Robinson Crusoe d'apres Daniel Defoe board game
Datec 1890
Object number00031388
NameBoard game box
MediumInk on paper
DimensionsOverall: 30 x 375 x 540 mm, 0.756 kg
ClassificationsToys, games and souvenirs
Credit LineANMM Collection Purchased with the assistance of the Louis Vuitton Trust Fund
DescriptionThis board game retells the famous story of Robinson Crusoe in French. The illustration on the box lid depicts the desert island, with Crusoe holding his musket and Friday, his freed companion, in a posture of supplication at his feet. There are several smaller images depicting scenes from the book in the corners of the box. It can be played in two ways, as a lotto, or as a pursuit game from England to South America and back. The game mimics the events from the book, including scenes of shipwreck, discovery, conflict with the natives, Crusoe's friendship with Friday and final rescue.
The board game consists of 6 lithograph plates, 48 printed cardboard tokens, 6 pink numbered cards, 5 figures on metal stands, 13 coloured markers, a cup and a papier mache tray.HistoryDaniel Defoe's novel was first published in 1719 under the long title 'The Life and Strange Surprizing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, of York, Mariner: Who lived Eight and Twenty Years, all alone in an un-inhabited Island on the Coast of America, near the Mouth of the Great River of Oroonoque; Having been cast on Shore by Shipwreck, wherein all the Men perished but himself. With An Account how he was at last as strangely deliver'd by Pirates.' It was a bestseller and since then, the novel has never been out of print.
Crusoe's character is widely accepted to have been based on Alexander Selkirk, a Scottish sailor who was abandoned on the Isla Más Afuera in the Juan Fernández Islands near Chile, from 1704 to 1709. Selkirk was eventually found by the English explorer and privateer William Dampier along with Captain Woodes Rogers sailing on board the DUKE. Their meeting was later described in Rogers' work, 'A Cruising Voyage Round the World' published in 1712.
The few insights Rogers provides in his accounts reveal interesting clues about Selkirk's experience on the island. Selkirk sailed on the English galley, CINQUE PORTS, under Captain Thomas Stradling. Convinced that the vessel was not seaworthy he attempted to persuade his shipmates to stay with him on the uninhabited island. Though unsuccessful in his efforts, after he was abandoned Selkirk went on to prove a resourceful survivor, much like his literary counterpart. This is confirmed by Rogers' assessment of the situation:
'...whatever there is in these Stories, this of Mr. Selkirk I know to be true; and his Behaviour afterwards gives me reason to believe the Account he gave me how he spent his time, and bore up under such an Affliction, in which nothing but the Divine Providence could have supported any Man…Necessity is the Mother of Invention, since he found means to supply his Wants in a very natural manner, so as to maintain his Life….'
Like Crusoe, Selkirk is seen as a lucky survivor and a prime example of the adaptable castaway. Ironically, CINQUE PORTS foundered after Selkirk's marooning. As Rogers concludes, 'one may see that Solitude and Retirement from the World is not such an unsufferable State of Life as most Men imagine, especially when People are fairly call’d or thrown into it unavoidably, as this Man was; who in all probability must otherwise have perish’d in the Seas, the Ship which left him being cast away not long after.'
It is clear from Rogers' language that Selkirk was held in high esteem. Much in the same way that Crusoe is revered for his survival skills, Selkirk is praised for his actions as he hunted goats and presented them to Rogers' sick crew. This admiration is further evidenced by Selkirk's assigned status as 'The Governor', though Rogers felt they ‘might as well have nam’d him the Absolute Monarch of the Island’.
Aside from the surface parallels between Selkirk and Crusoe's isolation, the recurring theme of survival and the castaway as a state of being seems to have been the main source of fascination for 18th and 19th century observers. This board game and its accessories stands as a lasting testament to this cultural obsession with Defoe's narrative of survival and the terror of the unknown. It depicts the story in a series of lithographs and would have been a colourful form of entertainment for readers. Like a pictorial exhibition, it may have provided an engaging storytelling exercise for children, with the game positioned in a 19th-century room.SignificanceThis board game would have been a popular mode of leisurely 19th-century entertainment and is based on a well-known adventure story of shipwreck, isolation and rescue. It demonstrates its enduring cultural appeal and the extent to which the story impacted readers across the world from when it was first published in 1719, right up to the 19th century.