Narrow screen resolution Wide screen resolution Auto adjust screen size Increase font size Decrease font size Default font size default color green color
OOPS. Your Flash player is missing or outdated.Click here to update your player so you can see this content.
You are here:  Home arrow News arrow Travel News arrow Cricket: the French didn’t start it

Login

Search

French views

Dordogne - dordogne18  Dordogne - dordogne09  Aveyron - Espalion  Dordogne - dordogne36  Coming soon’Ķ - Toulouse-canal-du-Midi  Dordogne - dordogne25  Aveyron - Roquefort-caves  Dordogne - dordogne38  Corrˆ®ze - Turenne-village  Dordogne - dordogne05  
Cricket: the French didn’t start it Print E-mail
Tuesday, 08 July 2008
Dear Editor,
I’m sorry to disappoint your readers but the claim that cricket was first played in the Pas-de- Calais in 1478 is a charming myth – but a myth all the same. The word ‘criquet’ does appear in a 15th-century document but there is no agreement among scholars on what it means, and there is no other evidence to support the claim. The cricket historian Rowland Bowen (who first suggested that ‘criquet’ referred to cricket) had his theory demolished in the leading archivists’ journal, and accepted that he was wrong before he died.
One of the things that misled Bowen was that a form of cricket was played at Saint- Omer in the Pas-de-Calais during the 18th century and possibly earlier. But this was at the Jesuit boarding school run there for English boys from 1593 (Catholic schools were banned in Protestant England). It is likely that boys from south-east England, where we know that cricket was played in the 17th century onwards, brought the game to the school. So they were probably the first French cricketers.
Wynford Hicks, Secretary, Saint-Aulaye Cricket
 
< Prev   Next >

News-Flash

French are less pessimistic!
According to the monthly opinion poll BVA the economic confidence index among French people has increased for the second month running.
Read more...
 
Battle rages to control Socialist party
The French Socialist party is locked in a fierce procedural struggle to establish clearly who won last Friday’s election for the post of Secretary-General.
Read more...
 
Ségolène by a whisker?

The French Socialists know they will be led by a woman. They will not know until tonight which one. The result will be very close.

Read more...
 
Simone Veil achieves immortality.
The 81 year old lawyer and politician has been elected at the first attempt to the ranks of the Académie Française known to the French as' les Immortels'.
Read more...