Board games and social life in Iron Age southern Africa

•Boardgames pervasive in Iron Age southern Africa.•Boardgames played a vital role in education, skills development and relaxation.•Boardgames were played across class, age, and gender categories.•Meanings and names of boardgames in southern Africa different to that of other regions of the Indian Oce...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of anthropological archaeology Vol. 66; p. 101418
Main Authors Maṱhoho, Eric N., Chirikure, Shadreck, Nyamushosho, Robert T.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Inc 01.06.2022
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Summary:•Boardgames pervasive in Iron Age southern Africa.•Boardgames played a vital role in education, skills development and relaxation.•Boardgames were played across class, age, and gender categories.•Meanings and names of boardgames in southern Africa different to that of other regions of the Indian Ocean. What games did the inhabitants of ancient southern Africa play to enrich their lives during the Iron Age (500–1900 CE)? We address this question by drawing from archaeological fingerprints of board games (tsoro/mufuvha) documented at farmer and forager sites in different parts of southern Africa. The typology of games and their spatial locations in the archaeology were compared with historical and contemporary gaming in selected African communities to map continuity and change in social significance temporally and spatially. Within limitations imposed by a lack of well-resolved chronologies for the material remains of board games, the comparison provided a platform to make inferences about how and why the games were played in the everyday life of Iron Age communities. Based on the strong correlation between the ethnographic and archaeological data, the conclusion of the paper is that board games were played for edutainment, skills development, gambling, and social engineering. However, this is tentative and opens possibilities for further research into the role of indigenous games in the development of ancient southern African communities.
ISSN:0278-4165
1090-2686
DOI:10.1016/j.jaa.2022.101418