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sports - events

c. 800 BCGreeceBook XXIII of the Greek epic poem The Iliad contains the earliest known extensive description of a sporting event, the Funeral Games of Patroclus. It is mostly devoted to chariot racing, but there are briefer descriptions of boxing, wrestling, discus and javelin throwing, and foot races. In another epic poem, The Odyssey, Homer describes a game resembling team handball, which he says was invented by Angagalla, a Spartan princess.
582 BCGreeceThe Pythian Games are inaugurated at Delphi, Greece, as a Panhellenic festival modelled on the Olympic Games. In the cycle of the four Panhellenic festivals, the Pythian Games are eventually held in the third year of each Olympiad.
566 BCGreeceThe Panathenaea, the greatest of the Greek local festivals, is inaugurated at Athens. Held every year in summer with an even grander celebration (the Greater Panathenaea) every four years, it includes athletic and equestrian events, and musical, dancing, and poetry contests.
67Greece-Roman, Roman EmpireRoman emperor Nero creates a spectacle by taking part in the Greek games. He is allowed to win 1,808 prizes, but his antics and dubious victories are not officially recorded.
969ChinaThe Chinese introduce playing cards. The earliest known pack consists of 56 cards divided into 4 suits of 14 cards each. The cards are printed in several inks, using separate wood blocks for each part of the pattern. They are used as paper money as well as for gaming.
1000–1100Europe‘Tables’, or backgammon, is introduced to Europe by the Arabs (or reintroduced, as it is similar in name and appearance to the Roman game Tabula). It becomes extremely popular over the next few centuries. The name ‘backgammon’ is first used in the mid-17th century.
1349EnglandFootball and other games are banned in England by King Edward III because they interfere with archery practice. The ban is repeated in 1389 and 1401, but with limited effect.
1591EnglandThe Privy Council orders all theatres in England to be closed on Thursdays because bear baitings generally take place on Thursdays and actors cannot be allowed to prejudice such entertainments by their competition.
1618UKKing James I of England and VI of Scotland issues a ‘declaration to his subjects concerning lawful sports to be used’, known widely as the Book of Sports. Sports such as football are prohibited, but in permitting a number of others, he fails to quell Puritan objections to the playing of games and other recreations.
1653UKThe first edition of English author Isaak Walton's The Compleat Angler, or The Contemplative Man's Recreation is published.
c. 1725c. 1740SpainBullfighting grows in popularity in Spain, with Francisco Romero becoming the first famous matador.
1811PrussiaThe Prussian educator Friedrich Ludwig Jahn, a founding father of modern gymnastics, establishes the Turnverein gymnastic society in Berlin, the Prussian capital.
c. 1820UKSquash rackets, a version of rackets with a softer ball, is invented and developed at Harrow School, London, England.
10 June 1829UKThe Oxford and Cambridge University Boat Race is first rowed, on the River Thames at Henley, Oxfordshire, England. Oxford wins the 3.6-km/2.25-mi race from Hambledon Lock to Henley Bridge in 14 min 30 sec, represented entirely by students from Christchurch College.
1858AustraliaAustralian cricketer Thomas Wills and his cousin Henry Colden Harrison devise Australian Rules football, and help to form the first club, Melbourne Football Club.
30 June 1859France, USA, CanadaThe French tightrope walker Charles Blondin (pseudonym of Jean-François Gravelet) crosses Niagara Falls, between Canada and the USA, on a tightrope. About 25,000 people witness the crossing, which takes five minutes.
c. 1867UKThe game of badminton, based on the old English game of battledore and shuttlecock (itself based on an ancient Chinese game), is devised at Badminton Hall, Gloucestershire, England, by the family and friends of the Duke of Beaufort.
1882JapanThe first judo kodokan (training hall) is established at Shitaya, Japan, by Jigoro Kano.
1884UKThe Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA), the governing body for the native Irish sports of hurling, Gaelic football, handball, and rounders, is formed, in Dublin, Ireland.
1886Ottoman Empire, UKJohn Collinson compiles the rules of bridge in Britain, after seeing the game played during a trip to Constantinople in the Ottoman Empire.
