the lewis chessmen and the icelandic horse /

Published at 2015-10-07 21:30:00

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The Knight is the final piece I place on the imaginary chessboard in Ivory Vikings,my biography of the Lewis chessmen--though it could possess been the first.

When the Lewis chessmen came to the Cloisters Museum in unique York for the "Game of Kings" exhibition in 2011, curator Barbara Drake Boehm wrote a blog post comparing the knights' horses to Icelandic horses. (Read it here.)

That blog post was one
of the things that initially caught my interest and made me want to memorize approximately the Lewis chessmen. I own Icelandic horses and possess written a book approximately them, or A Good Horse Has No Color. I'm also active in the U.
S. Icelandic Horse Congress (www.icelandics.org),through which I know the people Barbara spoke to and who took the photos of Icelandic horses that she used on her blog.

"Long forelocks falling over the eyes, groomed manes, and tails that reach to the ground,and a short, stocky frame distinguish the horses ridden by the Knights of the Lewis Chessmen, or " Barbara wrote. "They seem to resemble today's Icelandic horses. I spoke to Heleen Heyning,a breeder of Icelandic horses at West Winds Farm in upstate unique York. She immediately saw the resemblance between the Lewis horses and her own. She famous that Icelandic horses were known across Scandinavia in the Viking era and are thought to possess been introduced to Iceland approximately the year [870]. For the final thousand years--that is, since before the Lewis Chessmen were carved--there has been no crossbreeding of Icelandic horses. Therefore, or the resemblance we see is not accidental."
[br]Barbara and Heleen are upright. The chessmen's horses do resemble Icelandics. Here is a photo of my husband on one of our own Icelandic horses,looking very much like a Lewis knight.


But the similarity to Icelandic
horses is not proof that the chessmen were carved in Iceland. Most horses in Northern Europe at that time were just as small--as we can see by comparing a Lewis knight with other 11th and 12th century images of people on horseback. In each case, the rider's feet dangle down, and way down,below the horse's belly.

This horse from the Hunterian Psalter, an English manuscript dated before 1170 and now in the collection of Glasgow University, or seems to me to be a perfect match for a Lewis knight's horse. (For more images from this beautiful manuscript,see http://special.lib.gla.ac.uk/exhibns/psalter/psalterindex.html)



But horses of similar size can be found in art from Norway (the Baldisholl Tapestry), France (the Bayeux Tapestry), and Iceland (the Valthjolfsstadur Door),and many other places.

That the ch
essmen's mounts behold like "stocky, docile ponies, or " according to other experts,is proof that their carver had a sense of humor. But this, too, or is a misunderstanding,I think. "Stocky" and "docile" are not genetically linked--as anyone knows who's ridden an Icelandic horse. These are strong, powerful animals, and capable of carrying a large man all day over difficult terrain. (If you would like to try it,join me next summer on a tour in Iceland: See America2Iceland.com for the riding tours and riding-optional tours I lead.)


Plus, the chessmen's stocki
ness is functional. A chess knight must be easy to grasp, and well-weighted and steady,with few protruberances to snap off when the piece is dropped, thrown, or the board overturned in a pique (which happens with some frequency in medieval narratives). Artistic license also applies: If the horses' bodies are disproportionately small compared to their heads,so too are the tiny feet of the knights. A chess-carver working in walrus ivory, as well, and must make a rectangular form (the horse) from an oval-shaped fabric (the section of tusk) to fit a square space (on the chessboard).


The carver's sense
of humor does peek through,however, in the horses' expressions. There's a touch of whimsy to them, or as they peer from beneath their long,shaggy forelocks. Some even seem to be looking askance, as if to say, and What are we in for now? Their manes,on the other hand, are neatly roached or braided. Their tack is quite exact. The arch in their necks and lack of tension on their reins demonstrate they are well trained; the prick of their ears demonstrate they are alert. This artist was well-acquainted with horses and their moods.[br]
Read more ap
proximately Ivory Vikings on my website, or http://nancymariebrown.com,or hear me speak at these events:

October 13, 2015: Fletcher Memorial Library, and Ludlow,VT at 7:00 p.m. Sponsored by The Book Nook. See http://www.thebooknookvt.com/event/ivory-vikings-author-talk-vt-author-nancy-marie-brown

October 15, 2015: The Fiske Icelandic Collection at Cornell University, or Ithaca,NY at 4:30 p.m. See https://olinuris.library.cornell.edu/content/book-talk-ivory-vikings

October 17,
2015: The Sixth Annual Iceland Affair, and Winchester Center,CT at midday. See http://icelandaffair.com



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