📖 Linguistics & Board Games 📖

🟢 Back in 2016, the publisher Feuerland Spiele released one of Uwe Rosenberg’s most acclaimed board games to date: A Feast for Odin, a somewhat complex game about a Viking community that hunts, farms, crafts weapons and tools, and explores. A saga in board game form and an extraordinary game, a pleasure to play.

🟢 And although it’s just (?!?) a board game, I’ve learned a lot of interesting things from it—like the following. In the picture, you see a player board where they collect resources and other bits and pieces. Those blue wooden pieces near the tree are the blue player’s “workers,” which they use to perform actions in the game. The photo was most likely taken at the beginning of a round, when players gather all their workers in that spot on the board, called in the game a "Thing Square".

🟢 So what’s up with that? The workers being in a THING. Although it may seem so at first, this word "thing" isn’t the result of an indecisive designer who couldn’t think of a simple name for a meeting place for some game pieces… In fact, it’s the most accurate name for that gathering: THING.

🟢 Before playing A Feast for Odin, I had no idea about this, but as I later found out, while today the word "thing" means “object, stuff, matter,” in the Middle Ages, when the theme of the game is set, it actually meant “council, assembly, gathering.” So yes… the Vikings are in a THING, they are in the Thing Square—that is, they are in a medieval council, in the square where assemblies are held.

🟢 It turns out that this word "þing" or "thing" appears (among others) in Old English, Old Norse, Old Saxon, and Old Dutch. The term meaning “council, assembly, gathering” was used by the English as early as 685–686 AD. The place where a thing was held was called a "thingstead" or "thingstow". However, by the year 1300, it had already lost this meaning, shifting in Middle English to refer to personal possessions, eventually evolving into the modern sense of “object.”

🟢 Even in modern Icelandic, Norwegian, and Danish, the term still carries its original meaning in official names, such as Folketing (“People’s Thing,” or “People’s Assembly”) in Denmark, Storting (“Great Thing,” or “Great Assembly”) in Norway, or Alþingi (“General Thing,” or “General Assembly”) in Iceland.

#AFeastForOdin #BoardGames #History #linguistics #vikings #Meeple #UweRosenberg #thing #language #LearnSomethingNewEveryday

@alex_doppelganger I remember a similar fascination when I first played it too! Really interesting (and a great game too even if I can't really play it nowadays)
@picard I only had time to play it once. :)) But really is such an amazing game that you definitely want to play it more and more. And, yes, I really love when board games actually act like a cultural object and is not just a commercial product aimed at consumers.
@alex_doppelganger yes for sure. i agree. some of these 'new generation' games really are a joy - not only to play, but the simple physical experience of them. and when they help you learn something about the world - even better!
@alex_doppelganger
Once you know about that Thing crops up in lots of places: The Manx legislature is the Tynwald, from þingvellir or Thing Weald, and the name of the town Dingwall in Scotland derives from the same.
@alex_doppelganger That "thing wasn't a thing anymore had alot to do with the spread of christianity (sometimes - e.g. saxony - with brutal force, sometimes by free will) and the order of the christian feudal system that came with it, like the Itinerant court. The imperial diet might be the one closest to a thing, but only to some degree.
The most important function of a thing in Celtic societies was a legislative one and to make political decisions, but it also was a social event among others.