Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Shogi> ?p ?o }
- Shogi abstract "Shogi (将棋, shōgi) (/ˈʃoʊɡiː/, Japanese: [ɕo̞ːɡi] or [ɕo̞ːŋi]), also known as Japanese chess or the Generals' Game, is a two-player strategy board game in the same family as Western (international) chess, chaturanga, makruk, shatranj and xiangqi, and is the most popular of a family of chess variants native to Japan. Shōgi means general's (shō 将) board game (gi 棋).The earliest predecessor of the game, chaturanga, originated in India in the 6th century, and sometime in the 10th to 12th centuries xiangqi (Chinese chess) was brought to Japan where it spawned a number of variants. Shogi in its present form was played as early as the 16th century, while a direct ancestor without the \"drop rule\" was recorded from 1210 in a historical document Nichūreki, which is an edited copy of Shōchūreki and Kaichūreki from the late Heian period (c. 1120).According to The Chess Variant Pages :Perhaps the enduring popularity of shogi can be attributed to its ‘drop rule’; it was the first chess variant wherein captured pieces could be returned to the board to be used as one's own. David Pritchard credits the drop rule to the practice of 16th century mercenaries who switched loyalties when captured—no doubt as an alternative to execution.".
- Shogi genre Abstract_strategy_game.
- Shogi genre Board_game.
- Shogi thumbnail Shogi.jpg?width=300.
- Shogi wikiPageExternalLink 81dojo.com.
- Shogi wikiPageExternalLink Rules_and_Manners_of_Shogi.
- Shogi wikiPageExternalLink 06htzgcug.
- Shogi wikiPageExternalLink play?rules=Shogi.
- Shogi wikiPageExternalLink shogi.htm.
- Shogi wikiPageExternalLink BCMGames.
- Shogi wikiPageExternalLink shogi.html.
- Shogi wikiPageExternalLink shogi.html.
- Shogi wikiPageExternalLink shogi.html.
- Shogi wikiPageExternalLink shogi.htm.
- Shogi wikiPageExternalLink index_e.html.
- Shogi wikiPageExternalLink rules.
- Shogi wikiPageExternalLink www.shogi.es.
- Shogi wikiPageExternalLink BP.
- Shogi wikiPageExternalLink Njun15-05.txt.
- Shogi wikiPageExternalLink shogi.html.
- Shogi wikiPageExternalLink engindex.htm.
- Shogi wikiPageExternalLink view_play_list?p=587865CAE59EB84A&page=1.
- Shogi wikiPageExternalLink spearmain.html.
- Shogi wikiPageExternalLink shogipage.html.
- Shogi wikiPageExternalLink shogi-japanese-chess-print-and-play.
- Shogi wikiPageID "27739".
- Shogi wikiPageLength "70261".
- Shogi wikiPageOutDegree "156".
- Shogi wikiPageRevisionID "704883315".
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink 81diver.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Abstract_strategy_game.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Algebraic_notation_(chess).
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Begin_Japanology.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Bishop_(chess).
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Board_game.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Bushido.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Category:Abstract_strategy_games.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Category:Chess_variants.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Category:Japanese_games.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Category:Japanese_words_and_phrases.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Category:Shogi.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Category:Traditional_board_games.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Cercidiphyllum.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Chaturanga.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Check_(chess).
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Checkmate.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Chess.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink China.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_dragon.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Chu_shogi.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Computer_shogi.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Crazyhouse.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Dai_dai_shogi.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Dai_shogi.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Dan_(rank).
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink David_Pritchard_(chess_player).
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink De_facto.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Edo_period.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Ellipsis.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Fairy_chess_piece.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink File:MacShogi_modified.png.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Game_complexity.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink General_officer.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Go_(game).
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Hans_L._Bodlaender.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Heian_dai_shogi.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Heian_period.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Heian_shogi.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Hifumi_Kato.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Incense.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink India.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Japan.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Japanese_numerals.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink John_Fairbairn_(writer).
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Kana_Satomi.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Kanji.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Kannazuki.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink King_(chess).
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Kinjirō_Sekine.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Knight_(chess).
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Kozo_Masuda.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Kyū.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Kōfuku-ji.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Lance.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink List_of_chess_variants.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink List_of_world_championships_in_mind_sports.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Maka_dai_dai_shogi.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Makoto_Nakahara.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Makruk.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink March_Comes_in_Like_a_Lion.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Meijin.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Meijin_(shogi).
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Mercenary.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink NHK_World.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Nara_Prefecture.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Naruto.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Newspaper.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Orthogonality.
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Pawn_(chess).
- Shogi wikiPageWikiLink Perpetual_check.