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Hnefatafl began its life in Scandinavia. It probably
developed from a Roman war game, which in turn
developed from a game of the Greeks. In its
Scandinavian form, hnefatafl was taken through trade
and invasion to the British Isles, to Iceland, France,
Germany, the Ukraine and to Greenland. In addition to
many finds in its ancestral home, boards, pieces and
literature for many variants have been found in many
parts of northern Europe. The game flourished until
the arrival of chess. Just as hnefatafl had replaced
the earlier Roman game, so chess replaced hnefatafl as
the fashionable game for all classes. Also joining
this onslaught was the relatively new game of
draughts: against this two-pronged invasion, hnefatafl
stood little chance. Hnefatafl continued to linger in
remote districts after its fall from grace, and it is
from this late period that our best information
comes. Detailed information comes down to us about a
game in Wales in the sixteenth century, and in Lapland
in the eighteenth century. After this, however, the
light went out for a hundred years, until in the
nineteenth century the game was revived with an
American Civil War theme. Throughout the twentieth
century, more and more has been rediscovered about the
game. Archaeologists have uncovered many boards and
fragments, historians have thrown light upon old
passages once thought to refer to chess, and
reconstructionists have used all this information to
construct rules for the variants played on many
different sizes of board. Commercial companies and
modern cottage industries have manufactured sets for
the game, and some game designers have even designed
new games with hnefatafl as an obvious inspiration.
Click on the origins button
below for a journey into hnefatafl's past.
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