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folk football in Britain
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The first football in Britain was played by
huge numbers of people on vast 'pitches' with very few rules. Villages were
divided into two sides, often based on where they lived. The games were
usually linked to special dates in the calendar and some of these traditions
have survived today. For instance, on January 1 in Kirkwall, Orkney, street
football breaks out at 10.00am each year. There is a Hocktide (first Sunday
after Easter) game at Workington, Cumbria, and July sees 'Reivers Week' at
Duns, Borders, where the 'ba' game' is between the married and single men of
the town. But the biggest day of the year for folk football in Britain is
Shrove Tuesday.
"When the pancakes are sated,
Come to the ring and you'll be mated,
There this ball will be upcast,
May this game be better than the last."

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The annual Shrove Tuesday football 'event' in
Bromfield, Cumbria is described by P. A. Ditchfield, Old English Sports,
1891:
".....but the great game for Shrove Tuesday
was our time-honoured football, which has survived so many of the ancient
pastimes of our land, and may be considered the oldest of all our English
national sports. The play might not be quite so scientific as that played
by our modern athletes, but, from the descriptions that have come down to
us, it was no less vigorous. "After dinner" (says an old writer) "all the
youths go into the fields to play at the ball. The ancient and worthy men
of the city come forth on horseback to see the sport of the young men, and
to take part of the pleasure in beholding their agility." There are some
exciting descriptions of old football matches; and we read of some very
fierce contests at Derby, which was renowned for the game. In the
seventeenth century it was played in the streets of London, much to the
annoyance of the inhabitants, who had to protect their windows with
hurdles and bushes. At Bromfield, in Cumberland, the annual contest on
Shrove Tuesday was keenly fought. Sides having been chosen, the football
was thrown down in the churchyard, and the house of the captain of each
side was the goal. Sometimes the distance was two or three miles, and each
step was keenly disputed. He was a proud man at Bromfield who succeeded in
reaching the goal with the ball, which he received as his guerdon. How the
villagers used to talk over the exploits of the day, and recount their
triumphs of former years with quite as much satisfaction as their
ancestors enjoyed in relating their feats in the border wars!
The Scots were famous formerly, as they now
are, for prowess in the game, and the account of the Shrove Tuesday match
between the married and single men at Scone, in Perthshire, reads very
like a description of a modern Rugby contest. At Inverness the women also
played, the married against the unmarried, when the former were always
victorious. King James I., who was a great patron of sports, did not
approve of his son Henry being a football player. He wrote that a young
man ought to have a "moderate practice of running, leaping, wrestling,
fencing, dancing, and playing at the caitch, or tennis, bowls, archery,
pall-mall, and riding; and in foul or stormy weather, cards and
backgammon, dice, chess, and billiards," but football was too rough a game
for his Majesty, and "meeter for laming than making able." Stubbs also
speaks of it as a "bloody and murthering practice, rather than a fellowly
sport or pastime." From the descriptions of the old games, it seems to
have been very painful work for the shins, and there were no rules to
prevent hacking and tripping in those days.
Football has never been the spoilt child of
English pastimes, but has lived on in spite of royal proclamations and the
protests of peace-loving citizens who objected to the noise, rough play,
and other vagaries of the early votaries of the game. Edward II. and
succeeding monarchs regarded it as a "useless and idle sport," which
interfered with the practice of archery, and therefore ought to be shunned
by all loyal subjects. The violence displayed at the matches is evident
from the records which have come down to us, and from the opinions of
several writers who condemn it severely. Free fights, broken limbs, and
deaths often resulted from old football encounters; and when the games
took place in the streets, lines of broken windows marked the progress of
the players. "A bloody and murdering practice," "a devilish pastime,"
involving "beastly fury and extreme violence," the breaking of necks,
arms, legs and backs—these were some of the descriptions of the football
of olden times. The Puritans set their faces against it, and the sport
languished for a long period as a general pastime. In some places it was
still practised with unwonted vigour, but it was not until the second half
of the present century that any revival took place. But football players
have quickly made up for lost time; few villages do not possess their
club, and our young men are ready to "Try it out at football by the
shins," with quite as much readiness as the players in the good old days,
although the play is generally less violent, and more scientific."
more soccer history...
a bloody and murthering practice a short history of football (soccer) folk football football rules gender issues in soccer coaching the colourful history of football (soccer)
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