Daramutu
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Daramutu is a traditional mancala game from
Sri Lanka Sri Lanka (, ; si, ශ්‍රී ලංකා, Śrī Laṅkā, translit-std=ISO (); ta, இலங்கை, Ilaṅkai, translit-std=ISO ()), formerly known as Ceylon and officially the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, is an ...
. It was first described in 1909 by the British engineer Henry Parker in his book '' Ancient Ceylon'' (1909). Traditionally, the game is only played by women.


Rules

The game's board (termed ''olinda-puruwa'') comprises 2 rows of 7 pits each. At game setup, four seeds are places in each pit. Seeds of '' Abrus precatorius'' are traditionally used. Each player controls one of the rows. At her turn, the player takes all the seeds in one of her pits and
sows Sow or SOW may refer to: * Sowing, the process of planting Female animals * Badger * Bear * Guinea pig * Hedgehog * Suidae ** Wild boar ** Pig Arts, entertainment and media * Sow (band), a musical project of Anna Wildsmith * "Sow", a poem by S ...
them. The first player to play may choose whether sowing occurs clockwise or counterclockwise; after that, all sowing will be done accordingly throughout the game. Sowing is called ''ihinawa''. If the last seed is sown in a pit that contains at least 3 seeds, relay-sowing applies. If the last seed falls in an empty pit, or in a pit with exactly one seed (called ''puta'', "son") or in a pit with exactly two seeds (''naga'', "figlia"), any seeds in the opposite pit are captured. Note that the player can either capture seeds from her own or from the opponent's row, depending on whether her sowing ends in the opponent's or her own row. When one of the players cannot move, the game is over. All remaining seeds are captured by the opponent, and the winner is the player who captured most seeds. Traditional mancala games Sri Lankan folklore {{game-stub