Oware is an abstract strategy "pit and pebble" board game played worldwide. There are slight variations to the game, i.e. number of players, layout and strategies. Its origin is debatable, but it is widely believed to be of Asante origin. It is called different names in different cultures, but it is popular throughout West Africa and the Caribbean. Sylvain Meinrad Xavier de Golbèry (1742-1822) was a captain in the French military who explored the Senegambia region to provide economic, social, and political information for the French government. In describing this engraving, Golbèry wrote, "the young Foulha [Fula], Manding [Madingo], and Jolof Negresses are passionately fond of a game, which they call ouri; it is a complex game, which they study attentively, and pride themselves on playing with propriety. . . and yet it is only played by women" (p. 422-424). Another translation of this work (London, 1803), by William Mudford, with some variations in wording, contains the same image, but reversed.
A Young Negress, Studying the Game of Ouri
SI-OB-1080
1780s
A Young Negress, Studying the Game of Ouri
Sylvain Meinrad Xavier de Golbèry, Travels in Africa, performed during the years 1785, 1786, and 1787, in the western countries of that continent . . . translated from the French, without abridgement, by Francis Blagdon (London, 1802 [first published, Paris, 1802]), vol. 2, facing p. 423.
French
Pre-Colonial Africa: Society, Polity, Culture
Africa--Voltaic
Sylvain-Meinrad-Xavier de Golbèry, Travels in Africa, performed during the years 1785, 1786, and 1787, in the western countries of that continent . . . translated from the French, without abridgement, by Francis Blagdon (London, 1802 [alsopublished, Paris, 1802]), vol. 2, facing p. 423.
Jerome Handler; Michael Tuite; Henry B. Lovejoy Graduate Research Assistants: Tiffany Beebe; Travis May
27-Dec-12
Golbery1