News archive
2026
How a Belgian researcher reconstructed a nearly 1.800-year-old Roman board game with the help of AI
[Note by Henri Serruys: This article was published on 10 February 2026 in Dutch on the website of the Flemish Radio and Television Company (VRT).]
Author: Kasper Nollet (VRT NWS)
A mysterious stone that has been gathering dust for years in a Dutch museum may in fact be an ancient Roman board game. This emerges from a Belgian study reported by RTBF. Using a specialised AI model and an extensive database of historical board games, the researchers even managed to unravel how the nearly 1,800-year-old game was once played.
Summary:
• An international research group led by AI scientist Eric Piette (UCLouvain) has determined that a mysterious stone in the Roman Museum in Heerlen is an ancient Roman board game, dating from approximately AD 200 to 400.
• With the help of a specialised AI database and simulations, the researchers discovered that it is a blocking game.
• “The patterns and possible rules correspond strikingly well with games from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries in Scandinavia,” says Eric Piette (UCLouvain), “which points to early cultural influence between the two regions.”
Michael Negele on the road again: Wismar, Brunswick and Wijk aan Zee
by Michael Negele
Dear members and friends of the CH&LS,
It was on July 5, 2019, that I published my last post on our website. It was about the 76th auction at Klittich-Pfankuch in Brunswick.
76th Auction at Klittich-Pfankuch auction house on 22nd June 2019
After almost six years of "hibernation," I was able to attend the 89th auction on November 21/22, 2025. It made me happy to meet many friends from the "good old days" and to feel so welcome.
Before that, I had surprised Siegfried Schönle on November 11, 2025, in Wismar, where I was able to attend his wonderful lecture. I was pleased to purchase his book on Schach im DP-Lager Landsberg und im Ghetto Terezín / Theresienstadt [Chess in the DP Camp Landsberg and in the Terezín/Theresienstadt Ghetto].
Read more … Michael Negele on the road again: Wismar, Brunswick and Wijk aan Zee
New Member: Roderick Edwards
Our new member, Roderick Edwards from Canada, introduces himself in the members area (you must be logged in to read).
New Member: Vladimir Hrtko
Our new member, Vladimir Hrtko from Slovakia, is introduced in the members' area. (you must be logged in to read).
New Book from a Member
La Historia del Ajedrez Puertorriqueño, Trebejos en movimiento, v 1, is a pioneering work that gathers and presents the fascinating history of chess on the Island. This chronicle traces its origins back to the arrival of the first chessboards on ships coming from Spain, integrating the game’s development — with its highs and lows — from its earliest stages up to the early 1950s. The book, the result of rigorous research, offers readers in a single volume relevant information drawn from articles published by various authors in different sources, organized and grouped into chapters, largely following a chronological order. This structure allows the reader to appreciate the succession of the most significant events related to the game of chess.
The author, our member Bernard Christenson (Arecibo, 1953), is a distinguished physician specializing in Infectious Diseases. He is known for his numerous medical and historical publications
The Final Months of Lionel Kieseritzky
by Jean Olivier Leconte - https://lecafedelaregence.blogspot.com/
The end of Lionel Kieseritzky’s life long remained unclear to me, until I discovered several documents that shed light on his final months. What follows is the result of my investigation.
In 1851, Kieseritzky travelled to London for the first major international chess tournament, held during the Great Exhibition. He went there as the leading French player of the time. The event was not a great success for him, but his name would remain forever in the annals of chess thanks to the so-called “Immortal Game” played against Anderssen on the sidelines of the tournament.
Tobiblion update
Per Skjoldager has updated the database of the BoC-Project. Numerous new items and descriptions have been added to Tobiblion as well as the data of the 88th Klittich auction. They are now available for members in Tobiblion.