Uploaded by theoldtokaido on Sep 6, 2008
Description
Pair of vintage Japanese wooden bowls used to hold game stones for the Japanese game of Go. The set is less than 40 years old and includes stones though we have not counted the stone and are unsure if the numbers are complete. The black stones are made of slate while the white stones are seashell. Many of the stones are worn and chipped with evidence of past use. The bowls are in good condition though one bowl has some damage at the underside and both bowls have marks and scratches from handling and use. This set of Japanese Go bowls and stones is ready to once more facilitate pleasant hours of intellectual challenge between worthy Go players.
Size of each bowl:
Height: 3.5 inches (9.0 centimeters)
Diameter: 4.9 inches (12.5 centimeters)
Weight of both bowls including stones: 48.2 ounces (1376 grams)
More about the game of Go
When I was about ten years old my father came home one day with a new board game which he intended to teach my brother and I to play. The game board was made of wood with equally spaced lines running across the surface in a pattern which created dozens of small squares. The game was played with pieces that resembled small black and white stones, which were separated by color and stored in two small wooden bowls. The rules of the game were simple, and within an hour after supper that evening my father and I were engaged in our first game of Go together. Years later, during my first visit to Japan I was delighted to spot groups of old men playing Go out in the open in public parks. After moving to Japan I began to notice Go halls here and there in my community, where fans of the game would gather to compete on an amateur level. I spotted Go columns in the newspaper and even saw professional games aired on television! Truly this game, which had been a novel and exotic pastime in my youth, was a serious affair in Japan and, as I would later learn, most of China and Korea as well as with ardent fans the world over!
The game of Go has its roots in China where it was developed roughly 4,000 years ago. The game spread to Korea and eventually to Japan when Buddhist priests brought the game with them from the continent in the 5th century. Largely unchanged since ancient times, the rules are simplicity themselves and can be learned in less than an hour, while the strategy and tactics needed to master the game can take a lifetime to master. The object is simply to lay claim to as much board space as possible before the match is declared over by mutual consent of both players. Territory is marked out by placing one's stones upon the board at points where the lines intersect such that a boundary of stones is created around the area one wishes to claim. But beware, for your opponent may try to block your progress or even muscle in on your space through strategic placement of their own stones or by deliberate offensive moves meant to capture yours! The decisions, maneuvers and sacrifices of the game in many ways create a black and white map of wits upon the board which has earned the game the nickname "hand conversation". Top Go players often begin their careers at a young age and even today in Japan it is not uncommon for budding champions to take up residence in the home of their master as they prepare for their debut upon the professional Go circuit.
item code: R1S4-0005766
ship code: G3
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11 likes, 2 dislikes
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@batulefou it is both japanese and chinese, as it is played in both countries. actually, modern rules that are mainstream in the west are japanese.
CrawlingAxle 3 weeks ago
it is not a japanese game, it is chinese and its name is "weiqi".
batulefou 3 weeks ago
show me the japanese reaktor. . inside pics please..
BloKK187 10 months ago
this is originated from China.
sureitan 1 year ago
those look like there from china because they ar really flat and dont have a bi-convex curve like japanese stones.
chobitsjunky 1 year ago
i love go!!
Shiakumu 2 years ago