capture with that move. It can also move one space or leap two spaces orthogonally, but only to capture.

Taken from one of Charles Gilman's extensive Man & Beast articles on this site. A satrap was a provincial governor in the ancient Persial empire.

Ayatollah: The Imam moves one space or leaps two spaces orthogonally, but cannot capture with that move. It can also move one space or leap two spaces diagonally, but only to capture.

I created this piece as a counterpart to the Satrap. An Ayatollah is a high-ranking cleric in Shi'a Islam.

Jackal: The Jackal leaps three spaces diagonally, or like a Zebra.

I originally created this as a counterpart to the Leon, or Spanish Lion, which leaps three spaces orthogonally or like a Camel. Jackals are, of course, quite well-connected to Egypt and surrounding areas; Anubis is merely the best-known god associated with them.

Shiek: The Sheik moves to any adjacent diagonal space, leaps like a Camel, or leaps to every other orthogonal space (like a Dabbabarider).

This is another piece borrowed from Scheherezade. The title of shiek, which literally meals "elder" (as a noun), also translates as "lord" or "master," and most often refers to a tribal chief or royal family member.

Sorcerer: The Sorcerer moves one space orthogonally, or leaps like a Zebra.

This piece first appeared in Charles Daniel's game Sorcerer Chess. Sorcerers have a traditional existence in the lore many countries, including those in the Middle East.

Wizard: The Wizard moves one space diagonally, or leaps like a Camel.

This piece first appeared in Daniel MacDonald's game Omega Chess. As with Sorcerers, Wizards have a traditional existence in the lore of many countries.

Spear: The Arabian Spear moves directly forward like a Rook, or diagonally forward like a Bishop. (It cannot move sideways or backward.)

More often called the Arabic Spear (though "Arabian Spear" we be more grammatical), the earliest place where I can find this piece is in Hans Bodlander's game Pick-the-Team Chess.

Camel: The Camel leaps one space by three spaces.

This is an old historical piece. And of course the camel is so iconic to the Middle East that most of the compounds in this variant are compounds of the Camel.

Pawn: The Pawn moves like a Pawn in standard Chess, including a two-step opening move and en passant capture.

This piece is the only one in the game that is unchanged from standard Chess. As noted in the Piececlopedia, the word "pawn" has its origin in the Sanskrit word "padati," meaning "foot soldier."

Scorpion: The Scorpion moves like a standard Pawn, with one added move: a non-capturing leap one step forward and two steps to the left or right.

This Scorpion is borrowed from Scorpion Chess by M. Winther. Scorpions are so common in Western literature involving the Middle East that they're practically a cliché, even though they're found nearly anywhere south of the 50th parallel.

Rules

Other than what's stated here, rules are as in standard Chess.

Promotion

Pawns, Scorpions, and Spears that reach the back row may promote to the player's choice of (in no particular order) Sheik, Caliph, Hakim, Satrap, Wizard, Sorcerer, or Astrologer; or to any animal pieces (Camel, Jackal, Raven, or Snake) that the opponent has captured.



This 'user submitted' page is a collaboration between the posting user and the Chess Variant Pages. Registered contributors to the Chess Variant Pages have the ability to post their own works, subject to review and editing by the Chess Variant Pages Editorial Staff.


By Bob Greenwade.

Last revised by Bob Greenwade.


Web page created: 2023-08-21. Web page last updated: 2023-10-22

Revisions of MSdesertdust