Skip to main content
Have a personal or library account? Click to login
A Game on the Edge: An Attempt to Unravel the Gordian Knot of tafl Games Cover

A Game on the Edge: An Attempt to Unravel the Gordian Knot of tafl Games

By:   
Open Access
|Apr 2021

References

  1. Ashton, John C. (2010) “Linnaeus’s Game of Tablut and its Relationship to the Ancient Viking Game of Hnefatafl”, in The Heroic Age: A Journal of Early Mediaeval Northwestern Europe 13. August. np. Available online: <http://www.heroicage.org/issues/13/ashton.php> Date of access: January 2020.
  2. Bayless, Martha (2005) “Alea, Tæfl and Related Games: Vocabulary and Context”. In O’Brien O’Keeffe, K. and Orchard, A., eds, Latin Learning and English Lore: Studies in Anglo-Saxon Literature for Michael Lapidge. Volume II. University of Toronto Press. London.10.3138/9781442676589-033
  3. Bell, Robert Charles (1979) Board and Table Games from Many Civilisations. Revised edition. Two volumes bound as one. Dover. New York.
  4. Blunt, Wilfrid (1971) The Compleat Naturalist: A Life of Linnaeus. Collins. London.
  5. Brundle, Anne (2004) “The graffito on the gaming board from the Red Craig house, Birsay, Orkney”, in Papers and Pictures in honour of Daphne Home Lorrimer MBE. Orkney Archaeological Trust. No pagination. Available online: <http://www.orkneyjar.com/archaeology/dhl/papers/ab/index.html >. Date of access: December 2019.
  6. Crawford, Matthew R. (2019) The Eusebian Canon Tables: Ordering Textual Knowledge in Late Antiquity. Oxford University Press. Oxford.10.1093/oso/9780198802600.001.0001
  7. Duggan, Eddie (2016) “Strange Games: some Iron Age examples of a four-player board game?” in Duggan, E. and Gill, D W. J. (eds) From Cardboard to Keyboard: Proceedings of the XVII Annual Colloquium of the International Board Game Studies Association. UCS Ipswich 21–24 May 2014. Associação Ludus. Lisbon. pp. 77–101.
  8. Falkener, Edward (1961) Games Ancient and Oriental and How to Play Them. Dover. New York.
  9. Finkel, Irving (2007) “On the rules for The Royal Game of Ur”, in I. L. Finkel, ed. Ancient Board Games in Perspective: Papers from the 1990 British Museum Colloquium with additional contributions. British Museum Press. London. pp. 16–32.
  10. Fiske, Willard D. (1905) Chess in Iceland and in Icelandic Literature: With Historical Notes on Other Table-Games. Florentine Typographical Society. Florence.
  11. Hall, Mark. (2011) “Playtime: The Material Culture of Gaming in Medieval Scotland”, in Cowan, T. and Henderson, L. (eds) A History of Everyday Life in Medieval Scotland 1000-1600. Edinburgh University Press. Edinburgh. pp 145–68.
  12. Hall, Mark (2016) “Unfinished Gaming Board”, in Carver, M, Garner-Lahire, J and Spall, C. Portmahomack on Tarbat Ness: Changing Ideologies in North-East Scotland, Sixth to Sixteenth Century AD. Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. Edinburgh. Available online: <doi:10.9750/9781908332165>;. Date of access: December 2019.
  13. Hall, Mark and Katherine Forsyt. (2011) “Roman Rules? The introduction of board games to Britain and Ireland”, in Antiquity. December. pp. 1325–1338.
  14. Hencken, H., Harrington, G., Movius, H., Stelfox, A., & Roche, G. (1935). “Ballinderry Crannog No. 1”, in Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy. Section C: Archaeology, Celtic Studies, History, Linguistics, Literature. 43 pp. 103–239 (175–190). Available online: <http://www.jstor.org/stable/25515994>. Date of access: December 2019.
  15. Helmfrid, Sten (2005) “Hnefatafl: The Strategic board Game of the Vikings”. Available online: <http://hem.bredband.net/b512479/>. Date of access: December 2019.
  16. Hurley, Maurice F., Orla M. B Scully and Sarah W. J McCutcheon (eds) (1992) Late Viking Age and Medieval Waterford: Excavations 1986-1992. Waterford Corporation. Waterford.
  17. Johnson, Ruth (1999) “Ballinderry Crannog No. 1: A Reinterpretation”, in Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy. Section C: Archaeology, Celtic Studies, History, Linguistics, Literature. Vol. 99C No. 2 pp. 23–71. Available online: <https://www.jstor.org/stable/25516233> Date of access: December 2019.
  18. Lapidge, Michael (1992) “Israel the Grammarian in Anglo-Saxon England”, in: Westra, H. J. (ed.) From Athens to Chartres: Neoplatonism and Medieval Thought: Studies in Honour of Edouard Jeauneau. Studien und Texte zur Geistesgeschichte des Mittelalters 35. E. J. Brill. Leiden. pp. 97–114.
  19. Lewis, Frank (1943) “Gwerin Ffristial a thawlbwrdd”, in Transactions of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion. pp. 185–205. Available online: <http://hdl.handle.net/10107/1412278>. Date of access: December 2019.
  20. Linnaeus, Carl (1732) Iter Lapponicum. The Linnaean Collections: Linnaean Manuscripts. The Linnaean Society of London. Available online: <http://linnean-online.org/165368/>. Date of access: December 2019.
  21. Linnaeus, Carl (1811) Lachesis Laponica, or a Tour in Lapland. Translated by J. E. Smith. Two volumes. White and Cochrane. London10.5962/bhl.title.104488
