Medieval football is a modern term sometimes used
for a wide variety of localised
football
games which were invented and played in Europe. Alternative names
include
folk football,
mob football and
Shrovetide football. Some of these games
are played in current times. These games may also be regarded as
the "ancestors" of
modern
codes of football. By comparison with later forms of football,
the medieval matches were chaotic and had few rules.
The Middle
Ages saw a huge rise in popularity of games played annually at
Shrovetide throughout Europe, particularly in England
. The
games played in England at this time may have arrived with the
Roman occupation but there is little
evidence to indicate this. Certainly the
Romans played ball games, in particular
Harpastum. There is also one reference to
ball games being played in southern Britain prior to the
Norman Conquest.
In the ninth century
Nennius's Historia Britonum tells that a group of
boys were playing at ball (pilae ludus) The origin of this account
is either Southern England or
Wales
. Reports of a game played in France
— especially
Brittany, Normandy
and Picardy — known as La Soule or La Choule, suggest that
football games could have arrived in England as a result of the
Norman Conquest.
These archaic forms of football, typically classified as mob
football, would be played between neighboring towns and villages,
involving an unlimited number of players on opposing teams, who
would clash in a heaving mass of people struggling to drag an
inflated pig's bladder by any means possible to markers at each end
of a town. Sometimes instead of markers, the teams would attempt to
kick the bladder into the balcony of the opponents' church.
A legend
that these games in England evolved from a more ancient and bloody
ritual of kicking the "Dane
's head" is
unlikely to be true. Shrovetide games survive in a number of
English towns.
There are surprisingly few images of medieval football.
One
engraving from the early fourteenth century at Gloucester
Cathedral
, England, clearly shows two young men running
vigorously towards each other with a ball in mid-air between
them. There is a hint that the players may be using their
hands to strike the ball.
A second medieval image in the British Museum
, London clearly shows a group of men with a large
ball on the ground. The ball clearly has a seam where
leather has been sewn together. It is unclear exactly what is
happening in this set of three images, although the last images
appears to show a man with a broken arm. It is likely that this
image highlights the dangers of some medieval football games.
Most of the very early references to the game speak simply of "ball
play" or "playing at ball". This reinforces the idea that the games
played at the time did not necessarily involve a ball being
kicked.
Ninth century
The earliest account of ball games being played in Europe (after
the Roman occupation) comes from
Nennius's
account originating in southern Britain. This describes a group of
boys "playing at ball" (pilae ludus).
Twelfth century
The earliest reference from France which provides evidence of the
playing of ball games (presumably
La soule)
comes in 1147. This refers to the handing over of "seven balloons
of greatest dimension".
An early description of ball games that are likely to be football
in England was given by
William
FitzStephen (c. 1174-1183). He described the activities of
London youths during the annual festival of
Shrove Tuesday.
After lunch all the youth of the city go out into the
fields to take part in a ball game. The students of each school
have their own ball; the workers from each city craft are also
carrying their balls. Older citizens, fathers, and wealthy citizens
come on horseback to watch their juniors competing, and to relive
their own youth vicariously: you can see their inner passions
aroused as they watch the action and get caught up in the fun being
had by the carefree adolescents.[157216]
The earliest confirmation that such ball games in England involved
kicking comes from a verse about
St
Hugh, the Anglo-French
bishop of
Lincoln. This was probably written in the twelfth century,
although the precise date is not known: "Four and twenty bonny
boys, were playing at the ball.. he kicked the ball with his right
foot".
Thirteenth century
In about 1200 "ball" is mentioned as one of the games played by
King Arthur's knights in "Brut", written by
Layamon, an English poet from
Worcestershire. This is the earliest
reference to the
English language
"ball". Layamon states: "some drive balls (balles) far over the
fields".
Records
from 1280 report on a game at Ulgham
, near
Ashington
in Northumberland
, in which a player was killed as a result of
running against an opposing player's dagger. This account is
noteworthy because it the earliest reference to an English ball
game that definitely involved kicking; this suggests that kicking
was involved in even earlier ball games in England.
In Cornwall in 1283
plea rolls No. 111.
mention a man named Roger who was accused of striking a fellow
player in a game of
soule with a stone, a blow which
proved fatal.
