Football is the name given to a number of different, but related, team
sports. The most popular of these world-wide is association football (also known
as soccer). The English word "football" is also applied to American football,
Australian rules football, Canadian football, Gaelic football, rugby football
(rugby union and rugby league), and related games. Each of these codes (specific
sets of rules) is to a greater or lesser extent referred to as "football" and
sometimes "footy" by its followers.
These games involve:
a large
spherical or prolate spheroid ball, which is itself called a football.
a
team scoring goals and/or points, by moving the ball to an opposing team's end
of the field and either into a goal area, or over a line.
the goal and/or
line being defended by the opposing team.
players being required to move the
ball mostly by kicking and — in some codes — carrying and/or passing the ball by
hand.
goals and/or points resulting from players putting the ball between
two goalposts.
offside rules, in most codes, restricting the movement of
players.
in some codes, points are mostly scored by players carrying the
ball across the goal line.
in most codes players scoring a goal must put the
ball either under or over a crossbar between the goalposts.
players in some
codes receiving a free kick after they take a mark/make a fair catch.
Many
of the modern games have their origins in England, but many peoples around the
world have played games which involved kicking and/or carrying a ball since
ancient timesWhile it is widely believed that the word "football" (or "foot
ball") originated in reference to the action of a foot kicking a ball, there is
a rival explanation, which has it that football originally referred to a variety
of games in medieval Europe, which were played on foot.[1] These games were
usually played by peasants, as opposed to the horse-riding sports often played
by aristocrats. While there is no conclusive evidence for this explanation, the
word football has always implied a variety of games played on foot, not just
those that involved kicking a ball. In some cases, the word football has even
been applied to games which have specifically outlawed kicking the
ball
Throughout the history of mankind, the urge to kick at stones and other
such objects is thought to have led to many early activities involving kicking
and/or running with a ball. Football-like games predate recorded history in all
parts of the world, and thus the earliest forms of football are not
knownDocumented evidence of what is possibly the oldest activity resembling
football can be found in a Chinese military manual written during the Warring
States Period in about the 476 BC-221 BC. It describes a practice known as cuju,
which involved kicking a leather ball through a hole in a piece of silk cloth
strung between two 30 foot poles.
Kemari being played at the Tanzan
Shrine, Sakurai, Japan.Another Asian ball-kicking game, which was influenced by
cuju, is kemari. This is known to have been played within the Japanese imperial
court in Kyoto from about 600 AD. In kemari several people stand in a circle and
kick a ball to each other, trying not to let the ball drop to the ground (much
like keepie uppie). The game appears to have died out sometime before the
mid-19th century. (It was revived in 1903, and it can now be seen played for the
benefit of tourists at a number of festivals.)
Mesoamerican ballgames
played with rubber balls are also well-documented as existing since before this
time, but these had more similarities to basketball or volleyball, and since
their influence on modern football games is minimal, most do not class them as
football.
The Ancient Greeks and Romans are known to have played many
ball games some of which involved the use of the feet. The Roman writer Cicero
describes the case of a man who was killed whilst having a shave when a ball was
kicked into a barber's shop. The Roman game harpastum is believed to have been
adapted from a team game known as "επισκυρο?" (episkyros) or pheninda that is
mentioned by Greek playwright, Antiphanes (388-311BC) and later referred to by
Clement of Alexandria. These games appears to have resembled rugby.
There
are a number of references to traditional, ancient, and/or prehistoric ball
games, played by indigenous peoples in many different parts of the world. For
example, in 1586, men from a ship commanded by an English explorer named John
Davis, went ashore to play a form of football with Inuit (Eskimo) people in
Greenland.[2] There are later accounts of an Inuit game played on ice, called
Aqsaqtuk. Each match began with two teams facing each other in parallel lines,
before attempting to kick the ball through each other team's line and then at a
goal. In 1610, William Strachey of the Jamestown settlement, Virginia recorded a
game played by Native Americans, called Pahsaheman. In Victoria, Australia,
indigenous people played a game called Marn Grook ("ball game"). An 1878 book by
Robert Brough-Smyth, The Aborigines of Victoria, quotes a man called Richard
Thomas as saying, in about 1841, that he had witnessed Aboriginal people playing
the game: "Mr Thomas describes how the foremost player will drop kick a ball
made from the skin of a possum and how other players leap into the air in order
to catch it." It is widely believed that Marn Grook had an influence on the
development of Australian rules football (see below).
