ebook img

Ancient Egyptians at play : board games across borders PDF

244 Pages·2016·20.06 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Ancient Egyptians at play : board games across borders

Bloomsbury Egyptology Series editor: Nicholas Reeves Ancient Egyptian Technology and Innovation, Ian Shaw Archaeologists, Tourists, Interpreters, Rachel Mairs and Maya Muratov Asiatics in Middle Kingdom Egypt, Phyllis Saretta Burial Customs in Ancient Egypt, Wolfram Grajetzki Court Officials of the Egyptian Middle Kingdom, Wolfram Grajetzki The Egyptian Oracle Project, edited by Robyn Gillam and Jeffrey Jacobson Hidden Hands, Stephen Quirke The Middle Kingdom of Ancient Egypt, Wolfram Grajetzki Performance and Drama in Ancient Egypt, Robyn Gillam Contents List of Illustrations Acknowledgments Egyptian Chronology 1 Ancient Egyptians at Play: An Introduction A range of casting devices Board games across borders: Identifying Egyptian games 2 Mehen and men: The First Signs of Egyptian Board Games Mehen: The game of the coiled serpent Mehen boards Mehen pieces Rules of mehen Pictorial evidence Textual evidence Archaeological evidence and social context The demise of mehen in Egypt Mehen in Nubia Mehen in the Levant and Mesopotamia Mehen in Cyprus and the Aegean Men Two rows of thirteen and forty-two and pool 3 Senet across Borders Early evidence for senet Old Kingdom: Ritual use and graffiti Middle Kingdom: Changes and consistency New Kingdom: Religious meaning Later history of senet Playing pieces Senet in Nubia Senet in the Levant Senet in Cyprus The game of thirty-three 4 The Game of Twenty: A Foreign Acquisition Origins and chronological distribution Beni Hasan playing scenes Ancient names Boards for the game of twenty Special squares and decorations Archaeological contexts Rules for the game of twenty “Uniting of the twenty squares” or thirty-one The Levant and Cyprus: Games as heirlooms 5 The Game of Hounds and Jackals: From Thebes to Susa Boards for hounds and jackals Gaming pegs Beni Hasan playing scenes The game outside of Egypt Reconstructed rules Symbolism of the game The Coptic board game 6 Roman Board Games Crossing the Borders of Egypt The sources The game of five lines or πέντε γραμμαί Duodecim scripta or ludus duodecim scriptorum Latrunculi or ludus latrunculorum Merels or mill game Marbles Remaining configurations The borders of Egypt 7 Arab and Ottoman Invaders Scratching the Surface Graffiti games Seeja or siga Seeja playing rules Tâb Mancala 8 The Role of Board Games in Understanding Antiquity Spread of board games Religiosity of board games Site use Unidentified board games and new approaches References Author Index Subject Index Illustrations Figures All drawings, unless otherwise indicated, were made by Jennifer Steffey at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, who also designed the maps for each of the chapters. Dimensions of objects are indicated when available either as a scale on the photograph or in the caption. 1.1 Casting devices from Egypt and Sudan. 2.1 Map of sites mentioned in Chapter 2. 2.2 Mehen board demonstrating a Predynastic rendering of the game. 2.3 Mehen board bearing the name of Hor Aha. 2.4 Second Dynasty mehen board accompanied by spherical playing pieces. 2.5 Painting from the tomb of Hesy-Re showing mehen, senet and men. 2.6 Ivory mehen piece from Abydos in the form of a couchant lion. 2.7 Mehen game from Episkopi Phaneromeni, Cyprus. 3.1 Map of sites mentioned in Chapter 3. 3.2 Drawing of senet patterns, showing markings common during different periods. 3.3 Drawing of scene from the mastaba of Nikauhor showing senet playing. 3.4 Facsimile of a painting from the tomb of Nefertari. 3.5 Senet boards on terracotta platters from Twenty-Sixth Dynasty fortress at Tell Defenneh. 3.6 Playing pieces collected by F.G. Hilton Price. 3.7 Drawing of Merenptah playing senet. 3.8 Senet game from Arad, with drilled depressions as the playing spaces. 3.9 Senet game from Hazor, with the game of twenty on the opposite side. 3.10 Senet games from the Episkopi region, Cyprus. 3.11 Senet game of Late Period date, with the game of thirty-three on the opposite face. 4.1 Map of the game of twenty from the mid-third to the first millennium BCE. 4.2 The royal game of Ur with gaming pieces and tetrahedrons. 