Hopscotch
Hopscotch is a playground game in which players toss a small object, sometimes called a piggy or lagger, into numbered triangles or a pattern of rectangles outlined on the ground and then hop or jump through the spaces and retrieve the object. It is a children's game that can be played with several players or alone. Hopscotch is a physical and cognitive workout.
Court and rules
The court
To play hopscotch, a court is first laid out on the ground. Depending on the available surface, the court is either scratched out in the dirt or drawn with chalk on pavement. Courts may be permanently marked where playgrounds are commonly paved, as in primary schools. Designs vary, but the court is usually composed of a series of linear squares interspersed with blocks of two lateral squares. Traditionally the court ends with a "safe" or "home" base in which the player may turn before completing the reverse trip. The home base may be a square, a rectangle, or a semicircle. The squares are then numbered in the sequence in which they are to be hopped.Playing the game
The first player tosses a marker onto the court. The marker should land in the square without bouncing, sliding, or rolling out. In the United States the marker was called a "lagger" and in the 1940s Hopscotch Laggers made of rubber were sold by the Hoppy Taw Company of Utah. The marker must be thrown in sequential numerical order completely within the square without touching the line. The player then hops through the course, skipping the marker's square. Single squares must be hopped on one foot, except for the first single square, where either foot may be used. Side-by-side squares are straddled, with the left foot landing in the left square, and the right foot landing in the right square. Optional squares marked "Safe", "Home", or "Rest" are neutral squares, and may be hopped through in any manner without penalty. After hopping into "Safe", "Home", or "Rest", the player must then turn around and retrace their steps through the course on one or two legs, depending on the square, until reaching the marker's square. The player stops in the square before the marker and reaches down to retrieve the marker and continue the course as stated, without touching a line or stepping into a square with another player's marker.Upon successfully completing the sequence, the player continues the turn by tossing the marker into square number two, and repeating the pattern.
If, while hopping through the court in either direction, the player steps on a line, misses a square, or loses balance, the turn ends. Players begin their turns where they last left off. The first player to complete one course for every numbered square on the court wins the game.
Although the marker is most often picked up during the game, historically, in the boy's game, the marker was kicked sequentially back through the course on the return trip and then kicked out.
Origin
According to Ulrich Schädler, the origin of hopscotch is still enigmatic, although he firmly states it is an early modern game. Nonetheless, there are claims for a greater age of this game.B. B. Lal states that hopscotch was played 1200 to 600–500 BCE during the Painted Grey ware era of India. Among the games prohibited by Buddha there is an entry that is reminiscent of hopscotch, but not specific enough to enable us to actually identify the game.
Despite speculation that an ancient form of hopscotch was played by Roman children and soldiers, there is no evidence for this.
The first recorded references to the game in the English-speaking world date to the late seventeenth century, usually under the name "scotch-hop" or "scotch-hopper". A manuscript Book of Games compiled between 1635 and 1672 by Francis Willughby refers to 'Scotch Hopper‥. They play with a piece of tile or a little flat piece of lead, upon a boarded floor, or any area divided into oblong figures like boards'. In Poor Robin's Almanack for 1677, the game is referred to as "Scotch-hoppers". The entry states, "The time when schoolboys should play at Scotch-hoppers." The 1707 edition of Poor Robin's Almanack includes the following phrase... "Lawyers and Physicians have little to do this month, so they may play at Scotch-hoppers." In 1828, Webster's American Dictionary of the English Language also referred to the game as 'Scotch-hopper'... 'a play in which boys hop over scotches and lines in the ground.'
Etymology
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the etymology of hopscotch is a formation from the words "hop" and "", the latter in the sense of "an incised line or scratch". The journal of the British Archaeological Association, volume 26 states: "The sport of Hop-Scotch or Scotch-Hoppers is called in Yorkshire 'Hop-Score', and in Suffolk 'Scotch Hobbies or Hobby', from the boy who gets on the player's back whilst hopping or 'hicking', as it is there termed; and in Scotland it is known as 'Peevers, Peeverels, and Pabats'".Variations
There are many other forms of hopscotch played across the globe. In India it is called Stapu or Kit Kit in Hindi, Nondi/Paandi, Thokkudu billa or Kith-Kith, Kunte Bille. In Spain and some Latin American countries, it is called rayuela, although it may also be known as golosa or charranca. In France marelle is the name for the game.In Turkey, it is Seksek. In Russian it is known as классики. In Bulgaria, the game is referred to as дама which means "lady".
