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Chess
is the oldest skill game in
the world. But it is more than
just a game of skill. It can
tell you much about the way
people lived in medieval times.
If you look at how a chess board
is set up, then study the pieces
and how they are used, you will
realize that chess is a history
of medieval times in miniature.
The six different chess pieces
on the board represent a cross
section of medieval life with
its many ceremonies, grandeur,
and wars.
Chess was played many centuries
ago in China, India, and Persia.
No one really knows for sure
in which country it originated.
Then, in the eighth century,
armies of Arabs known as Moors
invaded Persia. The Moors learned
chess from the Persians. When
the Moors later invaded Spain,
the soldiers brought the game
of chess with them. Soon the
Spanish were playing chess,
too. From Spain, chess quickly
spread throughout all of Europe.
Europeans gave chess pieces
the names we know today; they
probably had trouble pronouncing
and spelling the Persian names,
so they modernized them to reflect
the way they lived.
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Pawns represent serfs, or laborers.
There are more of them than
any other piece on the board,
and often they are sacrificed
to save the more valuable
pieces. In medieval times,
serfs were considered no
more than the property of
landowners, or chattel.
Life was brutally hard for
serfs during this era of
history. They worked hard
and died young. They were
often left unprotected while
wars raged around them.
They could be traded, used
as a diversion, or even
sacrificed to allow the
landowners to escape harm.
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The castle is the home, or the refuge,
just as it was a home in
medieval times. Each side
has two castles, or rooks,
as they are sometimes called.
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Knights represents the professional
soldier of medieval times
whose job it was to protect
persons of rank, and there
are two of them on each
side. Knights are more important
than pawns, but less important
than bishops, kings, or
queens. They protect the
more important pieces, and
can be sacrificed to save
those pieces just as pawns
can.
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The bishop represents the church. The
church was a rich and mighty
force in medieval times,
and religion played a large
part in every person’s
life. It is no wonder that
a figure that represented
the concept of religion
found its way into the game.
A bishop was the name for
a priest in the Catholic
church who had risen through
the ranks to a more powerful
position.There are two bishops
for each side.
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The queen is the only piece that represents
a woman, and she is the
most powerful piece of the
game. In the game of chess,
there is only one queen
for each side. Queens in
medieval times often held
a powerful, yet precarious,
position. The king was often
guided by her advice, and
in many cases the queen
played games of intrigue
at court. But kings could
set wives aside or even
imprison them in nunneries
with the approval of the
church (and without the
queen’s approval),
and many women schemed merely
to hold her place at court.
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The king is the tallest piece, and
is as well defended on the
chessboard as in medieval
life. In medieval times,
the surrender of the king
would mean the loss of the
kingdom to invading armies
and that could mean change
for the worse. It was to
everyone’s advantage,
from the lowest serf to
the highest-ranking official,
to keep the king safe from
harm. The king is the most
important, but not the most
powerful piece in chess.
If you do not protect your
king, you lose the game.
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