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Game survey (Three Men’s Morris)

Three Men's Morris
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NEW PUBLICATIONS

  

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Locus Ludi Webinar

Due to the sanitary crisis, our weekly seminar is now held online. You can register to join us and attend our Webinar!

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Upcoming Events

Jan
21
Thu
2021
9 h 00 min Workshop ERC Locus Ludi “The Arc... @ University of Fribourg / Online
Workshop ERC Locus Ludi “The Arc... @ University of Fribourg / Online
Jan 21 @ 9 h 00 min – 18 h 00 min
Workshop ERC Locus Ludi "The Archeology of Play and Games" @ University of Fribourg / Online
    Programme (PDF)
Jun
22
Tue
2021
all-day International Conference ERC Loc...
International Conference ERC Loc...
Jun 22 – Jun 24 all-day
International Conference ERC Locus Ludi "Toys as Cultural Artefacts in Ancient Greek and Roman Cultures: Anthropological and Material Approaches"
      Call for papers (PDF)
Sep
6
Mon
2021
all-day ERC Locus Ludi / XVI CIERGA Inte...
ERC Locus Ludi / XVI CIERGA Inte...
Sep 6 – Sep 8 all-day
 
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Roberte Hamayon, Paris. Dr. Honoris Causa, University of Fribourg, 2020

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Our Mythical Friends from #ERC @Locus_Ludi:
Images en voyage:
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“Play Hide and Seek in Herculaneum” is the new animation realised by Steve Simons and Sonya Nevin (Panoply) for Locus Ludi.

This delicate animation, evoking the carefree happiness of loved children and hope, is meant as a gesture of solidarity with all our Italian friends, our colleagues and the many people throughout Europe and the world who are currently isolated. In the past as today, play and games can provide suspended moments of shared happiness.

The animation is based on a wall painting from the so-called cryptoporticus of the House of the Stags (Casa dei Cervi), one of the largest dwellings in Herculaneum with a beautiful terrace that once overlooked the sea.

The eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 CE destroyed the city but the pyroclastic flow preserved the splendour of this wealthy house.

Children may have actually played hide and seek in the corridor which was decorated with a series of small panels depicting Erotes engaged in various lively activities.

The scene is a perfect example of the contribution of images to the history of play and games: it preserves the memory of children’s social life ; they perform a collective activity, hide and seek, which otherwise left no archaeological trace and belongs to an immaterial heritage. The picture shares an imaginary, cheerful world where children are no longer mortal, but divine: they are depicted as carefree winged supernatural beings.

Images, however, do not provide us with game rules. The dictionary (Onomasticon) written by Julius Pollux in the 2nd century CE provides a list of games with descriptions.

Pollux lists four variants of hide and seek games : Myinda, Apodidraskinda, Chalké Muia, some of which are still practiced today. But which one is illustrated in Herculaneum? The animations skilfully propose different hypotheses