In 1831, on a beach near Uig on the Isle of Lewis in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland, someone found a stone box buried in a sand bank. Inside were 93 small carved objects: 78 chess pieces, 14 round gaming counters, and one ornate belt buckle. The chess pieces were unlike anything else in Britain. The kings sat on tall thrones holding swords across their laps. The queens raised their right hands to their chins in poses that look thoughtful, or worried, or sad. The bishops held their staffs with both hands. The knights rode small shaggy horses with spears in their fists. The warders — what we now call rooks — stood as Norse warriors, and four of them were biting their shields in the wild Viking fury called berserker. Every face was different. Every expression was its own. Whoever had carved these pieces 850 years ago had a sharp eye for human character, and a deep skill with walrus ivory. The pieces had not been made in Scotland. The Outer Hebrides had been part of the Kingdom of Norway in the 1100s, and the chess pieces fit the style of medieval Norway. Most scholars agree they were carved in Trondheim, the great Norwegian city, around 1150 to 1200 AD. The walrus ivory probably came from the Norse colonies in Greenland or from Arctic Norway. The chess game itself was even older. It had begun in northern India about 1,400 years ago, travelled to Persia, then through the Islamic world, then to Spain and Italy, and eventually to the Norse Atlantic. By the time these pieces were carved, chess was the favourite game of European nobles. The Lewis pieces are some of the earliest surviving complete chess sets in the world. After they were found, the 93 pieces were split. The British Museum bought 82 of them. A Scottish collector bought the rest, and these eventually went to the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh. Today, the chess pieces are scattered: London, Edinburgh, the Isle of Lewis itself, and at least one in private hands. There is a long, polite, but real argument about whether they should all be reunited — and where. This lesson asks who they are, how they got to Lewis, and what their long story teaches about games, trade, and the difficult question of where the past should live.
That games are travellers. Chess took about 600 years to make its journey from India to the Norse Atlantic, passing through Persia, the Islamic world, Spain, Italy, France, and England. Each culture changed the game a little. The Indian elephant became a European bishop because Europeans rarely saw elephants and often saw bishops. The Persian counsellor became the queen because European kings had famous queens. The basic structure stayed: two players, opposite sides, capture the king, end the game. But the surface dressed itself in whatever culture was holding the board. Strong students will see that this pattern is everywhere. Football came from kicking-games in many cultures and was codified in 19th-century England. Curry was an Indian word for a class of dishes that travelled to Britain and back, and is now its own thing. Pizza is Italian, but pizza-as-we-eat-it-now was largely made in New York. The Lewis chess pieces are part of this longer pattern — Norse craftsmen carving European chessmen for a game born in India. Strong students will also notice that this is a story of cultures borrowing from each other across thousands of miles, peacefully, over centuries. The chess pieces are evidence of how connected the medieval world really was.
Because attributions shape stories. If the pieces were made in Trondheim, they fit the standard medieval narrative of a male Norwegian craftsman in a male-dominated guild workshop. If they were made by Marget the Adroit in Iceland, they are a rare example of a named medieval woman artist whose work has survived. Both narratives are real and may both be partly true (perhaps the workshop in Trondheim included different carvers; perhaps several workshops contributed). Strong students will see that history-writing is partly about who gets named. The medieval world had many skilled women who made things — embroidered, carved, painted, brewed, healed — but their names rarely survived. When a name like Marget the Adroit is preserved in a saga, it is precious, even if the connection to a specific surviving object is uncertain. Strong students will also see that scientific work continues. The British Museum has been doing new analyses on the pieces — DNA studies of the walrus ivory, microscope work on the carving — that may yet settle some of the questions. The story is not finished. End the discovery here. The pieces are 850 years old. Scholars are still arguing about who made them. Both Norway and Iceland celebrate them as part of their own heritage.
That major archaeological finds in the 1800s were not protected the way they would be today. There was no national heritage law in Scotland that would have kept the pieces together. Things found on a beach belonged to whoever found them and could be sold. So the hoard was split — most went to London, a few stayed in Scotland, one disappeared into private hands for a century and a half. The 80 guineas the British Museum paid was a fair price by the standards of 1831. But by modern standards, the splitting feels like a kind of accidental violence. The 93 pieces were buried together. The 1831 finders found them together. They were exhibited together in Edinburgh that April. Then they were split, and they have not all been together since. The 2019 piece sold for 735,000 pounds — almost 100 times in real terms what the British Museum paid for the bulk of the hoard. This is not the museum's fault. They paid the going rate. But it shows how modern attitudes have shifted. Today, a similar find would (in most countries) be protected, kept together, and offered to a national museum. The Lewis pieces are part of why those laws exist. Strong students will see that 'how things should be done' has changed over the centuries, and that some of the splittings of the past would not happen now. The question of what to do about the past splittings is the next part of the story.