These games and
others may well go far back into antiquity and may have influenced later
football games. However, the main sources of modern football codes appear to lie
in western Europe, especially England.
The Middle Ages saw a huge rise in
popularity of annual Shrovetide football matches throughout Europe, particularly
in England. The game played in England at this time may have arrived with the
Roman occupation, but there is little evidence to indicate this. Reports of a
game played in Brittany, Normandy, and Picardy, known as La Soule or Choule,
suggest that some of these football games could have arrived in England as a
result of the Norman Conquest.
An illustration of mob football.These
archaic forms of football, typically classified as "mob football", would be
played between neighbouring 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). There is no
evidence to support the legend that these games in England evolved from a more
ancient and bloody ritual of kicking the "Dane's head". Shrovetide games have
survived into the modern era in a number of English towns (see
below).
The first detailed description of football in England was given
by William FitzStephen in about 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.[3]
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.
In 1314 , Nicholas de
Farndone, Lord Mayor of London issued a decree banning football (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." This
is the earliest reference to football.
The earliest mention of a ball
game that involves kicking was in 1321, in Shouldham, Norfolk: "[d]uring the
game at ball as he kicked the ball, a lay friend of his... ran against him and
wounded himself".[4].
In 1363, King Edward III of England issued a
proclamation banning "...handball, football, or hockey; coursing and
cock-fighting, or other such idle games", showing that "football" — whatever its
exact form in this case — was being differentiated from games involving other
parts of the body, such as handball.
King Henry IV of England gives the
earliest documented use of the English word "football", in 1409, when he issued
a proclamation forbidding the levying of money for "foteball".[5]
There
is also an account in Latin from the end of the 15th century of football being
played at Cawston, Nottinghamshire. This is the first description of a "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.[6]
Other firsts in
the medi?val and early modern eras:
"a football", in the sense of a ball
rather than a game, was first mentioned in 1486.[7] 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." [8]
a pair of football boots was ordered by King
Henry VIII of England in 1526. [9]
women playing a form of football was in
1580, when Sir Philip Sidney described it in one of his poems: "[a] tyme there
is for all, my mother often sayes, When she, with skirts tuckt very hy, with
girles at football playes."[10]
the first references to goals are in the
late 16th and early 17th centuries. In 1584 and 1602 respectively, John Norden
and Richard Carew referred to "goals" in Cornish hurling. Carew described how
goals were made: "they pitch two bushes in the ground, some eight or ten foote
asunder; and directly against them, ten or twelue [twelve] score off, other
twayne in like distance, which they terme their Goales".[11] He is also the
first to describe goalkeepers and passing of the ball between players.
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". The word
"football", when used in reference to a specific game can mean any one of those
described above. Because of this, much friendly controversy has occurred over
the term football, primarily because it is used in different ways in different
parts of the English-speaking world. Most often, the word "football" is used to
refer to the code of football that is considered dominant within a particular
region.
Globally, and not necessarily in native English speaking
countries, the word "football" usually refers to association football as this is
the most widely played code of football. The name "soccer" (or "soccer
football") was originally a slang abbreviation of association football and is
now the prevailing term in the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand
where other codes of football are dominant.
Of the 45 national FIFA
affiliates in which English is an official or primary language, only three
(Canada, Samoa and the United States) actually use "soccer" in their
organizations' official names, while the rest use football (although the Samoan
Federation actually uses both). However, in some countries, such as Australia
and New Zealand, use of the word "football" by soccer bodies is a recent change
and has been controversial.
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