Central Asian games for kids - horse races, wrestling, and archery

Central Asian Games


Mongolian wrestling today

People in Central Asia played games that helped them get better at skills they would need in their lives. They needed to ride horses well, and they liked to race their horses or play polo on their horses.

People also needed to be good fighters. They liked to wrestle to get better at hand to hand fighting. People wrestled especially during the festival of Naadam, in late July or early August. In Mongolian wrestling, you fought in any open grassy area. You won when you got your opponent to touch the ground with his upper body or elbow (or, in some versions, any part of his body except his feet).

Wrestlers
Wrestlers from Samarkand
(Uzbekistan, 600s AD)

People also held archery contests, shooting with a bow and arrow at targets. Both men and women competed in these games; one example is the story of Alpamysh and Barchin.

Why did people want to punch Socrates?

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Where did Egyptians bury your liver?

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How old are the Rocky Mountains?

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What does a half-timbered house look like?

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How do you spin wool?
(a project)

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In Russia, in the western part of Central Asia, people also used snowshoes and wooden cross-country skis both to get around and for fun. People also played games in the snow like building snow forts and skating on the ice on wooden skates.

Central Asian board games
Learn by Doing - Central Asian games

Tales told in Tents Empire of the Mongolians

Tales Told in Tents: Stories from Central Asia by Sally Pomme Clayton (2000). For kids.
Empire Of The Mongolians, by Michael Burgan (2005). Young adult.

Islamic games
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