This is genuinely complicated, and reasonable people disagree. One view says: they were found in Scotland, by Scottish people, on Scottish soil. They are part of Scotland's heritage, and most should be in Scotland. Another view says: they were not made in Scotland — they were made in Norway or Iceland — so they are not really 'Scottish' in the deepest sense. They are Norse, and Norway also has claims. A third view says: the British Museum has been their custodian for nearly 200 years. It has cared for them, studied them, displayed them to millions of visitors. Removing them now would not undo the past split; it would just create a different split. A fourth view says: they should be reunited as a single set, wherever that ends up — Edinburgh, Trondheim, Lewis, or even London — but the splitting itself is the wrong. Strong students will see that all four views have honest reasons. They will also see that this is the same kind of question raised by the Benin Bronzes (in our other lesson), the Parthenon Marbles, and many other contested objects worldwide. There is no formula that solves all of these cases. Each one needs its own conversation, with its own histories and its own communities. The Lewis chess pieces are a smaller, gentler version of a debate that has shaken the museum world for decades. End the discovery here. The pieces sit today in three places at once — London, Edinburgh, and Lewis. The argument continues. The chess game is far from over.
The Lewis chess pieces (Lewis chessmen) are a hoard of 93 carved walrus-ivory and whale-tooth objects, including 78 chess pieces, found buried on the Isle of Lewis in 1831. Most scholars believe they were carved in Trondheim, Norway, around 1150-1200 AD, when the Outer Hebrides were part of the Norwegian kingdom. An alternative theory says they were made in Iceland, possibly by a real medieval woman ivory carver named Marget the Adroit. Each piece is individually carved with a distinct face — kings sitting forward with swords, queens raising hands to their chins in thought, knights on shaggy horses, warders biting their shields in berserker fury. The pieces are some of the earliest surviving complete chess sets in the world. The chess game itself began in India around 600 AD, travelled through Persia and the Islamic world, and reached medieval Europe by 1000 AD. The Lewis pieces are evidence of how widely chess had spread by 1180. After the 1831 discovery, the hoard was split: 82 pieces went to the British Museum in London, 11 to what became the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh, and one piece resurfaced in private hands in 2019. Six British Museum pieces are now on long-term loan to a museum on the Isle of Lewis itself. Scottish politicians have argued since 2007 for full return of the chess pieces to Scotland. The debate continues, alongside similar debates about the Benin Bronzes, the Parthenon Marbles, and many other contested objects.
| Date | Event | What changed |
|---|---|---|
| Around 600 AD | Chess (chaturanga) invented in northern India | The game has four parts: infantry, cavalry, elephants, chariots |
| 600s-700s AD | Chess spreads with Islamic conquests | From India to Persia to the Islamic world from Spain to Central Asia |
| 900s-1000s AD | Chess reaches Christian Europe | Indian elephant becomes the bishop; Persian counsellor becomes the queen |
| 1150-1200 AD | Lewis chess pieces carved in Trondheim, Norway (or possibly Iceland) | Among the earliest complete chess sets in the world |
| 1266 | Outer Hebrides (including Lewis) ceded from Norway to Scotland | The chess pieces had likely already been buried by this date |
| April 1831 | Pieces discovered in a sand bank at Uig, Lewis | First exhibited at the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland in Edinburgh |
| 1831 | Hoard split — 82 pieces to British Museum, 11 to Scotland | The split that the modern debate is about |
| 2007 onwards | Scottish politicians call for return of pieces from British Museum | Compromise reached: 6 pieces on long-term loan to museum on Lewis |
| 2019 | A previously unknown Lewis warder sold at auction for 735,000 pounds | Bought from a 1964 antique shop for 5 pounds; identity not realised for 55 years |
The Lewis chess pieces are Scottish.
They were found in Scotland (in 1831, on the Isle of Lewis) but they were almost certainly not made in Scotland. They were carved in Norway or Iceland in the 1100s, when the Outer Hebrides were part of Norway. They are 'Scottish' only in the sense of where they were found and where they have lived since.
