Image series 37 / 2024: Pawn, Queen, King, Horse
Medieval Chess Pieces
Over 1,000 years ago, the game of chess found its way from the Orient to Europe. Chess pieces from this period are very rare. However, they are occasionally found during excavations at castles and aristocratic courts.
In 2005, for example, archaeologists found two chess pieces, a queen and a pawn, in Sendenhorst. Now a well-preserved knight has been discovered at the castle stone near Holzelfingen. The eyes and mane of the four-centimetre-high horse figure are sculpted. By analysing this chess piece in detail, the researchers hope to gain a variety of insights into the chess world of the medieval aristocracy and the European game of chess.
„Medieval game collection unearthed“
Drei Bauern (BM 126-8, 132-44), Ausschnitt, zweite Hälfte 12. Jahrhundert, Walroßzahn, London; Mediathek, Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf, Institut für Kunstgeschichte
Schachfiguren: Dame und Bauer, 11. bis 12. Jahrhundert, Tierknochen, Dame: Pferd; Upload-Datenbank, prometheus – Das verteilte digitale Bildarchiv für Forschung & Lehre
Lewis-Schachfiguren, gefunden 1831 (norwegisch), Ausschnitt, Drittes Viertel 12. Jahrhundert, Walrosszahn, 10,2 × 5,7 × 6,2 cm, London; Imago, Humboldt-Universität Berlin, Institut für Kunst- und Bildgeschichte
Chess piece, Series: The Lewis Chessmen, 1150-1200, walrus ivory, Height: 94 millimetres, Width: 40.71 millimetres, Depth: 30.48 millimetres, London; Upload-Datenbank, prometheus – Das verteilte digitale Bildarchiv für Forschung & Lehre
König (The Lewis Chessmen), 1150-1200, Walroßzahn, London; Mediathek, Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf, Institut für Kunstgeschichte