Fourteenth century
In the
early fourteenth century a misericord at
Gloucester
cathedral
, England shows two young men playing with a
ball. It looks as though they are using their hands for the
game; however, kicking certainly cannot be excluded. It is notable
for the fact that most other medieval images of ball games in
England show large balls. This picture clearly shows that small
balls were also used.
The
earliest reference to ball games being played by university
students comes in 1303 when "Thomas of Salisbury
, a student of Oxford University
, found his brother Adam dead, and it was alleged
that he was killed by Irish students, whilst playing the ball in
the High Street towards Eastgate".
In 1314, comes the earliest reference to a game called football
when Nicholas de Farndone,
Lord Mayor of the City of
London issued a decree on behalf of King
Edward II banning football. It was
written in the
French used by the
English upper classes at the time. A translation reads:
"[f]orasmuch as there is great noise in the city caused by hustling
over large foot balls [
rageries de grosses pelotes de pee]
in the fields of the public from which many evils might arise which
God forbid: we command and forbid on behalf of the king, on pain of
imprisonment, such game to be used in the city in the
future."
Banning of ball games began in France in 1331 by Philippe V,
presumably the ball game known as La soule.
King
Edward III of England
also issued such a declaration, in 1363: "[m]oreover we ordain that
you prohibit under penalty of imprisonment all and sundry from such
stone, wood and iron throwing; handball, football, or hockey;
coursing and cock-fighting, or other such idle games". It is
noteworthy that at this time football was already being
differentiated in England from handball, which suggests the
evolution of basic rules. Between 1314 and 1667, football was
officially banned in England alone by more than 30 royal and local
laws. (See the article
Attempts to ban football
games for more details.)
Another
early account of kicking ball games from England comes in a 1321
dispensation, granted by Pope John
XXII to William de Spalding of Shouldham
:
"To William de Spalding, canon of Scoldham of the order of
Sempringham. During the game at ball as he kicked the ball, a lay
friend of his, also called William, ran against him and wounded
himself on a sheathed knife carried by the canon, so severely that
he died within six days. Dispensation is granted, as no blame is
attached to William de Spalding, who, feeling deeply the death of
his friend, and fearing what might be said by his enemies, has
applied to the pope."
Likewise
Geoffrey Chaucer offered
an allusion to the manner in which contemporary ball games may have
been played in fourteenth century England. In the
Canterbury Tales (written some time
after 1380) he uses the following line: "rolleth under foot as doth
a ball"
[157217].
English Theologian
John Wycliffe (1320
- 1384) referred to football in one of his sermons: "the latter
clout their shoes with censures as if they were playing football"
Some of Wycliffe's works were published in English and it is not
clear which language this particular reference to football was
written in. It may therefore be the earliest use of the word
football in English.
Fifteenth century
That football was known at the turn of the century in Western
England comes from about 1400 when the West Midland Laud Troy War
Book states in English: "Hedes reled aboute overal As men playe at
the fote-ball"
Two
references to football games come from Sussex
in 1403 and 1404 at Selmeston
and Chidham
as part of baptisms. On each occasion one of
the players broke his leg
King
Henry IV of England
provides the first documented use of the English word "football"
when in 1409 he issued a proclamation forbidding the levying of
money for "foteball".
In 1409 on March 4 eight men were compelled to give a bond of £20
to the London city chamberlain for their good behaviour towards
"the kind and good men of the mystery of Cordwainers" undertaking
not to collect money for a football (pro pila pedali).
In 1410 King Henry IV of England found it necessary to impose a
fine of 20S on mayors and bailiffs in townswhere misdemeanours such
as football occurred. This confirms that football was not confined
to London.
The Accounts of the
Brewers
company of London between 1421 and 1423 concerning the hiring
out of their hall include reference to "by the "ffooteballepleyers"
twice... 20 pence" listed in English under the title "crafts and
fraternities". This reference suggests that bans against football
were unsuccessful and the listing of football players as a
"fraternity" is the earliest allusion to what might be considered a
football club.
The
earliest reference to football or kicking ball games in Scotland
was in 1424 when King James I of Scotland also attempted to
ban the playing of "fute-ball".
In 1425
the prior of Bicester
, England, made a payment on St Katherine's day "to
sundry gifts to football players (ludentibus ad pilam pedalem)" of
4 denarii. It is noteworthy that at this time the prior was
willing to give his patronage to the game despite its being
outlawed.
