Laquet
Laquet is an historical Castilian tables game that was described as a new game in the 13th century. It may be the ancestor of Jacquet. Unlike Backgammon and most other tables games, it has an asymmetrical starting position; only three of the four quadrants are used and the pieces may not be 'hit'.
History
Laquet is described in the Libro de los Juegos, a game book written for King Alfonso of Castile between 1251 and 1283. It was described as being a "new game". It shares with the much later French game of Jacquet the ludeme, unusual for games of the tables family that an isolated hostile man may not be 'hit'. It may therefore be ancestral to Jacquet. Golladay translates the name of the game as "Quest."Equipment
The game was played on a tables board of 24 points using 30 pieces or 'men' of two different colours, two dice and two dice cups.Starting position
Both players start in the first quadrant at the bottom right. The board is dressed asymmetrically as follows assuming Player A is at the bottom and Player B is at the top:- Player A places one man in the outer corner of the third quadrant, top left, and three on each point in the first quadrant with the exception of the leftmost, which only has two white men, and the rightmost which has none.
- Player B places one men at the top right and stacks the remainder on the vacant corner point in the first quadrant.
Rules
Aim
The aim of Laquet is to move all one's men to the third quadrant and be first to bear them all off.Direction of march
Both players move their men anti-clockwise and white always leads.Validity of the dice
The dice are good if they land within the board and on one face. If a die comes out of the board or lands on one of its rails it is invalid. If a die is cocked and players disagree on its validity or value, the player insisting it is good may place a test die on top and, if it stays in place, the die is good, otherwise it is invalid. If either die is invalid, both dice must be rethrown.Movement
On each throw of the dice the player may:- Move one man by the total pip count, resting on the intermediate point
- Move two men: one by the count on one die and the second man by the count on the other.
Bearing off
Once all fifteen men have entered the third quadrant, the player may begin bearing them off. For this purpose:- The rail counts as an additional point.
- A man that can reach the rail by the exact throw of a die may be borne off the board.
- Men may also be played within the exit quadrant if the die throw permits.
- If a die score is higher than the distance from a player's farthest man to the rail, that man may be borne off.
Literature
- King Alfonso X. El Libro de los Juegos .