LEWIS Historia.
LEWIS Historia.
LEWIS Historia.
OF
THE LEWIS CHESSMEN
Gudmundur G. Thorarinsson
The publishers wish to acknowledge with thanks
the assistance given by
Anna C. Benassi
Geirþrúður Anna Guðmundsdóttir
Chuck E. Cors
Helgi Guðmundsson
Jón G. Friðjónsson
Jónas Kristjónsson
Þór Magnússon
Copyright ©
Guðmundur G. Þórarinsson
Einar S. Einarsson
Published by
GALLERY CHESS
Reykjavik
Homepage:
www.leit.is/lewis
Printed by
LETURPRENT
Dugguvogi 12
Reykjavik
2010
PREFACE
Around 1830 A.D., on the sandy shores of the Isle of Lewis—one of the isles of Outer Hebrides—
there were found chess pieces that are believed to have been made before the year 1200.
The chessmen are made primarily from walrus tusks and the consensus among scholars is that
they are great works of art. The Lewis Chessmen, as they have come to be known, are the oldest
chess pieces in the world that bear the features of modern chessmen.
The origin and surrounding mystery of these chessmen has been a source of undying speculation
by various publications and institutions, including the National Museum of Scotland and the Brit-
ish Museum which regards the Lewis Chessmen as being among its most remarkable relics and
masterpieces.
Until recently, the consensus among scholars and historians was that the chessmen originated
from Throndheim, Norway. In the following paper on the history of the Lewis Chessmen, G.G.
Thorarinsson puts forward a compelling new theory about the enigma of the origin of these trea-
sured artifacts.
One of GGTH’s main arguments hinges on the fact that chess is, in essence, a war game. And yet
the Lewis chessmen are the first pieces where the game of chess is connected to the church as one
of the pieces is carved in the image of a bishop.
The word “bishop” for a chess piece is only used in two languages, Icelandic and English. In old
Icelandic manuscripts, written in the 13th and 14th centuries, we read about the bishop in chess.
According to Oxford dictionaries, the word bishop in chess entered the English language around
year 1470--long after the carving of the Lewis Chessmen. In most other languages, including
Norwegian, this piece was--and still is--called a “runner.”
Thus, it seems likely that at the time of the creation of the Lewis Chessmen (circa 1150-1200), no
nation except Iceland had connected the game of chess with bishops or the church. The only other
language where a “runner” is called a “bishop” is English—but that did not occur until after 1450
which coincides with the era when trade activitity between Iceland and England was quite lively.
Icelanders, in fact, refer to the period between 1400 and 1500 as “The English Century.”
Iceland had no king and power was concentrated in the hands of the bishops. Perhaps this is why
they named the chess piece that resides beside the king a bishop. Furthermore, Icelandic bishops
employed smithies, goldmiths, and craftsmen, many of which were educated overseas.
Icelandic commerce with Greenland resulted in an economic boom that enabled the writing of the
Sagas and the true flowering of a uniquely Icelandic culture. And it is through the Sagas that we
learn about the Icelandic skill at carving and ornamentation.
Einar S. Einarsson
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Gudmundur G. Thórarinsson is a civil engineer, a for-
mer MP of Althingi - The Icelandic Parliament and of
the Reykjavik City Council. He has served on several
governmental committees and has been a member of
The European Council. Thorarinsson is the former
President of the Icelandic Chess Federation and was
the chairman of the Organizing Committee of the his-
torical World Chess Championship Match between
Bobby Fischer and Boris Spassky in Reykavik 1972.
INTRODUCTION
Exhibited in Edinburgh in 1831 was an unusual set of chessmen that had been discovered on
the sandy shore of the Isle of Lewis, at the north end of the Western Isles, or Outer Hebrides,
of Scotland. The island is mentioned in ancient Icelandic manuscripts such as Heimskringla
and Flateyjarbók, which refer to it as Ljóðhús, meaning “house of song.” Indeed, “Lewis” is
very likely derived from this lovely Icelandic name. Today the exact place the chessmen were
found is unknown. The chessmen, generally thought to be the oldest set bearing the features of
modern chess pieces, are among the British Museum’s most remarkable relics. The Museum
has published pamphlets and DVDs with information on the Lewis chess pieces, which are
among its most popular exhibits, and has commissioned copies of the set and offered them for
sale. This ambitious and carefully crafted work by the British Museum was the catalyst for the
article that follows. The chessmen found on the Isle of Lewis are considered the first bearing
the features of human beings, and the oldest set using the bishop as one of the pieces.
