Game of Goose (1587)
Spielzeit: 20
Min. Alter: 5
Spieler: 2 - 6
Verlag: Daniel Mercier Chocolatier & Créateur, Mulder, Borras Plana S.A., Abel Klinger, Jeu Jura, Galleryplay, Tomland, Galison, XVIe, Tietz und Pinthus, Société Générale Polishes, University Games, Clementoni, White Horse, John Wallis, Zwan, ΕΠΑ (EPA), Verlag J. A. Steinkamp, Douwe Egberts, Papita, Schmidt Spiele, Berliner Spielkarten, La Petite Boîte, Martin Fritz, play time, Waldpost Spiele-Verlag, Fratelli Fabbri Editori (Fabbri Editore), ERA Aux Fruits D'Orient, Wild Horse, Brimtoy, Chupa Chups, Epinal, Diset S. A., René Ackermann, H. Overton, Clown Games, Ravensburger, Johann Trautner, Klee, Editions ATLAS, Otto Maier Verlag, Rubinstein, ASS Altenburger Spielkarten, Louvre Editions, Ricon, Dominioni Editore, King International, Pellerin & Cie, Società Editrice Internazionale, Kadon Enterprises, Robert Sayer, J Vlieger, Kids Games Ltd, Jos. Scholz, Selecta Spel en Hobby, Sio, Egel-Spelen, Majora, Hausser, Role of Honour Games, Inovac Rima SA, Saussine Editeur, HEMA, Koster Brothers, Tactic, Mon Petit Art, Palet spil, Ludens Spirit, Christian Janicot, Reclame Uitgaven De Beukelaer, Galt Toys, Editrice Giochi, Bookmark Verlag, Peri Spiele, MB Spellen, (Self-Published), Diabolo, Marigó, Noris Spiele, David Funck, Altap, ABC Nürnberg, Reader's Digest, Verlag G.N. Renner, ABRA, Carlit, Watilliaux, Brückner Spiele, Johann Raab, Jumbo, Carrom Art, Peliko Oy, Nürburg Spiele, Oehmigke & Riemschneider, R. H. Laurie, Cayro, The Games, Djeco, (Public Domain), Nathan, Το Καλό Παιχνίδι Α.Ε., MB Juegos, Georg Nikolaus Renner, Schmidt France, Playbox, Carlo Coriolani, (Unknown), Selecta Spielzeug, John Bowles & Son, Nederlandse Spellenfabriek B.V. Amsterdam, Jeux Stella, Spear's Games, Sala
Designer: (Uncredited)
Künstler: Séverine Prélat, Michael Holzbecher, Eugen Osswald, Claude Deschamps, Sébastien Chebret, Mauro Gariglio, Yasmin Imamura, Martin Jarrie, Florence Thuillier
Mechaniken: Events, Track Movement, Roll / Spin and Move, Race, Lose a Turn, Dice Rolling
Min. Alter: 5
Spieler: 2 - 6
Verlag: Daniel Mercier Chocolatier & Créateur, Mulder, Borras Plana S.A., Abel Klinger, Jeu Jura, Galleryplay, Tomland, Galison, XVIe, Tietz und Pinthus, Société Générale Polishes, University Games, Clementoni, White Horse, John Wallis, Zwan, ΕΠΑ (EPA), Verlag J. A. Steinkamp, Douwe Egberts, Papita, Schmidt Spiele, Berliner Spielkarten, La Petite Boîte, Martin Fritz, play time, Waldpost Spiele-Verlag, Fratelli Fabbri Editori (Fabbri Editore), ERA Aux Fruits D'Orient, Wild Horse, Brimtoy, Chupa Chups, Epinal, Diset S. A., René Ackermann, H. Overton, Clown Games, Ravensburger, Johann Trautner, Klee, Editions ATLAS, Otto Maier Verlag, Rubinstein, ASS Altenburger Spielkarten, Louvre Editions, Ricon, Dominioni Editore, King International, Pellerin & Cie, Società Editrice Internazionale, Kadon Enterprises, Robert Sayer, J Vlieger, Kids Games Ltd, Jos. Scholz, Selecta Spel en Hobby, Sio, Egel-Spelen, Majora, Hausser, Role of Honour Games, Inovac Rima SA, Saussine Editeur, HEMA, Koster Brothers, Tactic, Mon Petit Art, Palet spil, Ludens Spirit, Christian Janicot, Reclame Uitgaven De Beukelaer, Galt Toys, Editrice Giochi, Bookmark Verlag, Peri Spiele, MB Spellen, (Self-Published), Diabolo, Marigó, Noris Spiele, David Funck, Altap, ABC Nürnberg, Reader's Digest, Verlag G.N. Renner, ABRA, Carlit, Watilliaux, Brückner Spiele, Johann Raab, Jumbo, Carrom Art, Peliko Oy, Nürburg Spiele, Oehmigke & Riemschneider, R. H. Laurie, Cayro, The Games, Djeco, (Public Domain), Nathan, Το Καλό Παιχνίδι Α.