In about
1430 Thomas Lydgate refers to the
form of football played in East Anglia
known as Camp Ball:
"Bolseryd out of length and bread, lyck a large campynge
balle"
In 1440 the game of
Camp Ball was
confirmed to be a form of football when the first ever
English-Latin dictionary,
Promptorium Parvulorum offers
the following definition of camp ball: "Campan, or playar at foott
balle, pediluson; campyon, or champion"
[157218]
In 1472
the rector of Swaffham
, Norfolk bequethed a field
adjoining the church yard for use as a "camping-close" or
"camping-pightel" specifically for the playing of the East Anglian
version of football known as Camp
Ball.
In 1486 comes the earliest description of "a football", in the
sense of a ball rather than a game.
This reference is in Dame Juliana Berners' Book of St Albans
. It states: "a certain rounde
instrument to play with ...it is an instrument for the foote and
then it is calde in Latyn 'pila pedalis', a fotebal." It is
noteworthy that it was considered socially acceptable for a
football to be included in medieval English
Heraldry.
There is an account from 11 April 1497 of a sum of money "giffen
[given] to Jame Dog [James Doig] to b[u]y fut ballis to the
King".
[157219]. It is
not known if he himself played with them.
The earliest and perhaps most important description of a football
game comes from the end of the 15th century in a Latin account of a
football game with features of modern
soccer.
It was
played at Cawston, Nottinghamshire
, England. It is included in a manuscript
collection of the miracles of King
Henry VI of England. Although the
precise date is uncertain it certainly comes from between 1481 and
1500. This is the first account of an exclusively "kicking game"
and the first description of
dribbling:
"[t]he game at which they had met for common recreation is called
by some the foot-ball game. It is one in which young men, in
country sport, propel a huge ball not by throwing it into the air
but by striking it and rolling it along the ground, and that not
with their hands but with their feet... kicking in opposite
directions" The chronicler gives the earliest reference to a
football field, stating that: "[t]he boundaries have been marked
and the game had started. Nevertheless the game was still rough, as
the account confirms: "a game, I say, abominable enough . . . and
rarely ending but with some loss, accident, or disadvantage of the
players themselves."
Medieval sport had no referee.
Sixteenth century
In 1514 comes the next description of early football by
Alexander Barclay, a resident of the South
East of England:
They get the bladder and blowe it great and thin, with
many beanes and peason put within, It ratleth, shineth and soundeth
clere and fayre, While it is throwen and caste up in the eyre, Eche
one contendeth and hath a great delite, with foote and hande the
bladder for to smite, if it fall to the ground they lifte it up
again... Overcometh the winter with driving the
foote-ball.
The first record of a pair of football boots occurs when
Henry VIII of England ordered a pair
from the Great Wardrobe in 1526.
[157220] The royal shopping list for footwear states:
"45 velvet pairs and 1 leather pair for football". Unfortunately
these are no longer in existence. It is not known for certain
whether the king himself played the game, but if so this is
noteworthy as Henry later banned the game in 1548 it because it
incited riots.
The reputation of football as a violent game persists throughout
most accounts from 16th century England. In 1531, Sir Thomas Elyot
noted in his
Boke named The Governour the dangers of
football, as well as the benefits of
archery
("shooting"):
Some men wolde say, that in mediocritie, whiche I haue
so moche praised in shootynge, why shulde nat boulynge, claisshe,
pynnes, and koytyng be as moche commended?
Verily as for two the laste, be to be utterly abiected
of al noble men, in like wise foote balle, wherin is nothinge but
beastly furie and exstreme violence; wherof procedeth hurte, and
consequently rancour and malice do remaine with them that be
wounded; wherfore it is to be put in perpetuall
silence.
In classhe is emploied to litle strength; in boulyng
oftentimes to moche; wherby the sinewes be to moche strayned, and
the vaines to moche chafed.
Wherof often tymes is sene to ensue ache, or the
decreas of strength or agilitie in the armes: where, in shotyng, if
the shooter use the strength of his bowe within his owne tiller, he
shal neuer be therwith grieued or made more feble.
Although many sixteenth century references to football are
disapproving or dwell upon their dangers there are two notable
departures from this view. First, Sir
Thomas Elyot (although previously a critic of
the game) advocates "footeball" as part of what he calls vehement
exercise in his Castell of Helth published in 1534. Secondly
English headmaster
Richard
Mulcaster provides in his 1581 publication the earliest
evidence of organised, refereed football for small teams playing in
formation.
