Shrovetide$516237$ - vertaling naar grieks
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Shrovetide$516237$ - vertaling naar grieks

ANNUAL MEDIEVAL FOOTBALL GAME PLAYED IN ASHBOURNE, ENGLAND
Shrovetide football; Royal Shrovetide
  •  Shops on the approach to the Green Man & Black Head public house boarded up before the games commence.
  • Ball being 'turned up' from the 'plinth' at Shawcroft car park located along the line of a culverted section of [[Henmore Brook]] on Ash Wednesday 2011
  • Leather bottle used in village football from the 1800s on display at the [[National Football Museum]], Manchester.
  • Derby Museum]].<ref>[https://www.flickr.com/photos/derbymuseums/6041238995/sizes/z/in/set-72157627439429838/ Shrovetide Football], Derby Museum, Flickr.com, accessed August 2011</ref>
  • Shrovetide balls typical of those on display in shops and public houses in Ashbourne. These three were on display at the Wheel Inn, Ash Wednesday, 2013. The central ball shows the three cocks that appear on the Cockayne coat of Arms. This image is common to many game balls. To the right is an example of a ball without decoration.
  • Shrovetide ball goaled by H. Hind on Ash Wednesday 1887 that pre-dates the fire which destroyed the earliest written records of the sport.
  • Original lyrics from 1891 mounted on the plinth.

Shrovetide      
n. καθαρά εβδομάς
pancake day         
  • Russian artist [[Boris Kustodiev]]'s ''[[Maslenitsa]]'' (1916)
  • Football match in the 1846 Shrove Tuesday in [[Kingston upon Thames]], [[England]]
  • Luther Church]] ([[Helsinki]], Finland)
  • A [[pancake]] race in [[Olney, Buckinghamshire]], 2009
  • 3=Wodzenie niedźwiedzia}} in [[Poland]] (1950)
DAY IN FEBRUARY OR MARCH PRECEDING ASH WEDNESDAY
Pancake Day; Pancake tuesday; National Pancake Day; Pancake Tuesday; Pączki Day; Pancake day; Fauschnaut Day; International Pancake Day; Fausnacht; Fettisdagen; Malasada Day; Shrove tuesday; User:Willscom/National Pancake Day; Fasten's Eve
τσικνοπέμπτη

Definitie

shrove

Wikipedia

Royal Shrovetide Football

The Royal Shrovetide Football Match is a "medieval football" game played annually on Shrove Tuesday and Ash Wednesday in the town of Ashbourne in Derbyshire, England. Shrovetide ball games have been played in England since at least the 12th century from the reign of Henry II (1154–89). The Ashbourne game also known as "hugball" has been played from at least c.1667 although the exact origins of the game are unknown due to a fire at the Royal Shrovetide Committee office in the 1890s which destroyed the earliest records. One of the most popular origin theories suggests the macabre notion that the 'ball' was originally a severed head tossed into the waiting crowd following an execution. Although this may have happened, it is more likely that games such as the Winchelsea Streete Game, reputedly played during the Hundred Years' War with France, were adaptations of an original ball game intended to show contempt for the enemy.

One of the earliest references to football in the county of Derbyshire comes in a poem called "Burlesque upon the Great Frost" from 1683, written after the English Civil War by Charles Cotton, cousin to Aston Cockayne, Baronet of Ashbourne (1608–84):

Two towns, that long that war had raged
Being at football now engaged
For honour, as both sides pretend,
Left the brave trial to be ended
Till the next thaw for they were frozen
On either part at least a dozen,
With a good handsome space between 'em
Like Rollerich stones, if you've seen 'em
And could no more run, kick, or trip ye
Than I can quaff off Aganippe.

Shrovetide football played between "Two towns" in Derby is often credited with being the source of the term "local derby". A more widely accepted origin theory is The Derby horse race. Whatever the origins the "local derby" is now a recognised term for a football game played between local rivals and a Derby is a horse race.

A previously unknown tentative link between Royal Shrovetide football and La soule played in Tricot, Picardy was established in 2012 by history and sociology of sport lecturer Laurent Fournier from the Universite de Nantes. Whilst undertaking a study of "folk football", he noticed that the Coat of arms of the Cockayne family (seated in Ashbourne from the 12th century) painted on a 1909 Shrovetide ball displayed in the window of the Ashbourne Telegraph office contained three cockerels in its heraldic design. He recognised this matched the emblem of Tricot (also carrying three cockerels) where La soule is played on the first Sunday of Lent and Easter Monday. He was welcomed to Ashbourne by the Royal Shrovetide Committee and was a guest at the Shrovetide luncheon. Research into Royal Shrovetide Football's lost history is ongoing (August 2012).