Three men's morris


Three men's morris is an abstract strategy game played on a three by three board
that is similar to tic-tac-toe. It is also related to six men's morris and nine men's morris.

Rules

Each player has three pieces. The winner is the first player to align their three pieces on a line drawn on the board. There are 3 horizontal lines, 3 vertical lines and 2 diagonal lines.
The board is empty to begin the game, and players take turns placing their pieces on empty intersections. Once all pieces are placed, play proceeds with each player moving one of their pieces per turn. A piece may move to any vacant point on the board, not just an adjacent one.
According to A History of Chess, there is an alternative version in which pieces may not move to any vacant point, but only to any adjacent linked empty position, i.e. from a corner to the middle of an adjacent edge, from the middle of an edge to the center or an adjacent corner, or from the center to the middle of an edge.
H. J. R. Murray calls the first version "nine holes" and the second version "three men's morris" or "the smaller merels".

History

According to R. C. Bell, the earliest known board for the game includes diagonal lines and was "cut into the roofing slabs of the temple at Kurna in Egypt"; he estimated a date for them of BCE. However, Friedrich Berger wrote that some of the diagrams at Kurna include Coptic crosses, making it "doubtful" that the diagrams date to 1400 BCE. Berger concluded, "certainly they cannot be dated." When played on this board, the game is called tapatan in the Philippines and luk tsut k'i in China. It is thought that luk tsut k'i was played during the time of Confucius, c. 500 BCE. Centuries later, the game was mentioned in Ovid's Ars Amatoria, according to R. C. Bell. In book III, after discussing seats at the English cathedrals at Canterbury, Gloucester, Norwich, Salisbury and Westminster Abbey; the game was quite popular in England in the 13th century. These boards used holes, not lines, to represent the nine spaces on the board—hence the name nine-holes—and forming a diagonal row did not win the game.
The name of the game may be related to Morris dances. However, according to Daniel King, "the word 'morris' has nothing to do with the old English dance of the same name. It comes from the Latin word merellus, which means a counter or gaming piece."

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