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Isle of Lewis Chess Men. Missing description[All Comments] [Add Comment or Rating]
ST wrote on Tue, Aug 12, 2003 08:21 PM UTC:
I saw an Isle of Lewis set that had a castle for a rook. Does anyone know more about this?

Charles Gilman wrote on Sun, May 4, 2003 08:41 AM UTC:
I was intrigued at the reference to Uig, as the only Uig that I had heard
of was a port in NW Skye giving access to Harris, a southern peninsula of
Lewis. Examination of a map revealed that Lewis also had an Eye peninsula
and an unnamed peninsula dominated by the village of Aird Uig. Presumably
this last is the Uig peninsula. Note that a 'peninsular' is a native or
resident of a peninsula.
	The news that the colour has faded is no surprise, as the Elgin Marbles
arrived at the British Museum similarly age-worn, as it was in lifelike
colours and surrounded by columns in Legoesque primaries. One can only
wonder what kind of chess sets would have been made if this tradition of
tinted sculpture had still been going when Chess reached Europe!

Andrew Dunn wrote on Sun, Apr 27, 2003 01:19 PM UTC:Good ★★★★
A couple of other points of information. On the island of Lewis itself, the
chess pieces are known as the 'Uig Chessmen'. Uig being the name of the
peninsular with the beach where the chessmen were found.

The pieces are now kept in the British Museum in London where they are
usually on display (but not always?). The museum gift shop sells several
versions of reproduction chess sets based on casts of the original
pieces.

I think it is not quite acurate to say they are a 'complete set of
chessmen'. In fact the pieces appear to come from four incomplete sets.
There are four styles of king for example. However the pieces are similar
enough that a complete set can be constructed.

Also the pieces are now almost all ivory white, most of the red colouring
of the 'black' pieces having been lost through poor conservation. The
carving is still very fine however.

Charles Gilman wrote on Sun, Mar 30, 2003 08:43 AM UTC:
Three points: (1) If I remember rightly, Norse had a word similar to Rook
which meant 'brave warrior', and this may have influenced the design of
the Rooks.
(2) The anonymous contributor is right to draw attention to the misuse of
'English'. Using 'England' for all of Britain is like using
'California' for the whole U.S. West Coast. In fact as England is
Britain's Southeast lobe and Scotland its Northwest one, and the Hebrides
are in Scotland's Northwest corner, they are far indeed from England -
further than all of Belgium and much of northern France.
(3) These chessmen are not the only link between Chess, walruses, and the
name Lewis. The second of Lewis Carroll's Alice books features the Walrus
and the Carpenter, and in the array at the start the Walrus is on square
c8, highly appropriate for a tusker. The Carpenter is next door on b8,
reflecting that in lathe-turned sets Knights require the most post-turning
craftsmanship.

bernard wrote on Mon, Apr 22, 2002 04:31 PM UTC:Excellent ★★★★★
what is the history of the design of the rook?

Anonymous wrote on Thu, Mar 28, 2002 12:00 AM UTC:
A small point, but the Isle of Lewis is not an English island - it is in Scotland, as you point out later in your text. England and Scotland are different countries within the United Kingdom of Great Britain (i.e. the big island that has England, Scotland and Wales in it) and Northern Ireland (on the next door island that has Ireland on it as well). Otherwise a good site!

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