Tangram History
Tangram History
Game Manuals · PDF
| Filename | Tangram_History.pdf |
|---|---|
| Size | 0.02 MB |
| Subsection | Tangram History |
| Downloads | 0 |
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Tangram History
Tangram is a puzzle game that can be enjoyed by the entire
family members. It does not require an inordinate amount of skill-
just patience, time and, above all, imagination! There are hundreds
of dissection puzzles-plane or solid figures cut into various
pieces. Tangram is the most outstanding of all the dissection
puzzles.
Little is known for certain about the inventor or the origin
of the Tangram. Even the origin of the name is obscure.
According to Samuel Loyd, the American puzzle expert, the
God Tan invented the puzzle 4,000 years ago and described it in the
Seven Books of Tan. Each volume contained over 1,000 puzzles which
were supposed to illustrate the creation of the world and the origin
of species. The seven pieces were taken from the sun, the moon and
the five planets of Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Mercury and Venus. His
story later uncovered as a baseless elaborate and scholarly spoof.
According to some, the name Tangram is a corruption of the
obsolete English word trangam, which meant a puzzle or trinket.
Other says it was derived from the Cantonese riverboat tanka girls
who entertained American sailors. Other explains that the word was
derived from the Tang Dynasty of China. One story tells that Tangram
was invented by a man named Tan accidently while he tried to put
broken pieces of a porcelain tile. In Asia, it is called 'Seven
Plates of Wisdom'.
The earliest known reference is a wood cut from 1780 by
Utamaro. The earliest known book was published in 1813 in China. It
seems certain that it is already old in 1813. One of Tangram-like
puzzles first appeared in a book published in Japan in 1742.
Scholars assume that Tangram began in Orient before 18th century and
then spread westward. By 1818, Tangram publications had appeared in
the Unite States, Germany, Italy, France and England. It swept
through Europe and America at the beginning of 19th century and its
popularity continues to this day. In 19th century China, it was so
popular that the shape of the pieces found their way into the design
of dishes, lacquer boxes and even tables.
Toward the end of 19th century, a German industrialist began
to produce stone versions of Tangram and other dissection puzzles
under the name of 'The Anchor Puzzle'. The Anchor puzzles were so
successful that over 30 new designs of puzzle sets were followed.
During the World War I, its popularity reached to the highest level
among the troops in the trenches of both sides. Thomas Edison and U.
S. President Grover Cleveland publicly endorsed the puzzles in the
puzzle booklets.
There were many other famous fans of Tangram. During his
exile in St. Helena, Napoleon found in the Tangram an absorbing
interest. Literary men like Lewis Carroll and Edgar Allan Poe are
known to have played the game extensively.
Tangram has been loved by many as entertainment, educational
and mathematical tools. It is said that Pythagorean theorem was
discove…
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