Ε., MB Juegos, Georg Nikolaus Renner, Schmidt France, Playbox, Carlo Coriolani, (Unknown), Selecta Spielzeug, John Bowles & Son, Nederlandse Spellenfabriek B.V. Amsterdam, Jeux Stella, Spear's Games, Sala
Designer: (Uncredited)
Künstler: Séverine Prélat, Michael Holzbecher, Eugen Osswald, Claude Deschamps, Sébastien Chebret, Mauro Gariglio, Yasmin Imamura, Martin Jarrie, Florence Thuillier
Mechaniken: Events, Track Movement, Roll / Spin and Move, Race, Lose a Turn, Dice Rolling
Beschreibung anzeigen Kommentare anzeigen Preisentwicklung
The Game of Goose is an ancient children's classic, possibly tracing its roots all the way to the Ancient Egyptian game of Mehen which was played in early Old Kingdom times.
Francesco de Medici in Italy sent a copy of this game to King Felipe II of Spain during the 16th century.
It became one of the most popular games in Europe during that time.
Circa 1600, Benoît Rigaud's heirs printed in Lyon "Le Jeu de l'oye, renouvellé des Grecs, jeu de grand plaisir, comme aujourd'huy princes & grands seigneur" [sic] "le pratiquent" - Le jeu de l'oie, renewed from the Greeks, game of great pleasure, as today princes and great lord [sic] play it -, the oldest French copy known.
Father Claude-François Menestrier describes the game in his "Bibliothèque curieuse et instructive" (1704) : 'There's another type of game, that seems easier to learn, and easier to play; it's the game of goose so common and it is said to come from the Greeks, though nothing can be found about it in their authors. This game is much easier than cards game, because it's always wholly displayed to the players, and, being in the form of a snail or spirally folded snake, it's appropriate to print the things that one wants to learn...'.
The game became an instant hit in France in the 1600s, and engendered a lot of variants (educational, commemorative, ...) up to the present day.
It turned up later in England about 1750, according to Whitehouse, under the title "Royall & most pleasant game of the goose - Invented at the Consistory in Rome and are printed and sold by H. OVERTON at Ye White Horse without Newgate where all sorts of Fine Prints and maps are Sold and Framed at Reasonable Rate".
By 1851 it had been copied by the American publisher J.P. Beach of New York who entitled it The Jolly Game of Goose. An 1855 edition was called simply The Game of Goose.
It is a simple game of racing, using a spiral track with lovely illustrations. The main principle is one shared with Snakes and Ladders as well as the later Game of Life: virtue is rewarded and vice is punished.
Schmidt Spiele rates their Gänsespiel for ages 5 and up.
Bibliography
Whitehouse, F. R. B. (1971) [1951]. Table games of Georgian and Victorian days. Birmingham: Priory Press Ltd.
'Jeux de princes, jeux de vilains', edited by Eve Netchine, Bibliothèque nationale de France / Seuil (2009).