4.3 The game of twenty in the second and first millennia BCE, and the route of play. 4.4 Playing scenes A, B and C in the tombs of Baqet III and Khety, Beni Hasan. 4.5 Game of twenty from Thebes with senet on the opposite side. 4.6 Ostracon from Deir el-Medina. 4.7 Drawing of the Turin Papyrus with four games. 5.1 Map of the game of hounds and jackals during the second and first millennia BCE. 5.2 Game of hounds and jackals from Thebes. 5.3 Violin-shaped game board. 5.4 Drawing of hippopotamus-shaped game board. 5.5 Turtle stand or simulacra from Dra Abu el-Naga. 5.6 Playing scene in Beni Hasan, probably from Tomb 17. 5.7 Boards from the deposit of the temple of Inshushinak, Susa. 5.8 Reconstruction of the numbering sequence of the holes. 5.9 Coptic board game. 6.1 Map of sites mentioned in Chapters 6 and 7. 6.2 Example of a Roman games context at Palmyra, Syria. 6.3 Five lines at the Luxor temple and at Qasr al Ghweita. 6.4 Drawings of duodecim scripta boards from Qustul and Dawwi. 6.5 Duodecim scripta boards at Kom Ombo. 6.6 Drawing of a terracotta game board. 6.7 Latrunculi board at Kom Ombo. 6.8 Merels boards at Dendera, Kom el-Dekka, Kom Ombo and Silsila. 6.9 Drawing of a nine-men’s-morris board as found on a column at the Ramesseum. 6.10 Drawing of a marble lane. 6.11 Two unidentified game boards at Beni Hasan and Silsila. 6.12 Possible seeja board at the Kharga Oasis. 7.1 Example of an Arab or Ottoman games context at Petra, Jordan and on Sai Island, Sudan. 7.2 Placement of first pieces on a seeja board. 7.3 Examples of seeja boards at Silsila, Medamoud, and el-Kab. 7.4 Examples of tâb boards at el-Kab. 7.5 Drawing of a mancala board at the “Third Pyramid, Gizeh.” 7.6 Sudanese mancala boards carved in the temple of Tiye, Sedeinga, and on the temple of Soleb. Table 4.1 Table with types of marking and distinct shapes for special squares in Egypt. Acknowledgments First of all, we would like to thank Nick Reeves for initiating this book, Anna MacDiarmid and the staff at Bloomsbury Academic Press for their support in the process as well as two anonymous reviewers for their constructive and valuable comments. At the Metropolitan Museum of Art, we are indebted to the Department of Egyptian Art, led by Lila Acheson Wallace Curator in Charge Diana Craig Patch, for allowing us to study games in the collection, and in particular to Niv Allon, Elizabeth Fiorentino, Janice Kamrin, Marsha Hill, Adela Oppenheim, Catharine Roehrig, Morena Stefanova, as well as Ann Heywood from the Sherman Fairchild Center for Objects Conservation for their assistance in object or text studies and/or image requests. We wish to acknowledge the Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art, and Curator in Charge Joan Aruz, for their considerable support, and especially Blair Fowlkes-Childs, Elizabeth Knott and Michael Seymour for their contributions. Ben Haring and Olaf Kaper (Leiden University), Pavel Onderka (Narodni Muzeum, Prague), Rudolf Haensch (Kommision für Alte Geschichte und Epigraphik des Deutschen Archaeologischen Instituts), Dennys Frenez (Università di Bologna), Mark Kenoyer (University of Wisconsin), Jennifer Webb and David Frankel provided us with helpful information, and special mention should be made of our colleagues at Arizona State University, Nancy Serwint, Leif Jonsson and Kostalena Michelaki, as well as Annie Caubet (Musée du Louvre) and Francesco Tiradritti (Università di Enna Unikore) for their invaluable contribution to the progress of our research. Thanks to Dr. Abdel-Hamid (Egyptian Museum, Cairo), Sara Al-Ashmawi (Egyptian Museum, Cairo), Nadine Cherpion (Institut Français d’Archéologie Orientale, Cairo), Nevine Kamal (Institut Français d’Archéologie Orientale, Cairo), Yael Barschak (Israel Antiquities Authority), Christopher Sutherns (British Museum), Tracey Golding (Petrie Museum), Vincent Rondot (Musée du Louvre) and Isabelle Bardiès-Fronty (Musée de Cluny) for facilitating access to images and granting permission.

Description:
The rich history of Egypt has provided famous examples of board games played in antiquity. Each of these games provides evidence of contact between Egypt and its neighbours. From pre-dynastic rule to Arab and Ottoman invasions, Egypt's past is visible on game boards. This volume starts by introducin
See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.