France by
Pierre Duval|alt=A black and white print of a board game similar to the game of the goose with 26 steps. The steps are oval. They include a year, a French half and a Spanish half with a map each and French text. The game rules are explained in French. Educational race games based on the "Game of the Goose" are a French invention of the 17th century. The earliest known adaptation is Pierre Marriette's "Jeu Chronologique" dated 1638, with the purpose of teaching History. Successive versions taught geography, the arts of war, and heraldry, produced from expensively engraved copper plates as opposed to the provincial productions of games from woodcut blocks.
England A century later, England joined the trend of educational race games with John Jeffreys’ 1759 "A Journey through Europe, or the Play of Geography," printed by Carington Bowles. The first dated game of this kind marked a significant step in the evolution of educational games to facilitate the teaching of geography in the region. offers a distinct rule at space 57, where a depicted man with a pipe suggests a gendered activity. Any player, unless they are female, are sent back to space 47, hinting at the societal views on smoking as an exclusively masculine activity.
United States of America Crossing the Atlantic, the "Game of the Goose" was tailored once again. In the United States, "The Mansion of Happiness" was published in 1843 as one of the first board games mass-produced in America. The adaptation was designed by Anne Abbott, a clergyman's daughter from Beverly, with the purpose of instilling ethical values based on Christian morality. It used gameplay to reflect the lively path to happiness. An introductory verse in the instructions makes this clear:
At this amusement each will find A moral to improve the mind. It gives to those their proper due Who various paths of vice pursue, And shows (while vice destruction brings) That Good from every Virtue springs. Be virtuous then and forward press To gain the seat of Happiness Germany Meanwhile, In Germany, around 1933, the “Reise durch Deutschland” (Tour of Germany) was published. At first glance, it mirrored Swiss games designed in the late 19th century to promote tourism, but its purpose was evidently more profound. The game carried a political message, reflecting on the division of Germany after the
Treaty of Versailles. It featured depictions of rural workers in traditional attire and opened with a reference to the first Reichstag by Hitler.
Netherlands A Dutch variation published in 1858 called "Sint Nicolaas," involves the initial dice throw to affect the gameplay differently based on the player's gender. An initial throw of 6 and 3 moves male players to space 25 and female players to space 26, each marked by images of a young man or woman. Conversely, an initial throw of 5 and 4 moves male players to space 51 and female players to space 53, marked with images of an older man or woman, with the implication of being past marriageable age.
Male / Female Rules Historical variations of the “Game of the Goose” often reflect the cultural norms and gender roles of their times through the rules that differ according to the gender of the player. ==References==