Mancala World
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Hawalis → Italian.


Hawalis
Other Names: Bao Kiarabu
First Description: W. H.
Ingrams, 1921
Cycles: Two
Ranks: Four
Sowing: Multiple laps
Region: Oman, Tanzania
(Zanzibar)

Hawalis seems to be the only four-row mancala game found outside Africa except for some bizarre games from Yunnan (China). It is played in Oman, where the game is played by the Arab population, but not by Swahili speaking people, and also on Zanzibar, Tanzania, where it is known as Bao Kiarabu ("Arabian Board Game") and played by the Arabic people of the island who came from Oman. A two-row mancala game with seven pits per row is called "Al-Hawailah" in Qatar.

The game was first described on Zanzibar by W. H. Ingrams in 1921 and in Oman by Alexander Johan de Voogt in 2003. De Voogt reported that Hawalis clubs in Ruwa, Mutrah, and Seeb conduct regular championships. One of the strongest players was Dad Mohd.

Mancalaproject2

Hawalis tournament, Niederzissen (Germany) 2008

There was a small Hawalis tournament in Niederzissen, Germany, in May 2008. Nine boys (age 11-13) participated. The winner was 13-year old Tim Gomoluch, a grade 7 student.

The game was implemented by Arty Sandler for the igGameCenter on April 20, 2009, where it can be played online against human opponents in real time.

Hawalis is very similar to other games played all around Bantu speaking Africa. It is closely related to Njombwa (Mozambique), Lela (Malawi), Mulabalaba (D. R. of Congo) and Muvalavala (Angola).

Rules

Hawalis is played on a board, which has four rows of seven holes. Each player controls the two rows on his side.

At the beginning there are two stones in each hole.

Hawalis1

Initial Position

Players take turns to move.

On his turn a player takes all the stones from one of his holes, which has at least two seeds, and then sows them anti-clockwise in the following holes all around his two rows.

If the last stone falls into an occupied hole, its contents (including the last one played) are picked up and then distributed in another lap starting in the next hole.

If the last stone is dropped in an empty hole, the turn ends,

If this empty hole was in the front row and the opposite hole of the opponent was occupied, the stones of this hole are captured and removed from the game. If the hole in the back row is occupied too, its contents are also taken.

Hawal-draw

"Pendulum" - A forced draw

Singletons can only be moved, if none of the player's holes contain two or more seeds. However, it is not permitted to move such a stone to an occupied hole.

A player wins when he captures all stones of his adversary.

The game is a draw, when the board position repeats and nothing is captured.

Sample Games

Miceu Tavares (Portugal) - Ralf Gering (Germany), June 11, 2009

1. i (+4) L (+6); 2. d (+6) J (+6); 3. i (+2) H; 4. h N; 5. j D; 6. n K; 7. k (+2) E; 8. c E (+2);
9. d (+3) F (+1); 10. g I (+1); 11. a J; 12. h N; 13. e A; 14. f D; 15. b K (+1); 16. n E;
17. d (+1) F (+1); 18. f (+1) I (+1); 19. a L; 20. e M; 21. b D; 22. c E; 23. i (+1) N;
24. d (+3) J (+2); 25. e (+2) C; 26. l (+1) D; 27. m E; 28. n F; 29. a A; 30. b B; 31. c C;
32. d D; 33. e E; 34. l G; 35. m H; 36. b I; 37. c J; 38. d F; 39. e K (+1); 40. l L;
41. m M (+1); 42. b N; 43. c A; 44. d B; 45. e C; 46. h G (+1); 47. i H; 48. j D;
49. k (+1) E; 50. l F; 51. m G (+3); 52. f H; 53. g I; 54. h J; 55. i K (+1)


"miumiu" (Poland) - Benedikt Rosenau (Germany), June 29, 2009

1. h (+4) K (+6); 2. a I; 3. i (+4) C (+6); 4. k N (+6); 5. n M; 6. b (+2) G (+1); 7. g (+2) J (+2);
8. c K; 9. e F (+1); 10. f C; 11. g L; 12. h N; 13. k A! (infinite loop)

The board position repeats after the 77th lap. A shifted position is even found after the 11th lap.

Endgame Problems

Problem 1

Hawalisprob1

South to move wins! Look for the shortest solution. (Ralf Gering, 2008)

Problem 2

Hawalisprob2

South to move wins! (Ralf Gering, 2008)

See also

General Information

Online Play

Videos

Photos

References

Hyde, T.
De Ludis Orientalibus Libri Duo. Oxford (UK) 1694, 232.
Ingrams, W. H.
Zanzibar: Its History and Its People. Frank Cass & Co., London (UK) 1921, 257.
Isitt, G. F.
Vikings in the Persian Gulf. In: Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 2007; 17: 389-406.
Murray, H. J. R.
A History of Board-Games Other Than Chess. Oxford (UK) 1952, 207-208.
Romariz Santos Silva, E.
Jogos de quadrícula do tipo mancala com especial incidência nos praticados em Angola. Lisboa (Portugal) 1995.
Salloum, H.
Muscat Enwraps the Past with the Present. In: The Jordan Times 2003 (April 27).
Voogt, A. J. de
Hawalis in Oman: A First Account of Expertise and Dispersal of Four-row Mancala in the Middle East. In: Board Game Studies 2003; 6: 95-98.

Solutions

Problem 1

5! (x1 a) 10; 2 (x1) 11; 3 (x1) 12; 4 (x1) 13; 6 (x3) 8; 7 9; 5 10; 8 11; 9 12; 10 13; 11 6; 12 7; 13 8; 14 9; 1 10; 2 11; 3 12; 4 14; 6 (x1) 13; 5 14 (x1); 6 (x1). (41 moves)

a) 2? (x3) 4 (x1); 5 (x1) 3; 6 11; 7 12; 8 13; 9 14; 10 1; 11 2; 12 8; 13 9; 14 6 (x1) and North wins.

Problem 2

13 2; 14 3; 1 8; 6 9; 7 10; 8 11; 9 12; 10 13; 11 14; 12 1; 13 2; 14 4; 2 (x1) 3; 3 (x1). (27 moves)

Copyright

© Wikimanqala.
By: Víktor Bautista i Roca & Ralf Gering
Under the CC by-sa 2.5 license.

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