1001 to 1600 in sports

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before 1001 | 1001 to 1600 | 1601 to 1700 | 1701 to 1725 | 1726 to 1730

By 1600, rural folk in Great Britain had begun to play early versions of cricket, football and golf. Early in the 16th century, English public houses were showing interest in bowls and real tennis, as well as dice and cards, all of which the government tried to eliminate forcefully. According to Derek Birley, it was late in the 16th century that "licensing began to replace prohibition ... a public house might be licensed to allow men of substance to engage in dice, cards, tables, bowls, and tennis on condition that there was no blaspheming or swearing, and no play before noon on working days or during hours of religious worship on Sundays". [1]

Contents

Bandy

Events

Boxing

Events

"Creag"

Speculation

Cricket

Events

Curling

Events

Football

Events

Golf

Theory of origin

Horse racing

Events

Mesoamerican ballgame

Events

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