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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. Today, the
names certainly aren’t modern but a
thousand years ago they represented the
very way in which both ordinary people
and persons of rank lived their lives.
The pawns on the chess board 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 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.
The castle piece on a chess board is the
home, or the refuge, just as it was a
home in medieval times. In chess, each
side has two castles, or rooks, as they
are sometimes called.
The knight on a chess board represents
the professional soldier of medieval
times whose job it was to protect
persons of rank, and there are two of
them per each side in a game of chess.
Knights in a game of chess are more
important than pawns, but less important
than bishops, kings, or queens. Their
purpose in the game of chess is to
protect the more important pieces, and
they can be sacrificed to save those
pieces just as pawns can.
There is a bishop in the game of chess,
who 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. In the game of chess,
there are two bishops for each side.
The queen is the only piece on the board
during a
chess
game
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. Many people do not
realize that 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. The
machinations of queens working either
for or against their kings are well
noted in history throughout medieval
times, and often she held more power
than the king did.
The king is the tallest piece on the
board, 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.
The next time you set up your chessboard
and get ready to play a friendly game or
two, think of chess as a history lesson.
The pieces on the board represent a way
of life that is no more, and the real
life dramas that occurred in medieval
times are now only a game. |