Apparently another name for shovelboard etc - see attached dictionary entries.
Adrian
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The queckboard = shovelboard equation is pure speculation that arose in the 17th century (after the word "queckboard" had become obsolete and was no longer understood) and was quickly assumed to be fact. It's a factoid carried on in dictionary tradition. (This is actually a side note that James & I will mention in our shovelboard talk in Chemnitz. *end of commercial*) ;-)
(1376) Doc.in Riley Mem.Lond. 395: [They wished to gain some money at tables, or at chequers, commonly called] quek..[They found..a pair of tables, on the outside of which was painted a chequer-board, that is called a] quek..[The complainants played with the defendant, Nicholas, at] quek [until they had lost, at the games of tables and] quek [39 s. 2 d.].
In 1413, on 29 December, the quaecbert (game) or "chess" in Brussels was farmed out for 32 Dutch gilders.En 1413, le 29 décembre, le quaecbert ou jeu d'échecs à Bruxelles fut affermé 32 florins de Hollande.
(also) …la maison au jeu d'échecs (queecbert) était tenue par le bourreau. Elle fut fermée par résolution du 28 mai 1568 (Idem, II, p. 593)
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Arie van der Stoep, assisted by Jan de Ruiter and me, is preparing a new book (in Dutch). Chapter 5 is about quek, including the position of the game in England and France with all information Thierry mentioned. Chapter 8 deals about dice chess, with the texts of this game in the bylaws. From chapter 9 onwards a discussion about the consequences for our view on medieval chess.
Wim van Mourik
The books concerns a sociologic study of draughts, chess, morris and backgammon in the Netherlands and Flanders
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