--gameplay description from Wikipedia:
The board consists of a track with consecutively numbered spaces (usually 63), and is often arranged in a spiral with the starting point at the outside. Each player's piece is moved according to throws of one or two dice. Scattered throughout the board are a number of spaces on which a goose is depicted; landing on a goose allows the player to move again by the same distance. Additional shortcuts, such as spaces marked with a bridge, move the player to some other specified position. There are also a few penalty spaces which force the player to move backwards or lose one or more turns, the most recognizable being the one marked with a skull and symbolizing death; landing on this space results in the player being sent back to start. On Spanish boards the reverse is usually a Pachisi board.
Many themed versions of the game have been created, depicting topics as diverse as ice skating, Richard Nixon, and sewage pumps. These can be valued for their historical or artistic merits even by those who have no interest in the game itself, with some editions having been sold for thousands of dollars at auction or displayed in museums.
Francesco de Medici in Italy sent a copy of this game to King Felipe II of Spain during the 16th century.
It became one of the most popular games in Europe during that time.
Circa 1600, Benoît Rigaud's heirs printed in Lyon "Le Jeu de l'oye, renouvellé des Grecs, jeu de grand plaisir, comme aujourd'huy princes & grands seigneur" [sic] "le pratiquent" - Le jeu de l'oie, renewed from the Greeks, game of great pleasure, as today princes and great lord [sic] play it -, the oldest French copy known.
Father Claude-François Menestrier describes the game in his "Bibliothèque curieuse et instructive" (1704) : 'There's another type of game, that seems easier to learn, and easier to play; it's the game of goose so common and it is said to come from the Greeks, though nothing can be found about it in their authors. This game is much easier than cards game, because it's always wholly displayed to the players, and, being in the form of a snail or spirally folded snake, it's appropriate to print the things that one wants to learn...'.
The game became an instant hit in France in the 1600s, and engendered a lot of variants (educational, commemorative, ...) up to the present day.
It turned up later in England about 1750, according to Whitehouse, under the title "Royall & most pleasant game of the goose - Invented at the Consistory in Rome and are printed and sold by H. OVERTON at Ye White Horse without Newgate where all sorts of Fine Prints and maps are Sold and Framed at Reasonable Rate".
By 1851 it had been copied by the American publisher J.P. Beach of New York who entitled it The Jolly Game of Goose. An 1855 edition was called simply The Game of Goose.
It is a simple game of racing, using a spiral track with lovely illustrations. The main principle is one shared with Snakes and Ladders as well as the later Game of Life: virtue is rewarded and vice is punished.
Schmidt Spiele rates their Gänsespiel for ages 5 and up.
Bibliography
Whitehouse, F. R. B. (1971) [1951]. Table games of Georgian and Victorian days. Birmingham: Priory Press Ltd.
'Jeux de princes, jeux de vilains', edited by Eve Netchine, Bibliothèque nationale de France / Seuil (2009).
--gameplay description from Wikipedia:
The board consists of a track with consecutively numbered spaces (usually 63), and is often arranged in a spiral with the starting point at the outside. Each player's piece is moved according to throws of one or two dice. Scattered throughout the board are a number of spaces on which a goose is depicted; landing on a goose allows the player to move again by the same distance. Additional shortcuts, such as spaces marked with a bridge, move the player to some other specified position. There are also a few penalty spaces which force the player to move backwards or lose one or more turns, the most recognizable being the one marked with a skull and symbolizing death; landing on this space results in the player being sent back to start. On Spanish boards the reverse is usually a Pachisi board.
Many themed versions of the game have been created, depicting topics as diverse as ice skating, Richard Nixon, and sewage pumps. These can be valued for their historical or artistic merits even by those who have no interest in the game itself, with some editions having been sold for thousands of dollars at auction or displayed in museums.
