Adji kui I

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Adji kui
Played in:
Cuba
One cycle
Single lap
6 holes per row
Two rows

Adji kui is the name of at least two Cuban mancala games from the area near Matanzas. The game was first recorded by Ruth Magalys Wilson Ferrer in the early 1990s.

These games were played only by a few families of Arará origin (not to be confused with the Brazilian Arara people), whose ancestry is related to the Fon, Ewe, Mina, Popo and other peoples from the Benin and Togo coastal area in Western Africa.

Here are the rules of one of them, which appears to be related with oware

Contents

Rules

At the beginning there are four seeds or pebbles in each of the six holes a player controls.

board
Initial position

On his turn a player takes the contents of any of his holes containing more than one seed and sows them, one by one, counterclockwise in the ensuing holes. The move ends after a single lap.

If the last seed is placed in an opponent's hole, which then contains 2 or 3 seeds, its contents are captured, as are the contents of the previous opponent's holes containing 2 or 3 seeds.

If, on his turn, a player has only singletons or empty holes, his turn passes.

When the last seeds are cycling around the board, the game ends and the seeds are splitted between the two players, each player getting the seeds on his side of the board.

The player who has captured more seeds wins.

See also

Adji kui II

References

Wilson Ferrer, R. M.
(1991) El maravilloso mundo de las piedras y los agujeros, Santiago de Cuba: Centro Cultural Africano "Fernando Ortiz".
Wilson Ferrer, R. M.
(2006) Re: Adji kui, email to Bautista i Roca, V (viktor@drac.com), 29 Sep.

Personal references

Bautista i Roca, Víktor
Personal communication with Ruth Wilson Ferrer during the colloquium about mancala games held in Fribourg, Switzerland, at the beginning of September 2006.

External links

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