In Poland, it appears in two forms: klasy which has a rectangular shape and no marker ; and pajac which has a human shape and uses a thrown marker, e.g. a piece of glass or stone.
In Sweden the game is named hoppa hage, while in Norway it is called paradis, or Paradise. In Italy the game is known as campana, or mondo. In the Netherlands and Flanders, it is called Hinkelen. In Bosnia, Croatia, and Serbia it is called školica, meaning "little school". In Malaysia, the most popular variant is called tengteng.
In Mexico, it is called bebeleche meaning "drink milk" or avioncito meaning "little plane", after its shape. In Cuba and in Puerto Rico it is called "La Peregrina" and the squares represent the 9 rings the pilgrim traveler has to pass in order to reach Heaven from Purgatory, according to Dante's Inferno.
In Romania the game is called șotron and is widely played by children all over the country. In Denmark it is called hinke. In Brazil it is called amarelinha, evolved from marelle, the French name for the game that became too closely associated with the radical amarelo and its diminutive in -inho/a.
In Breton, the name is reg or delech. The Albanian variant is called rrasavi, which is composed of two words: rrasa and vi. In China, hopscotch is called tiao fangzi.
In the Philippines, the game is known as piko, a variation of hopscotch that features a territorial capture mechanic. It is played on a diagram of boxes, commonly shaped like a cross, a stylized human figure or a four-petal shaped zone called moons. Children take turns tossing a pamato onto designated squares and hopping through the course on one foot. The goal is not only to complete the sequence without stepping on lines or losing balance, but also to claim territory. After a successful round, a player may capture a square, which then becomes off-limits to others. This rule adds a strategic dimension that increases the challenge as the game progresses. Across the country, the game is known by various regional names: kingking in the Ilocos Region, bikabix, kiki, or vicks-vicks in Cebu and other Visayan-speaking areas, buan-buan in parts of Mindanao and the Visayas, and saya-saya among Waray speakers, derived from the word saya meaning “skirt.”
In India, hopscotch is called "thikrya", because broken stones called thikrya are slid across the grid as players hop to each square. In South Korea, hopscotch is called sabangchigi and is widely played across the nation. In Ghana, hopscotch is called "tumatu" and is mostly played by children.
In Zimbabwe, the game is called pada and its mostly played by girls. In America the game is referred to as Hop Scotch and is played with a marker. It is found on elementary school playgrounds and is an activity most often played by girls.
Persian: Laylay (or Khane bazi)
The hopscotch game's generic name in Persian is Laylay. The most common form of Laylay in Iran resembles the older Western types and uses six or more side-by-side squares successively numbered. The player uses a peg or a flat stone that the player must kick to the next square as the player is hopping. If either the stone or a player's foot lands on a line, the player forfeits the game. Although somewhat less common, the contemporary Western type also is played.Glasgow: Peevers or Peever
In the Glasgow area, the hopscotch game is called "beds" or "Peever". "Peever" is also the name of the object which is slid across the grid to land in a square. In the 1950s and 1960s in Glasgow, it was common for the peever to be a shoe polish tin filled with stones or dirt and screwed shut.Edinburgh children also call the game Peevers, played on a Peever bed with a chalked grid and a small flat tin - like a puck, where the chalk is stored during the game with the ballast.
French: Marelle, Escargot
"Marelle" is the name of the traditional hopscotch game in France, but a variant there is known as escargot or marelle ronde. The variant is played on a spiral course. Players must hop on one foot to the center of the spiral and then reverse their path to back out again.Players reaching the center without stepping on a line or losing balance mark one square with their initials, and from then on may place two feet in that square, while all other players must hop over it. The game ends when all squares are marked or no one can reach the center and the winner is the player who "owns" the most squares.