Fragmentary gaming board: game of 58 holes ca. 18th century B.C. Old Assyrian Trading Colony This fragment belongs to a group of carved ivories, mostly furniture elements, probably found at the site of a palace at Acemhöyük in central Anatolia. Like another piece in the Metropolitan Museums collection (36.70.37g), it was originally part of a gaming board for playing an ancient game known today as the game of fifty-eight holes. The game was played as a race between two players with game pieces in the form of pegs that were inserted into the holes making up each players track, as in the modern game of cribbage, although the two games are not related. Since the earliest gaming boards for the game of fifty-eight holes come from Egypt, such as an example from Thebes which still has its animal-headed pegs (Department of Egyptian Art, 26.7.1287), the game itself may have originated there. More than forty examples of boards of this type are known from Egypt and the Near East, including an ad

Fragmentary gaming board: game of 58 holes ca. 18th century B.C. Old Assyrian Trading Colony This fragment belongs to a group of carved ivories, mostly furniture elements, probably found at the site of a palace at Acemhöyük in central Anatolia. Like another piece in the Metropolitan Museums collection (36.70.37g), it was originally part of a gaming board for playing an ancient game known today as the game of fifty-eight holes. The game was played as a race between two players with game pieces in the form of pegs that were inserted into the holes making up each players track, as in the modern game of cribbage, although the two games are not related. Since the earliest gaming boards for the game of fifty-eight holes come from Egypt, such as an example from Thebes which still has its animal-headed pegs (Department of Egyptian Art, 26.7.1287), the game itself may have originated there. More than forty examples of boards of this type are known from Egypt and the Near East, including an ad
SuperStock offers millions of photos, videos, and stock assets to creatives around the world. This image of Fragmentary gaming board: game of 58 holes ca. 18th century B.C. Old Assyrian Trading Colony This fragment belongs to a group of carved ivories, mostly furniture elements, probably found at the site of a palace at Acemhöyük in central Anatolia. Like another piece in the Metropolitan Museums collection (36.70.37g), it was originally part of a gaming board for playing an ancient game known today as the game of fifty-eight holes. The game was played as a race between two players with game pieces in the form of pegs that were inserted into the holes making up each players track, as in the modern game of cribbage, although the two games are not related. Since the earliest gaming boards for the game of fifty-eight holes come from Egypt, such as an example from Thebes which still has its animal-headed pegs (Department of Egyptian Art, 26.7.1287), the game itself may have originated there. More than forty examples of boards of this type are known from Egypt and the Near East, including an ad by Piemags/PL Photography Limited is available for licensing today.
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