
Terracotta group of two girls playing a game known as ephedrismos
The subject of this group with one person carrying another has a long history in Greek art. It is thought to illustrate a game called ephedrismos. A stone was placed upright on the ground, and balls or pebbles were thrown at it from a distance.
Playing Ephedrismos - Girl Museum
2017年2月14日 · Terracotta group of two girls playing a game known as ephedrismos, Hellenistic period (400-301 BCE), Ancient Greece. Metropolitan Museum of Art. Rogers Fund, 1907. How long have girls played games? Some of the earliest evidence of games specifically for girls comes from Ancient Greece.
Ephedrismos - Wikipedia
L'Ephedrismos (in greco antico: ἐϕεδρισμός?; chiamato ἐν κούλῃ in Attica secondo Esichio [1]) era un gioco popolare diffuso nell'antica Grecia.
Ephedrismos Group (Piggyback Girls) - JHU Archaeological Museum
Ephedrismos groups, or piggyback girls, were frequently represented in Hellestic art, and were particularly popular as small-scale terracotta figurines. More than forty terracotta statuettes of piggyback girls have been unearthed since the 19 th century.
Ephedrismos — Wikipédia
L'ephedrismos (du verbe grec ancien : ἐφεδρίζω / ephedrizô, littéralement « se faire porter, s'asseoir à dos ») est un jeu pratiqué en Grèce antique et dont les participants, au nombre de deux, sont de même sexe — féminin ou masculin — ou encore des personnages mythologiques, comme par exemple Éros ou des satyres [1].
Greek Games - History for kids
One common children’s game in ancient Greece was ephedrismos, which was a kind of piggyback game. Artifacts such as vases often show children playing this game. Another popular game was ostrakinda, a game in which a shell was painted black one side.
ギリシャの女の子のゲーム:ephedrismos - 人文科学 2025
メトロポリタン美術館のオンラインカタログには、女の子がキトンに身を包み、赤い巻き毛で描かれていることも記載されています。 ライダーは ステファノ (クラウン)を着用し、敗者はフローラルリースを着用します。 しかし、それはメットの情報が止まるところです。 なぜ女の子はこのゲームをプレイしたのですか、そしてこれが彼らがプレイしていたものであることをどうやって知るのですか? エフェドリスモスグループ(ピギーバックガールズ) ジョンズホプ …
Play and Games in Ancient Greece — Google Arts & Culture
Ephedrismos was a popular game for boys and girls where one person carries another on their back while blindfolded until they touch a stone. Mythological figures are also depicted playing...
Category:Ephedrismos - Wikimedia Commons
English: It is a game whose the name means "carry on the back". It was played with 2 players (boys or girls) in 2 steps. The players had to hit a target (standing stone) on the ground with a rock or a ball. The loser had to carry the winner, who covered the loser's eyes, on his back until the loser touched the target with his foot [1].
Terracotta group of two girls playing a game known as ephedrismos
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