The first reference to football in Ireland occurs in the
Statute of Galway of
1527, which allowed the playing of football and archery but banned
" 'hokie' — the
hurling of a little ball
with sticks or staves" as well as other sports.
(The earliest
recorded football match in Ireland was one between Louth
and Meath
, at Slane
, in
1712.)
The oldest surviving ball that might have been used for football
games dates to about 1540 and comes from Scotland. It is made from
leather and a pig's bladder.
It was discovered in 1981 in the roof
structure of the Queen's Chamber, Stirling Castle
. However, it has not been possible to
confirm this find was ever intended to be used as a
football; because of its small size (diameter 14-16 cm),
it has been suggested by the
National Museum of Scotland that
the ball was more probably used for a tennis-like game called
pallone.
The violence of early football in Scotland is made crystal clear in
this sixteenth century poem on the "beauties of football":
Bruised muscles and broken bonesDiscordant strife and
futile blowsLamed in old age, then cripled withalThese are the
beauties of football" (translated from old Scots)
The
earliest specific reference to football (pila pedalis) at a
university comes in 1555 when it was outlawed at St John's
College, Oxford
. Similar decrees followed shortly after at
other Oxford
Colleges and at Cambridge University
.
Another reference occurred in 1555, when Antonio Scaino published
his treatise
Del Giuoco della Palla (
On the Game of
the Ball). It was mostly concerned with a medieval predecessor
of tennis, but near the end, Scaino included a chapter titled, "Del
Giuoco del Calcio" ("On the Game of Football"), for comparison.
According to Scaino, the game was popular with students. It could
be played with any number of players. The only rules seem to be
that weapons could not be brought onto the field, and the ball
could not be thrown by hand. The goal was for each team to try to
cross the ball across a marked space at the opposite end of the
field. To start, the ball was placed in the middle of the field and
kicked by a member of the team that was chosen by lots. Scaino
remarks that its chief entertainment for the spectators was to see
"the players fall in great disarray & upside down."
In 1568
Sir Francis Knollys described a
football game played at Carlisle Castle
, Cumbria
, England by the retinue of Mary Queen of Scots who
had been imprisoned there: `20 of her retinue played at football
before her for two hours very strongly, nimbly, and
skilfully". Unfortunately, he does say anything about the
rules of the game.
According to the Tullie House
Museum
in Carlisle the identities of her retinue have been
well documented and are known to have included men of a range of
nationalities. Her normal Scottish retinue was presumably
not allowed in order to prevent her escaping back to Scotland. The
retinue were known to have come from both sides of the England
Scotland border and even included men from continental
Europe.
The first
official rules of Calcio Fiorentino
(Florentine kick) were recorded in 1580, although
the game had been developing around Florence for some time before
that date. The game involved teams of 27 kicking and
carrying a ball in a giant sandpit set up in the Piazza Santa Croce
in the centre of Florence, both teams aiming for their designated
point on the perimeter of the sandpit.
In 1586,
men from a ship commanded by English explorer John Davis, went ashore to
play a form of football with Inuit (Eskimo)
people in Greenland
.
Seventeenth century
The earliest account of a ball game that involves passing of the
ball comes from
Richard
Carew's 1602 account of
Cornish
Hurling which states "Then must he cast the ball (named
Dealing) to some one of his fellowes". Carew also offers the
earliest description of a goal (they pitch two bushes in the
ground, some eight or ten foote asunder; and directly against them,
ten or twelue score off,other twayne in like distance, which they
terme their Goales") and of goal keepers ("There is assigned for
their gard, a couple of their best stopping Hurlers").
The first
direct reference to scoring a goal is in John Day's play The Blind Beggar of Bethnal
Green (performed circa 1600; published 1659): "I'll play a
gole at camp-ball" (an extremely
violent variety of football, which was popular in East Anglia
).. Similarly in a poem in 1613,
Michael Drayton refers to "when the Ball to
throw, And drive it to the Gole, in squadrons forth they
goe".
In
1615 James I of England visited
Wiltshire
and the villagers "entertained his Majesty with a
foot-ball match"
Oliver Cromwell who left Cambridge
University
in 1617 was described by James Heath as "one of the chief
matchmakers and players of football" during his time at the
university.
