Description
5-inch Elizabethan chess pieces combine powerful craftsmanship and beauty. It features a King with a height of 4 3/4″ (12cm) and a base of 1 7/8″ (4.7cm).
These chess pieces bring back the Elizabethan era on the game of chess. They feature skilled artwork and construction. The experts from Berkeley Chess use crushed marble and resin to craft these outstanding pieces that tell the story of Queen Elizabeth or the Virgin Queen.
Each of these themed chess pieces has a well-felt and weighted underlay finish giving a quality feel. The pieces bring back an antique effect and classical feeling to every player using them. Essentially, it has 32 chessmen with each piece representing a character in the Elizabethan ruling hierarchy.
The King represent Sir William Cecil who was The Queen’s Chief Advisor. Queen pieces are features Queen Elizabeth I. Bishop has Matthew Parker who was the Archbishop of Canterbury. Knight and Rook represent Sir Walter Raleigh and White Tower of The Tower of London respectively while the pawns are Ships of the English Fleet representation.
5-inch Elizabethan chess pieces combine powerful craftsmanship and beauty. It features a King with a height of 4 3/4″ (12cm) and a base of 1 7/8″ (4.7cm).
These chess pieces bring back the Elizabethan era on the game of chess. They feature skilled artwork and construction. The experts from Berkeley Chess use crushed marble and resin to craft these outstanding pieces that tell the story of Queen Elizabeth or the Virgin Queen.
Each of these themed chess pieces has a well-felt and weighted underlay finish giving a quality feel. The pieces bring back an antique effect and classical feeling to every player using them. Essentially, it has 32 chessmen with each piece representing a character in the Elizabethan ruling hierarchy.
The King represent Sir William Cecil who was The Queen’s Chief Advisor. Queen pieces are features Queen Elizabeth I. Bishop has Matthew Parker who was the Archbishop of Canterbury. Knight and Rook represent Sir Walter Raleigh and White Tower of The Tower of London respectively while the pawns are Ships of the English Fleet representation.
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