The present paper presents a die in its archaeological context, which is a rich grave in the region of Boeotia. It attempts to understand with what other items this gaming piece coexisted and why, as well as who was the person who played with it during lifetime. The Boeotian die is a solid cube made of clay that presents a peculiarity in its numbering system, for the face normally bearing six dots features twenty-five instead. The date of the die in the Archaic period and the sex of the deceased can be established from its associated grave-group which comprises 48 Boeotian (mostly bird bowls) and Late Corinthian vases, minor objects, such as spindle whorls, and gaming pieces from raw natural materials (such as pebbles, shells, a terracotta ...
In this article, an attempt is made to enrich the conventional archaeological picture of the much-di...
International audienceNever mind the bollocks? Aidoia aryballoi in the Archaic Mediterranean Out of ...
Inhumation inside ceramic vessels, conventionally termed “enchytrismos” in modern scholarship, is a ...
Gaming-pieces, dice, and game-boards are found in connection withburials at various times and places...
International audienceIn research on the history and archaeology of games, dice are typically auxili...
International audienceAmong the objects deposited in graves, gaming devices evidence recreational ac...
This paper is part of the ERC project Locus Ludi 741520. Board games were played in ancient Greece ...
International audienceIn 1963 two sets of gaming materials were excavated from a Meroitic necropo-li...
No AbstractIn 1958 a chest-shaped grave has been dug out in Neapolis Thessaloniki containing very im...
Gold foil is found in numerous burials in the Mediterranean dating to the early Mycenaean period an...
The assemblage of four cones (ivory, stone) and an astragalus marked with dots from Katsambas in Cre...
International audienceJewellery was frequently found in Late Bronze Age mortuary contexts on the Gre...
Papers from the second and third international symposia on symbolism at The Norwegian institute at A...
The characteristics of dice found in archaeological contexts assist in the understanding of historic...
International audienceThe assemblage of four cones (ivory, stone) and an astragalus marked with dots...
In this article, an attempt is made to enrich the conventional archaeological picture of the much-di...
International audienceNever mind the bollocks? Aidoia aryballoi in the Archaic Mediterranean Out of ...
Inhumation inside ceramic vessels, conventionally termed “enchytrismos” in modern scholarship, is a ...
Gaming-pieces, dice, and game-boards are found in connection withburials at various times and places...
International audienceIn research on the history and archaeology of games, dice are typically auxili...
International audienceAmong the objects deposited in graves, gaming devices evidence recreational ac...
This paper is part of the ERC project Locus Ludi 741520. Board games were played in ancient Greece ...
International audienceIn 1963 two sets of gaming materials were excavated from a Meroitic necropo-li...
No AbstractIn 1958 a chest-shaped grave has been dug out in Neapolis Thessaloniki containing very im...
Gold foil is found in numerous burials in the Mediterranean dating to the early Mycenaean period an...
The assemblage of four cones (ivory, stone) and an astragalus marked with dots from Katsambas in Cre...
International audienceJewellery was frequently found in Late Bronze Age mortuary contexts on the Gre...
Papers from the second and third international symposia on symbolism at The Norwegian institute at A...
The characteristics of dice found in archaeological contexts assist in the understanding of historic...
International audienceThe assemblage of four cones (ivory, stone) and an astragalus marked with dots...
In this article, an attempt is made to enrich the conventional archaeological picture of the much-di...
International audienceNever mind the bollocks? Aidoia aryballoi in the Archaic Mediterranean Out of ...
Inhumation inside ceramic vessels, conventionally termed “enchytrismos” in modern scholarship, is a ...