armchairgm
all sports, all you
+ Add Friends
You are not logged-in.
Sign Up - Log In
Main Page
Sports
Write
Articles
Hot Links
Images
Meet People
Fun
Explore
MLB - NFL - NBA - NHL - College Basketball - College Football - Soccer - Nascar - Other
Article - Locker Room Discussion
All Articles - New Articles - Today's Articles
Submit a Link - Approve Links
Picture Game - Ratings - Polls - Pick Game - Quiz Game - Spring Silliness
Random Page - Random Image - Random Fan

About the Author

Alex Holowczak
I am from Birmingham, England, and I am a fan of many sports, including F1, snooker and cricket. I don't much care for "soccer".

My name is not of British decent, but of Ukrainian decent. My grandfather was from Lvov, a town in Western Ukraine. During the Second World War, he ended up in Britain.

I am the reigning ArmchairGM Pool and Chess Champion, and I hope to retain my Pool trophy in 2008.

More By Alex Holowczak

2009 World Snooker Championship Review
11 votes, 3 comments
2009 Masters Final Videos
3 votes, 0 comments
Chess player banned for drugs offence
12 votes, 5 comments
View All

Other recent voters

If you like the article, vote for it.
Edit
Page history Discuss pageWhat links here

Was the traditionally English game of cricket founded in Belgium?

by Alex Holowczak
created March 02, 2009, last edited March 04, 2009
5
Vote

The popular story of the origins of cricket go back to the 16th century. Australia and the United States didn't exist. Spain and France ended a war as Korea and Japan were starting one. England began exporting convicts to its colonies. France granted religious equality to Hugenots with Catholics. And, cricket was causing problems in Guildford.

There was dispute over a plot of land in Guildford. A court case was to determine whether it belonged to the school or not. John Derrick, a 59 year old coroner, testified that 50 years previously, he had been playing "creckett" on the land. He gave a description of the game he was playing, and it was essentially a primative form of cricket. This fixes the origins of cricket to be earlier than 1550. In the same year, "cricket" was defined in a dictionary not only as an insect, but a game.

Cricket had risen to prominence by spreading through the Weald, an area that encompasses much of modern day Surrey, Sussex and Kent. Indeed, it is known that the game was played in those counties, and spread to the largest nearby city, London, quite quickly. In the early 1600s, the monarchy was known to play the game. Indeed, in 1624, a fatality was recorded, when a batsmen illegally tried to hit the ball twice to avoid being caught, and inadvertantly hit the fielder in the head, killing him. The verdict was death by misadventure. It was one of many cricketing injuries in the early 1600s as a result of being bludgened with a cricket bat, both in games of cricket and otherwise.

Before about 1550, nobody knows where the game came from. Until this week...

Paul Campbell, of the Australian National University discovered a poem by John Skelton, which seems to describe his experience of watching Flemish immigrants playing the game. Indeed, Skelton did not take to the newcomers:

O lorde of Ipocrites
Nowe shut vpp your wickettes
And clape to your clickettes!
A! Farewell, kings of crekettes!

The poem, The Image of Ipocrisie dates to 1533, and predates the Guildford courtcase's citation of playing cricket around 1550.

Historically, it is known that Flemish weavers came to England for hundreds of years by the 16th century - there was much trade between the two areas at the time - so this ties in with the poem. As for the sport described, the poem not only mentions "crekettes", but "wickettes". Cricket is of course, played with three stumps (originally two), composing what has become known as a "wicket". This therefore seems very plausible. Linguistically, a European language expert of Bonn University, Heiner Gillmeister, "cricket" is a Middle Dutch phrase for hockey, "met de (krik ket)sen", which means to chase with a curved stick. This also ties in with the sport of cricket, since early cricket bats resembled the shape of a modern hockey stick. This was because until the 18th century, the ball was "bowled" literally, in the sense of bowling, i.e. rolled along the ground. So a hook at the end of the stick would be needed to hit the ball in the air.

There is some suspiscion about this however. An Australian discovering this in a year when England will play Australia in The Ashes is "well-timed" to say the least. As for the linguistic expert, well, he was German...

Joking aside, the search for the origins of cricket may now cross to continental Europe, and the Flanders area of modern day Belgium and The Netherlands. That said, the area has been subject to much warfare over the years, even before you get to the obvious war there, i.e. World War I. Evidence may be thin on the ground, but it would be good if there was mention of the game in the Low Countries to back up this finding.


Enable Comment Auto-Refresher
Pittsburgh GunnyAAA-er
270 days ago
Score 0+-
Great stuff Alex, and good to see you back here.
Permalink | Reply
Anonymous Fanatic #1
268 days ago
Score 1+-
I know this has nothing to do with cricket but when ever the topic of Hugenots (a pretentious term for French Calvinists) I have to tell one of my favorite ironic tales of history. Just a generation after the Hugenots were granted religious freedoms, when the Borbone family took over the French kingship (an interesting tale in itself), that freedom was striped away and the Hugenots were exiled. One group of Hugenots shipped off for the Americas and formed a settlement. Well after escaping French persecution a group of Spanish soldiers came upon them and massacred the Hugenots. The Spanish then stayed in that settlement and it is now the oldest continuously inhabited European colony in North America, St. Augustine, Florida.
Permalink | Reply
Add your Comment
ArmchairGM welcomes all comments. If you don't want to be anonymous, Register or Login. It's free
Categories: Opinions | Opinions by User Alex Holowczak | March 2, 2009 | March 2009 | Cricket Opinions

Don't Miss

Phillies World Series 2009: A Year Later, and They Still Don't Want Us
Sorry, But I'm Not Sorry
2009 NHL Preview
In Which Ricketts Wins World Series
2009 Week 3: Let’s Talk About Your Favorite NFL Team

In the News

Hey ArmchairGM users! Want to help the admins update this news section? Click here to help us out.

Comments of the Day

0 The reason for the "94 baseball strike in my opinion was ...
0 Lou, you said it all......Mickey Cochrane wasn"t j...

Take a Poll

Who were the greatest righthanders and lefthanders strike out pitchers in the Major Leagues.
Ryan/Koufax R Johnson/Ryan Ryan/W Johnson Steve C/W Johnson

New Articles

Ken Caminiti: National League's 1996 MVP
Winter Olympics 2010
Highlights from Dubai 7's
Triple Crown Winner Lou Gehrig: No MVP
Judge Sonia Sotomayor Blamed the Owners

Retrieved from "http://armchairgm.wikia.com/Article:Was_the_traditionally_English_game_of_cricket_founded_in_Belgium%3F"

This page was last modified 14:40, 2 March 2009. Content is available under the GFDL.

Main Page About Special Pages Help Terms of Use Advertise