Archaeologists Uncover an Ancient Roman Game Board at Hadrian’s Wall

Disir

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Life in the Roman legions is often presented as constant excitement, with endless military campaigns subduing people throughout Europe and the Near East. But the truth is Roman soldiers had down time. As evidenced by a gridded gaming board recently uncovered during excavations of Hadrian's Wall, a 73-mile-long fortification in what's now northern England that once delineated the northern frontier of the Roman Empire, soldiers played games to pass the time.


Tony Henderson at Chronicle Live reports that the cracked stone game board was uncovered late last month while archaeologists excavated a third century building behind the bath house at Vindolanda, one of 14 forts along Hadrian's Wall. It’s believed that the board was likely used in the bath house, but was repurposed as a floor stone in the adjacent building after it was broken.

It’s unknown how the board was cracked, but a spokesperson for the site tells Henderson it could be a colorful story. “You can almost picture the losing Roman tipping the board up in frustration, causing it to break,” he says.

Read more: Archaeologists Uncover an Ancient Roman Game Board at Hadrian's Wall | Smart News | Smithsonian


They were already playing Risk.
 
this is great news; the Romans had a 73 mile fortification along side the English border & they made England pay for the wall.

Sounds like a great fantasy & I'm sure the board games offered some level of legitimacy to the Romans's claims that England would pay for the wall.

What's old is new again!!!
 

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