In 1623
Edmund Waller refers in one of
his poems to "football" and alludes to teamwork and passing the
ball: "They ply their feet, and still the restless ball, Toss'd to
and fro, is urged by them all" . In 1650
Richard Baxer gives an interesting description
of football in his book Everlasting Rest: "Alas, that I must stand
by and see the Church, and Cause of Christ, like a Football in the
midst of a crowd of Boys, tost about in contention from one to
another.... and may drive it before him. ... But to be spurned
about in the dirt, till they have driven it on to the goal of their
private interests". This is noteworthy as it confirms that passing
of the ball from one player to another was part of football
games.
The first study of football as part of early sports is given in
Francis Willughby's Book of
Sports
[157221], written in about 1660. This account
is particularly noteworthy as he refers to football by its correct
name in English and is the first to describe the following: modern
goals and a pitch ("a close that has a gate at either end. The
gates are called Goals"), tactics ("leaving some of their best
players to guard the goal"), scoring ("they that can strike the
ball through their opponents' goal first win") and the way teams
were selected ("the players being equally divided according to
their strength and nimbleness"). He is the first to describe a law
of football: "They often break one another's shins when two meet
and strike both together against the ball, and therefore there is a
law that they must not strike higher than the ball". His account of
the ball itself is also very informative: "They blow a strong
bladder and tie the neck of it as fast as they can, and then put it
into the skin of a bull's cod and sew it fast in". He adds: "The
harder the ball is blown, the better it flies. They used to put
quicksilver into it sometimes to keep it from lying still". His
book includes the first (basic) diagram illustrating a football
pitch.
Surviving medieval ball games
Extinct varieties of medieval football
- France
- La Soule in Normandy and
Brittany, France.
- Ireland
- United Kingdom
- Chester-le-Street
, had a game played between the Upstreeters and
Downstreeters that was played until 1932
- Dorking
in Epsom
- East Anglia
: Camp ball was a popular
sport in the 15th century.
- Newton Ferrers
in Devon
- Kingston upon Thames
, Twickenham
, Bushy and Hampton Wick
, all near London. "The custom was to carry a
foot-ball from door to door and beg money:—at about 12 o'clock the
ball was turned loose, and those who could would kick it. In the
town of Kingston, all the shops are purposely kept shut upon that
day, there were several balls in the town, and of course several
parties. The game would last about four hours, when the parties
retire to the public-houses, and spend the money they had collected
on refreshments." The Every-Day Book
- Teddington
: "it was conducted with such animation that careful
house-holders had to protect their windows with hurdles and
bushes."The Chambers' Book of
Days February 9th
- Torrington in
Devon
had Out-Hurling. "Once played on
Trinity Monday, The sport of 'Out-hurling' was included in the 1922
Great Torrington Revel' Day. The publication Devon and Cornwall
Notes and Questions 1922, volume 12, carried an account of the
game, and noted that it had previously been a regular sport, and
involved a small ball which was thrown 'over-hand', and a pitch
approximately half a mile long (adjoining a brook)." Folklore, Culture, Customs and Language of
Devon
- In
Wales a game known as Cnapan was
once popular, notably at Llanwenog in
Cardiganshire, and Pwlldu in Pembrokeshire

References
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England and Middle-English literature. The American Historical
Review, vol 35, No. 1.
- Marples, Morris (1954). A History of Football, Secker
and Warburg, London
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and Warburg, London, p32
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and Warburg, London, p36
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-
http://www.ucm.es/BUCM/revistas/fll/11330392/articulos/EIUC9494110047A.PDF
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and Warburg, London, p37
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Curiouser & Curiouser Adventures in History, p.85. Simon
& Schuster, New York. ISBN 0684801647.
- http://www.gktgazette.com/2004/mar/features.asp
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and Warburg, London, p66
-
http://www.homecomingscotland2009.com/whats-on/oldest_football.html
- Scaino, Antonio. Trattato del Giuoco della Palla.
Trans. P. A. Negretti. London: Raquetier Productions Ltd.,
1984.
- Halpern, J. Balls and Blood, Sports Illustrated. Vol 109, No.
4: August 4, 2008, p. 42.
- Richard Hakluyt, Voyages in Search of The North-West Passage,
University of Adelaide, December
29, 2003
- Richard Carew - The Survey of Cornwall Page
63
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Rural Exercises Generally Practised: Chapter III
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http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext04/nhwil10.txt
- Oliver Cromwell - Quotes about Oliver Cromwell
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