West Asian Games
The people of West Asia were known for gambling games in particular; the Greek historian Herodotus describes how the people of Lydia got through a famine in this way:
For many years, there was not enough to eat in Lydia
(in modern Turkey), because of bad
weather and not enough rain. Now the Lydians liked gambling a lot,
and so they decided that to save their food they would only eat on even
days. On odd days, to take their mind off how hungry they were, they
would play dice all day, and place
bets. Herodotus says that the Lydians lived this way for several years
(Herodotus is writing in the 400's BC; he
places this story around 600 BC).
Now this is just a story. The Lydians probably never really tried such
a silly plan. But it may show that the Greeks
thought of the Lydians as people who really enjoyed gambling with dice.
A little later on, around 100 AD, the Parthians were known for their horsemanship, and they played many games which were contests of skill, to see who was the best at riding horses, at shooting arrows at a target, and at throwing spears. Horse races, and betting on horse races, were very popular. At the same time, the Romans introduced Roman games to the western part of West Asia.
To find out more about West Asian games, check out these books from Amazon.com or from your library:
Find Out About Mesopotamia: What Life Was Like in Ancient Sumer, Babylon and Assyria, by Lorna Oakes (2004).
Everyday Life in Ancient Mesopotamia, by Jean Bottero and others (2001).
Daily Life in Ancient Mesopotamia, by Karen Rhea Nemet-Nejat (2002).
West Asian games during the Islamic Empire.

