Cricket Early Origins

In the late spring of the mid-sixteenth century, England began what was to become the country's most chic game.

Cricket dates back to Saxon times in a clearing off the beaten track in the southeast of England. 1598 is the most punctual mention of a game called "Crackett".

Cricket became ubiquitous and continued to progress throughout the seventeenth century, especially on Sundays after the chapel, regularly resting and resting from the noisy workweek.


Wickets can be up to six feet wide and only a couple of inches high. The size of the pitch, the equipment and the playing mechanisms were unusual: the bat was mistaken for a GAA throw-up club, and four balls passed under the arm on the outside of the wicket. In 1760, serving the ball became an established movement strategy. It was not until 1864 that uncompromising transport became the standard; by the way, this was the same time and time of the distribution of the first almanac of the Wisden Cricketers.

The stakes were rising in England at the time, and soon attention was drawn to what immediately became a national game.

Around 1660, realistic cricket brigades began to form, usually energized alongside the nobility, dignitaries and landowners in the Shire, who now checked out the cricket park and began to support the locals, some of whom were possibly the main cricket experts. It wasn't until 1963 that the distinction between beginner and expert in English cricket finally disappeared.

In 1744, the Stars and Garters Club formally drafted the Cricket Act, which later became the Marylebone Cricket Club.

In 1794, the main recorded match between the schools was played: Charterhouse vs. Westminster.

In 1806, the first Gentlemen vs. Gamblers meeting was held at Lord, which later became the home of the Central Control Commission.

In 1877 England, playing in Melbourne, lost their first test match to Australia with 45 runs, in 1880 the main trial was played in England, resulting in Australia winning 5 wickets on the Oval, this was also the site of their defeat against Australia in 1882. ..

The Sporting Times piece showed that the "remains" of England in this sense marked the beginning of the ash period.

Remains of the promise contained in a small earthen urn are still dubious.

The urn is marked with a six-line section. This is the fourth stanza of the poetic melody circulated in the Melbourne Punch on February 1, 1883:

When Ivo returns with urn, urn; Studds, Steel, Reed and Tylecot are back, are back; Welkin will sound noisy, the Great Group will be glad to see Barlow and Bates with an urn, urn; And the rest will return with the urn. In February 1883, shortly before the controversial Fourth Test, Bly gave a velvet bag made by Mrs. Anne Fletcher, a little girl to Joseph Hines Clark and Marion Wright of Dublin, to store the urn.

The MCC remains the custodian of cricket laws, while the Lords of Cricket Museum, against all odds, holds the most famous assortment of cricket memorabilia on the planet.

Since its inception, cricket is now played in over 100 countries around the world.

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