The set has made its impact far and wide: It is used in the film “Harry Potter and the
Philosopher’s Stone” and inspired the cartoon “Noggin the Nog.”1
The brochure from the British Museum states that the chessmen were probably crafted in
Trondheim, Norway, but their actual origin remains unknown. Various theories mention
Iceland, Norway or Scandinavia, Scotland, Ireland, or England as possibilities.2 Most of the
pieces are carved from walrus tusks (some of them from whale’s teeth), and they are thought to
have been made between 1150 and 1200.3
4 Magnússon, Interview.
5 Ibid.
6 Sveinsson, Páls saga biskups.
7 Fiske, Chess in Iceland.
8 Nörlund, Fornar byggðir á hjara heims.
Figure 2: The head of the Greenland crosier
This evidence clearly indicates that walrus tusks were available in Iceland at this time. It is likely
that the Norwegians who continued to sail to Greenland made a stopover in Iceland on their way,
although they are not mentioned in written documents.
Thus Icelanders not only wrote their legendary manuscripts at this time, but also developed
decorative art, carving, and carpentry.
9 Guðmundsson, Um haf innan.
10 Guðmundsson, Interview.
A BISHOP IN CHESS
In his book Chess in Iceland, published in Florence in 1905, Daniel Willard Fiske claims that the
word “bishop” is used for the pieces next to the king and queen in only two languages, Icelandic
and English. He considers this an indication that the game passed to Iceland from the British
Isles.11 In Scandinavia and elsewhere in Europe, this piece is called “löber” or “Leufer”, meaning
runner or messenger. As far as is known, Norwegians have never called this piece a bishop.
Figure 4: A bishop
In The Compact Edition of the Oxford English Dictionary from 1971, the entry for “bishop” reads
thus: “One of the pieces in the game of chess, having its upper part carved into the shape of a
mitre, formerly called archer and in still earlier times alfin or aufyn.” This entry also cites a source
from 1562: “The Bishoppes some name Alphins, some fooles, and some name them Princes; other
some name them Arches.” Further sources from the years 1581 and 1656 are also quoted. An 1802
source reads: “The alfin was also denominated, with us an archer and at last a bishop.”12
It is thus highly probable that chess was known in Iceland at the time when the Lewis chessmen
were made.
SITE OF DISCOVERY
The chessmen were discovered on a sandy beach on the Isle of Lewis, the largest of Scotland’s
Outer Hebrides. A farmer on the island is believed to have found them when digging up a sand
bank. Various hypotheses have been advanced as to how the chessmen found their way to this
remote location. The find consisted of 78 chessmen from four chess sets that are missing a number
of pieces. A belt buckle and fourteen objects from board games were found at the same location.
Some sources state that the objects were contained in a box of sorts. Most of the chessmen were
made of walrus tusk, but some were made of whale tooth.16
13 “Alfin, alphin.”
14 Fiske, Chess in Iceland.
15 Friðjónsson, Interview.
16 Stratford, The Lewis Chessmen and the enigma of the hoard.
Figure 5: The Vikings Sailing Routes
The author of another British Museum pamphlet seems to think it most probable that a merchant
hid the chessmen there with the intent of retrieving them later.17 This is probably an oblique
reference to various other valuables that have been buried and later found. But it is equally
possible that the chessmen were washed ashore after a shipwreck. The condition of the pieces is
quite variable; some are as new, others quite worn. This calls to mind the story of the bishop’s ship
from Greenland that was wrecked at Hítarnes in 1266 and the walrus tusks that washed up on the
nearby shore for a long while afterward.
Figure 6: Berserkers
KNIGHTS
The knights are mounted, and the second brochure from the British Museum points out that
the horses have Icelandic features. They are so small that they are reminiscent of the Icelandic
horse,18 and the shape of their heads seems Icelandic. Horses of this kind were extremely scarce
in Scandinavia.
18 Ibid.
Figure 7: Knights
BISHOPS’ MITRES
According to documentation from the British Museum, the age of the Lewis chessmen is
estimated primarily from the bishops’ mitres. Mitres of this kind were first introduced around
1150, so the chessmen cannot predate that time. These mitres are highest at the front and back,
with a depression between the two peaks. Before 1150, the highest points were to the sides and
the cleft between them ran from front to back. Mitres changed again around the year 1200, so
the chessmen are unlikely to be much younger than that.19 Icelandic bishops’ mitres came from
Scandinavia or Europe, and they are thus not much use as a diagnostic feature for the chessmen’s
provenance.