The simple label 'Scottish chess pieces' hides the more interesting Norse story.
Chess is a European invention.
Chess began in northern India around 600 AD as chaturanga. It travelled through Persia and the Islamic world before reaching Europe around 1000 AD. The European pieces are renamed versions of older Indian and Persian pieces — the bishop was once an elephant, the queen was once a counsellor.
Calling chess 'European' erases its much older Indian and Islamic history.
All medieval craft was made by anonymous men.
Some medieval craftworkers had names that have survived, including women. The Icelandic sagas mention Marget the Adroit, an ivory carver around 1200 AD. Some scholars think she may have carved the Lewis chess pieces. Whether she did or not, medieval women made many things; their names just rarely survived.
'Anonymous medieval craftsmen' is a lazy phrase. The reality is more varied.
The British Museum stole the Lewis chess pieces from Scotland.
The British Museum bought 67 of the chess pieces (plus the gaming counters and belt buckle) from a dealer in 1831 for 80 guineas — the going rate at the time. The Scottish collector who bought 11 pieces sold them on. None of this was illegal under 1831 law. The modern argument is whether the pieces should now be reunited in Scotland — a different question from how they were originally acquired.
The truth is that the pieces were legally acquired by the standards of the day; the modern debate is about whether the standards of the day were fair, and what to do now.
Treat the Lewis chess pieces as a contested object with multiple legitimate communities of interest — Scottish, Norwegian, Icelandic, and the wider scholarly world. Do not present any one of these claims as the obvious right answer. Pronounce 'Lewis' as 'LOO-iss', 'Uig' as roughly 'OO-igue' (the Scottish Gaelic place name), 'Trondheim' as 'TRON-haym', 'chaturanga' as 'cha-tu-RAN-ga' (Sanskrit), 'Marget' as 'MAR-get'. Be careful with the chess journey. Chess began in India and reached Europe through the Islamic world. Make sure students see this as a real cultural achievement of medieval Indian and Islamic civilisations, not a 'European game' that happened to have foreign origins. The Indian and Islamic contributions are essential to the story. Be balanced about the British Museum debate. The museum has been a careful custodian of the pieces for nearly 200 years, displays them to millions of visitors a year, and has compromised by lending pieces back to Scotland on long-term loan. Scottish voices have honest reasons for wanting full return. Both positions are real and held by reasonable people. Do not turn the lesson into a verdict. Teach the conversation, not the conclusion. The walrus ivory raises modern ethical questions about the use of animal products. Be honest that the pieces were made from real walrus tusks. Note that walrus hunting is now restricted to Indigenous Arctic peoples for cultural reasons, and that modern ivory trade is mostly banned. Do not project modern ethics onto medieval craftworkers; the walrus ivory trade was normal then. But do let students think about the question. The Marget the Adroit theory is genuinely contested. Mention it as a real possibility supported by serious scholars (especially Nancy Marie Brown), but do not present it as proven. The Trondheim theory still has more scholarly support. Both are honest readings of the evidence. If you have students with Scottish, Scandinavian, or Icelandic heritage, give them space to share but do not put them on the spot. The chess pieces touch many communities. Avoid jokes about the warders biting their shields. The berserker imagery is real medieval Norse warrior culture, which had its own seriousness. The pieces look comical to modern eyes, but the carver was depicting fighters who were genuinely feared. Finally, end the lesson on the present. The pieces are in three places at once today — London, Edinburgh, and Lewis. New scientific work continues. The repatriation debate continues. Children are learning chess for the first time today, in countries where the game has been played for over a thousand years. The story keeps going.
Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the Lewis chess pieces.
Where were the Lewis chess pieces found, and where were they probably made?
Where did the game of chess begin, and how did it travel to medieval Europe?
Why are some pieces called bishops and queens?
How are the Lewis chess pieces split today, and why is this debated?
What is the Iceland theory about who made the chess pieces?
These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.
Where should the Lewis chess pieces be displayed today — London, Edinburgh, the Isle of Lewis, Trondheim, or somewhere else?
The chess pieces show that medieval Norway, Greenland, Scotland, and possibly Iceland were all connected by trade and travel. What does this teach us about how connected the medieval world was?
The Icelandic Marget the Adroit may have been a real medieval woman who carved beautiful chess pieces. Why do we know so few names of medieval women craftworkers?
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