• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Knuckle-Bone Dice Used For Gambling And Divination Found Beneath Ancient Hellenic City

August 19, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

Long before Dungeons and Dragons, Kerplunk, or Risk, the ancient inhabitants of the Middle East used the astragali – or knuckle bones – of cattle to make dice for retro board games. Describing the discovery of 532 astragali in an underground cave complex in southern Israel dating back over 2,000 years, the authors of a new study reveal how these instruments of chance shaped the lives of the region’s inhabitants, who relied upon them for recreation, gambling, and occult activities.

Advertisement

Though referred to as a knuckle bone, an astragalus is in fact an anklebone. Because the astragali of sheep, goats, and other medium-sized mammals have six asymmetric concave and convex sides, they lend themselves perfectly to be used as dice.

While excavating the caves beneath the ancient city of Maresha – which prospered during the Hellenistic period around 2,300 years ago – archaeologists found a staggering array of astragali, many of which had been shaved down, perforated, or filled with lead to enhance their various functions.

Describing their discovery in the journal Levant, the study authors reveal how the astragali found beneath one section of the city reflect “a variety of games that were part of the daily life of the inhabitants living in and around this area.” Many of the dice unearthed in this segment contained inscriptions related to gaming, including some bearing the name of Nike, the Greek goddess of victory.

Others featured game-related phrases and commands such as “stop!”, “snatch away” or “you are burnt.” Some astragali were engraved with ‘Aphrodite’, ‘Eros’, and ‘Hera’, the gods of love, sex, and marriage respectively. According to the authors, these dice may have been cast in order to solicit luck in love.

Maresha dice inscriptions

Many of the dice bear game-related inscriptions. Image: Roi Shafir, University of Haifa

The dice found in another cave, meanwhile, were deposited alongside divination texts and other “cultic material,” including a series of chalk phalluses. According to the researchers, “the scarcity of inscriptions that are specifically useful in games may further imply that many of the astragali from this subterranean complex were not simply played with, but were chosen for the purpose of cult.”

“It is of interest that these knuckle bones are often found next to ostraca (pottery sherds with writing inscribed or written in ink), which bore Aramaic texts, such as, ‘Magical incantation’, or ‘If you do so, this will happen to you., which demonstrates their cultic role,” explained study author Dr Lee Perry-Gal in a statement.

Sounds a bit like Jumanji, if you ask us.

Advertisement

“The assemblage shows that in ancient times of distress, as today, people sought help from external factors, in magic and spells, and in the world of the unknown,” said Perry-Gal.

“In addition, we know that astragali were used for games. It is noteworthy that we have examples of children buried with similar gaming dice. The cubes, which were a popular gaming activity, had a role in accompanying children to the next world, to be used there.”

Summing up their findings and the importance of these knuckle-bone dice in Hellenic life, the authors conclude that “astragali were used at Maresha by different classes of people and for different purposes: children’s games, adults’ games, gambling, and divination.”

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Migrants denounce Mexico’s crackdown amid bilateral talks in Washington
  2. U.S. Senate panel sets hearing on Russian gas pipeline amid Ukraine concerns
  3. Oil prices rise, hit 2-month highs on supply worries
  4. After Pandora Papers, EU says it plans new rules against tax avoidance

Source Link: Knuckle-Bone Dice Used For Gambling And Divination Found Beneath Ancient Hellenic City

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Proof Of Complex Organic Molecules In Enceladus’s Ocean: “You Have Everything You Need To Form Life”
  • Long COVID Risk In Kids Found To Double After Their Second COVID-19 Infection
  • “One Of The Most Extreme Environmental Events On Earth” Unfolded 6.2 Million Years Ago
  • GW190521 May Be Evidence Of Another Universe “Connected To Our Universe Through A Throat”, Scientists Claim
  • Physicists Find A Way Around Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle, One Of The Most Frustrating Concepts In Physics
  • AI-Generated Genomes Used To Produce Functional, Bacteria-Killing Viruses In World First
  • Meet The Pocket Sharks: They’re Rare, They’re Tiny, And They’re Something Of A Mystery
  • The Great Comet Of 1997 Was Visible To The Naked Eye For A Record 569 Days
  • In The Soil Of Easter Island, Scientists Found An Anti-Aging Drug That Changed Medicine Forever
  • Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Shows “Extreme Negative Polarization”. What Does That Mean?
  • “Agreeable To The Taste” Like A Sirloin Steak: The People Who Ate Mammoth Meat In The 20th Century
  • Too Much Alcohol For Too Long Can Stop Liver Healing, Even After Quitting – Now We Know Why
  • Meet The Only Mouse Known To Howl At The Moon
  • Centuries-Old Texas Tree Named “Jolene” Set For Nearly $1 Million Relocation… Just 400 Meters Away
  • World’s Most Sensitive Dark Matter Detector Is Closing In On What It Can – And Cannot – Be
  • The History Of The Loch Ness Monster – And The Theories On What It Could Have Been
  • Perfectly Mummified Cheetahs Are The First Naturally Mummified Big Cats Ever Found
  • There’s A New Key Cause Contributing To Divorce And Breakups In The US
  • World’s Highest Bridge, Standing 625 Meters Above “Crack In The Earth”, Opens To Public
  • Can You Identify The “Triangle Of Death”?
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version