THE QUEEN
The queen is rather unusually carved. She rests her hand on her cheek and seems worried
or sad.20 This is somewhat reminiscent of icons of the Virgin Mary and further supports the
hypothesis that the figures were carved under a bishop’s instructions.
19 Robinson, The Lewis Chessmen; Stratford, The Lewis Chessmen and the enigma of the hoard.
20 Fulmar Television & Film Ltd., The Lewis Chessmen.
HYPOTHESIS
British Museum publications theorise that the Lewis chessmen were carved in Trondheim,
Norway, where facilities and tools for such work were available and where the patterns on the
pieces were most fashionable at the time. Furthermore, they conclude that the chessmen were
most likely buried on the Lewis shore by a merchant who intended to retrieve them later. In 1832,
a year after the pieces were first exhibited, the English archaeologist Francis Madden wrote an
article, Historical Remarks on the Ancient Chessmen discovered in the Isle of Lewis, where he
advances the hypothesis that the chessmen were carved in Iceland before the year 1200.21 This
theory has met with little enthusiasm.
Here I advance the hypothesis that the Lewis chessmen were carved in Iceland and present
evidence in support of this theory.
1) The word “bishop” does not seem to have been used for chessmen in Norway
at any point in history. This word only occurs in Icelandic and English. Written
records show that the word “bishop” was used in Iceland around 1300 and in
England in the late 15th century. Records indicate that the word “alfin” fell out of
use in English around 1475, after which the chess piece was exclusively known
as a bishop. When the Lewis chessmen were carved, these pieces were only
known as bishops in Iceland. They were probably carved here at the behest of
a bishop who thought it appropriate that pieces closest to the king and queen be
bishops. Should this prove correct, then the English adopted the word “bishop”
for a chess piece from Icelanders. Helgi Guðmundsson points out that the timing
of this change coincides with the so-called English century (1400–1500), when
trade and interaction with the English was at its zenith. He then asks whether it
can be ascertained where this usage was first adopted, whether it may have been
in Bristol, for example, or other hometowns of companies that traded in Iceland
at the time.
2) The knights are mounted on horses that seem Icelandic in both size and head
shape.
3) The rooks are berserkers, who figure prominently in contemporary Icelandic
writings but are not known from written works in Norway at the time. There they
used the word torn.
4) Decorative art and carving were highly developed in Iceland at this time. Many
examples are known of Icelandic bishops’ sending or bringing fine gifts carved
from walrus tusks to foreigners. Artists, goldsmiths, and master carvers were
employed at the bishops’ seats, and written records state outright that walrus tusk
was among their raw materials.
21 Jónsson, “Lewis-taflmenn.”
5) Iceland had a strong connection to Greenland at this time. Icelanders settled
Greenland with a large fleet of ships, and these Greenlanders had many friends
and relatives in Iceland. Records describe bishops’ ships that brought goods from
Greenland at that time. This connection was severed when Icelanders lost their
fleet of seaworthy ships. Icelanders thus had access to walrus tusks and other raw
materials from Greenland.
6) A ship carrying the Lewis chessmen from Iceland could have been shipwrecked
near the Isle of Lewis on its way to Dublin and the pieces been washed up on
the sand. It is telling that the men are from four chess sets, none of which are
complete, which indicates that a number of pieces were lost. Perhaps more pieces
remain buried there in the sand. Icelanders sold a great deal of their exports in
Ireland, because in Norway they were required to pay a toll.
7) In The Saga Writing of the Oddi Clan, Einar Ólafur Sveinsson, professor at
the university of Iceland, advances the hypothesis that men from the Oddi
clan wrote Orkneyinga saga, the History of the Earls of Orkney. A friendship
existed between Bishop Páll and the Earls of Orkney at this time, and there was
considerable communication between them; there are stories of gifts’ being
exchanged. From there the Outer Hebrides are not far off. 22 23
8) One might even entertain the notion that the Lewis chessmen were made at the
request of Bishop Páll of Skálholt and carved by Margrét the Adroit, whose
carving skills were the stuff of legend. The men were then sent abroad for sale or
as a gift, but the ship was then lost.
All figures except Figure 2 - Figure 5 and Skálholt are from Robinson, James. The Lewis
Chessmen. London: The British Museum Press, 2004.