  22. Linnaeus, Carl (1913) Iter Lapponicum. Skrifter af Carl von Linné. Volume V. Second edition, with attachments and notes delivered to Th. M. Fries. Upsala. Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. Available online: <https://archive.org/details/iterlapponicumvlinn/>.
  23. McEneaney, Eamonn and Ryan, Rosemary (2004) Waterford Treasures a Guide to the Historical and Archaeological Treasures of Waterford City. Waterford Museum of Treasures. Waterford.
  24. MacLees, Christopher (1990) “Games people played. Gaming-pieces, boards and dice from excavations in the medieval town of Trondheim, Norway”, in Fortiden I Trondheim bygrunn: Folkebibliotekstomten meddelelser, 24. Riksantikvaren. Trondheim. Available online: <https://www.ntnu.no/museum/nidark/fortiden-i-trondheimsbygrunn>. Date of access: December 2019.
  25. MacWhite, Eóin. (1947) “Early Irish board games”, in Éigse: A Journal of Irish Studies. 5. pp. 23–35. Available online <http://www.unicorngarden.com/eigse/eigse01.htm>. Date of access: December 2019.
  26. Michaelsen, Peter (2010) “Dablo — A Sami Game”, in Variant Chess 8 (64). pp. 218–221. Available online: <https://www.mayhematics.com/v/vol8/vc64d.pdf> Date of access: January 2020.
  27. Murray, Harold J. R. (1913) A History of Chess. Clarendon Press. Oxford.
  28. Murray, Harold J. R. (1952) A History of Board Games Other Than Chess. Clarendon Press. Oxford.
  29. Nielsen, Aage (1998–2020) Play Hnefatafl Online [website] Available online: <http://aagenielsen.dk/>. Date of access: January 2020.
  30. Nugent, Brian (2011) The Irish invented Chess! Revised edition. Lulu. Corstown.
  31. Parlett, David (1999) The Oxford History of Board Games. Oxford University Press. Oxford.
  32. Parlett, David (2016) “What’s a Ludeme?” in Game & Puzzle Design 2 (2). pp. 81–84.
  33. Price, Neil, Charlotte Hedenstierna-Jonson, et al (2019). “Viking warrior women? Reassessing Birka chamber grave Bj.581”, in Antiquity 93 (367) pp. 181–198. Available online: <doi:10.15184/aqy.2018.258>;. Date of access: December 2019.
  34. Riddler, I. (2007) “In pursuit of hnefatafl”. In: I. L. Finkel, ed. Ancient Board Games in Perspective: Papers from the 1990 British Museum Colloquium with additional contributions. British Museum Press. London. pp. 256–262.
  35. Ritchie, Anna (1976) “Excavation of Pictish and Viking-age farmsteads at Buckquoy, Orkney”, in Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 108 pp. 174–227. Available online: <http://journals.socantscot.org/index.php/psas/article/view/8970/8938> Date of access: December 2019.
  36. Robertson, Armitage Joseph (1923) The Times of St Dunstan: the Ford lectures delivered in the University of Oxford in the Michaelmas term, 1922. Clarendon Press. Oxford.
  37. Sanvito, Alessandro (2002) “Das Rätsel des Kelten-Spiels”, in Board Game Studies Journal 5 pp. 9–24.
  38. Schädler, Ulrich (2007) “The Doctor’s Game: New Light on the History of Ancient Board Games”, in Crummy, P. et al. Stanway: An Elite Burial Site at Camulodunum. Britannia Monograph Series 24. Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies. London. pp. 359–375.
  39. Schmittberger, R. Wayne (1992) New Rules for Classic Games. John Wiley & Sons. New York.
  40. Simpson, W. G. (1972) “A Gaming-Board of Ballinderry-Type from Knockanboy, Derrykeighan, Co. Antrim”, in Ulster Journal of Archaeology. Third series. 35. pp. 63–65. Available online: <www.jstor.org/stable/20567715>. Date of access: December 2019.
  41. Skalk (n.d.) “Nefatavl: Rules of the Game”, Skalk. [website] Available online: <https://www.skalk.dk/media/1452/nefatavl_game-instructions-in-english.pdf>. Date of access: January 2020.
  42. Sterckx, Claude (1970) “Les jeux de damiers celtiques”, in Annales de Bretagne. 77 (4) pp. 597-609. Available online: <https://www.persee.fr/doc/abpo_0003-391x_1970_num_77_4_2551>. Date of access: January 2020.
  43. Walker, Damian (2014) Reconstructing Hnefatafl. Revised edition. Lightning Press. Milton Keynes.
  44. Whittaker, Helène (2006) “Game-Boards and Gaming-Pieces in Funerary Contexts in the Northern European Iron Age”, in Nordlit 10 (2) pp. 103–112. Available online: <doi:10.7557/13.1802>;. Date of access: December 2019.
  45. Wood, Michael (2005) In Search of The Dark Ages. Revised edition. BBC Books. London.
  46. Youngs, S. M. (1983) “The Gaming Pieces”, in Bruce-Mitford, R. The Sutton Hoo Ship Burial. Volume III: Late Roman and Byzantine Silver, Hanging Bowls, Drinking Vessels, Cauldrons and Other Containers, Textiles, The Lyre, Pottery Bottles and Other Items. Edited by Angela Care Evans. British Museum Press. London. pp. 853–874.
  47. Zorgdrager, Nellejet (2008) “Linnaeus as Ethnographer of Sami Culture”. TijdSchrift voor Skandinavistiek 29 (1 & 2) pp. 45–76. Available online: <https://rjh.ub.rug.nl/tvs/article/view/10740/8311> Date of access: January 2020.
Language: English
Page range: 99 - 132
Published on: Apr 27, 2021
Published by: Ludus Association
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2021 Eddie Duggan, published by Ludus Association
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.