on The Public Domain Review:
Players moving pieces along a track to be first to reach a goal was the archetypal board game format of the 18th and 19th centuries.
Alex Andriesse looks at one popular incarnation in which these pieces progress chronologically through history itself, usually with some not-so-subtle ideological, moral, or national ideal as the object of the game.
Ten thousand years ago, in the Neolithic period, before human beings began making pottery, we were playing games on flat stone boards drilled with two or more rows of holes.
By the Early Dynastic Period in Ancient Egypt, three millennia later, board games were already represented in hieroglyphs. And on the wall of Nefertari’s tomb, built in the twelfth or thirteenth century BCE, someone painted the queen playing Senet, one of three Ancient Egyptian board games whose pieces have come down to us, along with Mehen and Hounds and Jackals.
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Reblogged this on Die Erste Eslarner Zeitung – Aus und über Eslarn, sowie die bayerisch-tschechische Region!.
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I recently learned the wood tiles of Scrabble are used for Divination Fortune Telling. Interesting modern history, is it not?
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WOW 😱
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Such in intriguing article!
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Glad you enjoyed it, Becky 😃
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