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Football

Medieval football is a modern term sometimes used for a wide variety of localised football games which were invented and played inEurope during the Middle Ages. Alternative names include folk football, mob football and Shrovetide football. These games may be regarded as the ancestors of modern codes of football, and by comparison with later forms of football, the medieval matches were chaotic and had few rules.

The Middle Ages saw a paun 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).[1]The origin of this account is either Southern England or Wales. References to a ball game played in northern France known as La Souleor Choule, in which the ball was propelled by hands, feet, and sticks,[2] date from the 12th century.[3]

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