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Das Spiel wurde auch unter folgenden Namen veröffentlicht:
Jeu de l'Huile de Table des Chartreux ,
Het Aloude Ganzenspel ,
Reise in die Ewigkeit ,
Das Grosse Gänse Spiel ,
Lustiges Gänse Spiel ,
Joc de l'oca ,
Grand Jeu de L'Oie ,
Het Efteling Spel ,
Il Gioco dell'Oca del Lago di Como ,
Det nya gåsspelet ,
El joc de l'oca ,
Gåsspelet ,
Drillepind ,
Gänsespiel ,
Comme du Buerre ,
Ganzenbord 3D ,
Il Gioco dell'Oca ,
Jeu du Chemin de Fer ou du Jeu de l'oie ferroviaire ,
Gässpelet ,
Il Gioco Dell' Oca Dilettevole ,
Das neue Affenspiel ,
Nederlandsch Ganze Spel ,
Jeu de l'Oie: Pédagogique – Sur la culture du Cacao ,
Het Nieuw en Vemaecklyck Gansespel ,
Kva-Kvaak hanhipeli ,
Reuze Ganzenbord ,
Het nieuwe ganzenspel ,
Jeu de l'oie: Un petit tour au musée du Louvre ,
Das lustige Affenspiel für Jung und Alt ,
Oud-Hollands Ganzenbord ,
Het echt ganzenspel ,
Il Gioco con le Oche ,
Il Gioco di Jules Verne ,
Le Jeu Des Bons Enfans ,
Neues Gänsespiel ,
Ganzenbord Assen ,
Jeu de l'oie des archives départementales du Gard ,
Oud-Hollandsch Ganzenbord ,
De school gaat uit ,
Die große Überfahrt: Gänsespiel ,
Oud Hollands Ganzenbord ,
Gåsespillet ,
The Royal Game of the Goose ,
Jeu de l'oie du RCCH: Rugby Club Cherbourg-Hague ,
The Game of Goose set around Lake Como ,
The new and marvellous game of the goose, or, one man's morris-off ,
I personaggi della Commedia ,
The New and Favorite Game of Mother Goose and the Golden Egg ,
Das kleine Gänsespiel ,
Il dilettevole Gioco di Loca ,
Jeu de l'Oie F.C.Grenoble Rugby ,
Laurie's New and Entertaining Game of the Golden Goose ,
Jeu de l'Oie ,
Het Samson Spel ,
Piggelmee ,
Gänseliesl ,
Jeu de L'oie et Petits Chevaux ,
Oudhollands Ganzenbord ,
Il gioco dell'oca di Milano ,
La Oca Loca ,
Het Oud Hollandse Ganzenbord ,
Το παιχνίδι της χήνας ,
El juego de la oca ,
Neues Gänse Spiel ,
The Royal Game of Goose ,
Goose Game ,
Jeu de l'âne Noirmoutier ,
Das Gänsespiel ,
Le Jeu de l'Oie ,
Royall & most pleasant game of the goose ,
Löwenspiel ,
Piraña wildwaterspel ,
Zodiac Race Classic Game Bandana ,
Ein Neu-Erfundenes Ganss-Spiel ,
Ganzebord ,
Wilde-Ganzenbord ,
Europe Game ,
Gänse Spiel ,
Leeuwenspel ,
Das Khurtzweillige Fortuna-Spill ,
Het Ganzenbord ,
Gioco dell'Oca ,
Ganzenbord ,
Game of Goose ,
Ganzenbord spelkleed ,
Jogo da Glória ,
Auf dem Gänseanger ,
Nouveau Jeu De L'Oie ,
Le Jeu du Crocodile Nîmois ,
Het Apenspel ,
Gänse-Spiel ,
The Game of the Goose ,
Giuoco dell'Oca ,
Goosegame ,
Jogo do Ganso ,
Juego de la oca ,
Het Out-Hollandse Ganzenbord ,
En voyage avec Vauban ,
Le Jeu d'Oie
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ag.gameitem.lastUpdated: 2025-04-22 09:58:32.931