Figure 2 is from Nörlund, Poul. Fornar byggðir á hjara heims [Ancient Settlements at the
Northern Edge of the World]. Translated from the Danish (De Gamle Nordbobygder
ved Verdens Ende) by Kristján Eldjárn. Reykjavík: Ísafoldarprentsmiðja, 1972.
Figure 5 is from http://www.melt.is/lok/myndir/islenska/bokmenntir/eiriks_saga_rauda/kort_1_
unnid.jpg
APPENDIX
A few more points to consider:
1) The Lewis Chessmen are the only chess pieces that connect chess with the church.
2) The Lewis Chessmen are the only chess pieces that include bishops with crosier and mitres
and full ceremonial clothing.
3) Chess is a war game where a battle is being fought. The use of the word bishop in chess is
only found in two languages in the world, Icelandic and English. In Scandinavia and Germany
this piece is called a runner--a messenger that investigates the situation in the battle and informs
the king. The runner participates in the battle.
4) The word bishop in chess is found in old Icelandic manuscripts. In Magus story there is found
the word “bishopsmate.” This manuscript originated between 1300 and 1325, but the story itself
is much older. The word “bishopsmate” is a combination of the words bishop and mate. Philolo-
gists are of the opinion that a combination like this is an example of the creative power of the
language and hardly happens before the first word has been in use for a long time. Therefore it is
safe to assume that the word bishop as a chess piece is much older in Icelandic. Therefore it is safe
to assume that the word bishop as a chess piece is much older in Icelandic
5) According to The Compact Edition of the Oxford English Dictionary from 1971, the the word
“bishop” entered the English language around 1450-70. The use of this word seems to have come
into English from Icelandic at a period where commerce was lively between Iceland and England.
This era, spanning from 1400 to 1500, is known in Iceland as the “English Century”.
6) The Icelandic Sagas mention skilled Icelandic artists, carvers at the time of the making of the
Lewis chessmen. These artists are called the adroits. Decorative art and carving were highly de-
veloped in Iceland at this time. Most of the Icelandic artists learned and studied in Throndheim.
7) According to historians, the “Church politic” in Throndheim was clear: the church should be
peaceful and not participate in war or violence; the church should be and an independent, spiritual
power--separated from the worldly power of kings. Most of the artists were working in coop-
eration with the church and its vast riches. In Trondheim in 1194, a severe dispute between the
bishop and the king resulted in the excommunication of King Sverrir (1151-1202) by the Pope.
It is therefore highly unlikely that during the age of King Sverrir’s excommunication, the church
would consent to or tolerate the involvement bishops in a war game where these clergymen are
servants, fighters and defenders of the king, participating in battles and the killing of enemies.
8) Some scholars find it likely that the Lewis chessmen were carved in Throndheim. It might
also be worth considering that the vestments of an archbishop differ from that of a bishop. An
archbishop wears a pallium over his shoulders and in front of him. This garment is not to be seen
on the Lewis bishops. Yet carvers in Throndheim would probably have clothed the bishop in a
pallium since the only bishop in their vicinity was an archbishop.
9) In Iceland, the “Church politic” at this time was much different. The bishop at Skalholt, Pall
Jonsson (1155-1211), was a descendant of the Norwegian kings--his grandmother was a daughter
of the Norwegian king Magnus Olafsson. The bishop was proud of his ancestry. Therefore, he
would have espoused close cooperation between king and bishop. In his worldview, the bishop
should stand beside the king -- even on a chess board.
10) It may therefore be argued that the Lewis Chessmen were made in Iceland at the bishopric
in Skalholt by the skilled craftsmen, mentioned in Icelandic manuscripts, working for bishop Pall
Jonsson.
“In every place the chess pieces will change to reflect that society that
played it”.
“European pieces by contrast are often intensely human and the Lewis
Chessmen not only appear to show us particularly kinds of characters but
strikingly reflect the structures of the great medieval power game as it was
fought out across Northern Europe, from ICELAND and Ireland to Scan-
dinavia and the Baltic!”
“At the edges of the board where we now have castles are the ultimate
shock troops of the Scandinavian world ....these are the fighters called
Berserkers. It is an Icelandic word for a soldier wearing a shirt made of
bearskin”.
“There is one piece I have not looked at yet but it is perhaps the most fas-
cinating figure of all the Lewis Chessmen, the one which gives us a crucial
insight into the society that made it!”
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/console/b00stb51