Dice games have been played in India since
Shramanic times, though game boards and pieces have been found in the
Indus Valley Civilisation. Ivory and bone objects of all shapes and sizes, some with dots on them, and interpreted as "dice" and/or "gaming pieces", have been found at
Mohenjo-daro,
Harappa,
Lothal,
Kalibangan,
Alamgirpur, and so on. Fragments of game boards have also been found at various sites. A potsherd with a
chaupar design drawn on it has been discovered at
Nagarjunakonda. A recent excavation from Rakhigarhi in Haryana discovered game boards and game pieces in terracotta and stone. Many pyramid-shaped game pieces made in stone, ivory and terracotta have been discovered at these ancient sites. Dice playing is also mentioned in a hymn in the
Rig Veda, which expresses the lament of the player over his loss of wealth and spouse. The Vedic people used
Vibhidaka (small brown nuts) as dice. This tradition of ritualistic gambling is still seen today as Hindus play the modern version of this game during Diwali. The
Mahabharata also mentions the game of dice in which
Yudhishthira loses everything to his cousins. The
Skanda Purana mentions Shiva and Parvati playing a game of dice. This scene has been beautifully shown in a sculpture in the
Ellora Caves in Aurangabad. The Jain gyan chauper is mentioned in the
Dhanapala, a 10th-century text from Rishabhapanchashika. It was mostly played on painted cloth called patas. Gyan Chauper reached England around the 1890s. In the beginning, the game was also moralistic like the Indian version, but later due to the slowdown of the European economy in the 1940s due to the wars only numerical plan game boards were made. This design since then has remained ubiquitous. ==Gameplay==