Morabaraba
Morabaraba gameboard; pieces move from intersection to intersection along marked lines | |
| Genres | Board game, abstract strategy game |
|---|---|
| Players | 2 |
| Setup time | < 1 minute |
| Playing time | < 1 hour |
| Chance | None |
| Age range | Any |
| Skills | Strategy, tactics |
| Synonyms | Mlabalaba, mmela, muravava, umlabalaba, mororova |
Morabaraba is a traditional two-player strategy board game played in South Africa and Botswana with a slightly different variation played in Lesotho. This game is known by many names in many languages, including mlabalaba, mmela (in Setswana), muravava, and umlabalaba. The game is similar to twelve men's morris, a variation on the Roman board game nine men's morris, which was based on the Egyptian game. The earliest known diagram of Marabaraba was found in an Egyptian temple in Kurna, Egypt, dating back to around 1440 BC. Other boards have been discovered in Ceylon / Sri Lanka (c. AD 10) and in the Gokstad Viking ship (c. AD 900).
While some believed that morabaraba was introduced to Southern Africa by British settlers, morris variants exist in many parts of the world, e.g., India (char bhar), Ghana (achi), Kenya (shisimia), Somalia (shax), Zimbabwe (tsoro yemutwelve), Iran(dooz), the Philippines (tapatan) and Mongolia (gurgaldaj). It is claimed that morabaraba boards carved in rock are dated to be at least 800 years old, which would exclude a European origin. As Nine Men’s Morris and later 12, uses the term Men for the game pieces and Marabaraba uses the term Cows for the stone pieces, both use the term a “Mill” for the line of three protected stones. It is reasonable that both games derived from the Egyptian game, one via the Roman and one directly. The mancala-type game of moruba (using rows of cupules) is yet another Egyptian game that is played historically throughout Africa, not merely in the South.
Morabaraba is today most popular amongst rural African youth in Southern Africa, but can be seen daily at any non-city bus stop being played by adult passing time. In the traditional European games like nine men's morris, the counters are commonly referred to as "men", but in the South African game the counters are referred to as "cows", the game being particularly popular amongst youth who herd cattle.
According to the OxfordDictionaries.com, the term morabaraba is derived from the Southern Sotho moraba-raba, meaning 'to mill' or 'to go round in a circle'.