There
are many unconfirmed stories telling how the Lewis
chess pieces were found. These range from a local
man discovering them while chasing a cow, to dramatic
stories involving death-bed confessions of murder
and theft from a seaman who was observed jumping
ship.
What is clear it that they were buried at some
point. It was here in 1831 at Ardroil near Uig
Sands (a beautiful beach west of Callanish) that
high tide exposed a cave or small, stone-built
chamber which the eroding sand had exposed. The
treasure within was an assembly of 78 chessmen,
probably the finest early chess pieces in the
world, carved from morse ivory, the fossil remains
of walrus tusks.
Believed to be carved between AD 1150-1170, the
Lewis Chessmen represent a possible Norse origin
and the most complete collection of ancient chessmen
in existence today. At that time, the Outer Hebrides
were an important part of the Viking world and
there was regular sea traffic between Lewis, Iceland
and Scandinavia.
Go to Uig Lodge
|