A gameboard from Gerulata (Bratislava-Rusovce) in the context of Roman-period gaming finds in the north of the Carpathian Basin

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Penn, T. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4472-9031, Kovár, B. and Šebesta, B. (2025) A gameboard from Gerulata (Bratislava-Rusovce) in the context of Roman-period gaming finds in the north of the Carpathian Basin. Slovenská archeológia, 73 (1). 121 -135. ISSN 1335-0102 doi: 10.31577/slovarch.2025.73.5

Abstract/Summary

This article examines a Roman period gameboard (Gameboard 1) from Gerulata (modern Bratislava-Rusovce, Slovakia), a military settlement on the Danube frontier in Pannonia. The board was carved into a tile and features a 7 × 8 grid layout. A much smaller fragment of another possible gameboard or fragment of wall tile (Possible gameboard/tile 2) was also recovered from the site, though this identification is less secure. This study explores the archaeological context, typology, and potential identification of the board(s). Gameboard 1 was probably used for playing the game known as ludus latrunculorum, even if other possibilities should not be entirely discarded. Analysis of published and unpublished finds from the Northern Carpathian basin and neighbouring regions – which we present together for the first time – indicates that this gameboard belongs to a wider ludic culture, which was particularly visible among Roman soldiers and military communities. Portable elements of Roman-style material culture (dice, counters) but not bulky gameboards have been recovered in parts of Slovakia that were in the Barbaricum, and this suggests some cultural diffusion across borders in the Roman period. These objects appear to be prestige finds, since they are commonly associated with elite sites, but we cannot be sure that they were used to play ‘Roman’ games. The article argues that such objects offer a valuable lens into the social and cultural life of Roman soldiers and civilians on the frontier. It also highlights the methodological challenges of identifying and interpreting gameboards in provincial contexts.

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Item Type Article
URI https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/id/eprint/124218
Identification Number/DOI 10.31577/slovarch.2025.73.5
Refereed Yes
Divisions Arts, Humanities and Social Science > School of Humanities > Classics
Publisher Archeologický ústav SAV (Archaeological Institute of the Slovak Academy of Sciences)
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