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Games of chance
involving "dice" have been around since the dawn of
civilization. The earliest dice were probably shaped
from animal bone or carved from hardwoods like ebony
and oak. We know that Roman soldiers tossed pig knuckles
onto their shields more than two thousand years ago
in a game some called "bones". But where did Craps come
from - and how did it get that name?
The answer to
both questions is certainly open to debate, but here
is one take on the convoluted journey from pig knuckles
to a casino classic:
Arabs adopted
the Legionnaire's pastime of "throwing the bones" (tossing
dice) when they expanded into former Roman provinces.
They called their small, numbered cubes "azzahr". At
some time during trade with Europeans in the Middle
Ages, this dice game came back across the Mediterranean
to be adopted by the French as "hasar" or "hasard".
During the interminable wars between France and England
during the 13th and 14th Centuries, English knights
brought the game home as "hazard" - meaning to take
a chance or to put at risk (as in "hazard a guess").
As the English
played the game, they called the lowest roll "crabs".
In the aftermath of yet another war, French soldiers
picked up this variation from their English prisoners
but, maintaining their linguistic independence, used
the French word "crabes". Early in the 18th Century,
French colonists took the game to the Canadian wilderness.
As England extended its reach north from the American
colonies, some of the displaced French-speaking Canadians
migrated to Louisiana where, by the end of the century,
a simplified version of Hazard lost its English name
and became known simply as "creps", the Cajun spelling
of crabes.
As Cajun riverboat
men journeyed up the Mississippi, the venerable dice
game was again introduced to English speakers, this
time American frontiersmen, who adopted the game and
corrupted the name to "craps". As Americans spread out
across the West, they made craps a mainstay of every
saloon and casino in the land. After the U.S. Civil
War, a dice maker introduced an innovation that made
imperfectly manufactured dice a non-issue: players could
bet for or against the roller. As the popularity of
craps continued to grow, various bets (like the Hardways
and Horn bets) were incorporated to add some spice and
give players more ways to win.
Today,
craps is one of the most popular games in any casino.
Craps tables are easy to spot on the casino floor -
they're the ones where large crowds have gathered round
to watch the thrilling action in rapt fascination.
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