Upvote:4
You are correct.
According to this site (unfortunately in German) about the Roman Empire there were many different types of dice in use by the Romans. Apart from the 6-sided cubes we know today there were also rod-shaped dice with four or six sides.
The website reports:
"For many games of dice of the ancient times one required only four possible differentiations (results). They derive from little bones from animals, which were also used for playing dice."
The source given by the website is Marco Fitta, "Spiele und Spielzeug in der Antike".
Upvote:7
The use elongated or long dice has been noted for a number of cultures and they seem to have been associated with particular games over many centuries. Archer St. Clair in Carving as Craft notes that these
had largely been replaced by cubical dice in the Roman world by the second century AD.
St. Clair adds that
they are usually made from the shafts of small long bones, and the numbers 1 and 2 are usually omitted. Even when solid...the ends are usually left blank
Interestingly, parallelepiped dice have also been found in Britainn dating from both before and after the Roman occupation but seemingly made in a similar fashion. On these, Arthur MacGregor in Bone, Antler, Ivory and Horn: The Technology of Skeletal Materials Since the Roman Period, says most were
made from the shafts of small, long bones, comparable with the metapodials of sheep, and indeed their characteristically elongated shape may be seen as resulting from this repeated selection. A corollary of this choice is that the ends are usually open and hence the values are normally restricted to the four elongated sides, the numbers 1 and 2 usually being omitted.
There is little mention of what games the Romans played with these dice, but there is this from Pete Nash in Mythic Rome:
TALI (ROLLED KNUCKLEBONES)
Played with actual knucklebones, or elongated dice (tali) which mimic the elongated shape of the bones....the sides were marked with the numerals 1, 3, 4 or 6.... Played with four bones, the objective of the game is to roll the highest possible value.
F. N. David, in Games, Gods and Gambling, citing Suetonius, mentions that it is unfortunate that the emperor Claudius' book 'How to Win at Dice' has not survived. While Davis does not believe it contained rules on games, it might have told us something.