1887USAGeorge Hancock of the Farragut Boat Club, Chicago, Illinois, invents softball as an indoor version of baseball. The game later becomes known as ‘mush-ball’ or ‘kitten-ball’; it is not called ‘softball’ until the 1920s.
1895USAVolleyball is invented by William G Morgan, director of physical training at the Holyoke YMCA, Massachusetts. It is originally known as ‘mintonette’.
30 March 1895USA, UKUS-born British cinematographic pioneer Birt Acres films the Oxford and Cambridge University Boat Race. This is the first sporting event to be filmed in Britain, and the first regular event in the sporting calendar to be filmed anywhere in the world.
1902–1903EuropeHenry Lunn, the English founder of the Lunn travel agency business, pioneers skiing holidays and skiing races through the Public Schools Alpine Sports Club.
1–19 July 1903FranceThe Tour de France cycling race is run for the first time, organized by Henri Desgrange, editor of the French cycling magazine L'Auto. Twenty-one of the 60 entrants finish the 2,428-km/1,509-mi race, with Maurice Garin of France the winner.
1908The game of darts is legalized in British public houses.
4 June 1920United Kingdom, USAThe US sculler John B Kelly is refused entry to the Henley Regatta, England, because it is deemed that his job as a bricklayer gives him an unfair advantage in competition with ‘gentlemen’. He goes on to win two gold medals for rowing at the Antwerp Olympic Games.
8 August 1926UK, France, USAGertrude Ederle of the USA becomes the first woman to swim the English Channel, completing the 56 km/35 mi crossing from Cape Nez, France, to Dover, England, in 14 hrs, 31 min, a new world record for a man or a woman.
c. 1960USASkateboarding is invented in California, USA, by surfers who fix roller-skate wheels to short surfboards. Soon afterwards the first skateboards are manufactured commercially, and over the decade the craze spreads east across the USA.
1961Netherlands, JapanAnton Geesink of the Netherlands becomes the first non-Japanese winner of the World Judo Championships, in Paris, France.
18 July 1965CongoThe first All-African Games sports festival opens in Brazzaville, Congo, with 29 nations competing. Because of political problems the next games are not held until 1973.
1972USAUS runners Philip Knight and William Bowerman found Nike, Inc, under the name of Blue Ribbon Sports. By 1990, Nike will be the leader in the training shoes market and Knight will be a billionaire.
July 1972USA, JapanHawaiian-born Jesse Kuhaulua, also known as Takamiyama, is the first non-Japanese sumo wrestler to win an official top-division tournament.
1977UKSkateboarding is becoming more popular in Britain, with the prime minister, James Callaghan, seen riding a board. Some local authorities build skateboard parks, which fall into disuse when the craze wanes.
1980USACanadian ice-hockey player Scott Olsen and his brother create rollerblades, high-speed roller-skates, and found Rollerblade Inc in Minneapolis, Minnesota, to manufacture them.
4 April 1981UKSusan Brown becomes the first woman cox in the Oxford and Cambridge university boat race in England, steering the Oxford crew to victory.
19 March 1982UK, South AfricaFifteen England cricketers led by Graham Gooch are banned from Test cricket for three years for participating in a cricket tour of South Africa, breaking an international ban on sporting links with that country because of its policy of apartheid.
5–20 July 1986USSR, USAThe first Goodwill Games are held in Moscow, USSR, conceived by US entrepreneur Ted Turner to promote goodwill between the USA and USSR following the boycotts of the 1980 and 1984 Olympic Games. Over 3,000 athletes from 79 countries compete in 18 different sports.
1996Spain, EuropeThe Spanish bullfighter Christina Sanchez becomes the first female matador in Europe.


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? Mentioned in ? References in classic literature
 
GRANDFATHER had been sitting in his old arm-chair all that pleasant afternoon, while the children were pursuing their various sports far off or near at hand, Sometimes you would have said, "Grandfather is asleep;" hut still, even when his eyes were closed, his thoughts were with the young people, playing among the flowers and shrubbery of the garden.
A MAN had two dogs: a Hound, trained to assist him in his sports, and a Housedog, taught to watch the house.
Then Euryalus reviled him outright and said, "I gather, then, that you are unskilled in any of the many sports that men generally delight in.
 
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