EVIDENCE
OF BOWLS BEING PLAYED 7,000 YEARS AGO
Bowls
B.C. -- and A.D.
The history of
bowls, in some form or other, reaches well back into antiquity
in various parts of the world, though its actual origin is still
a matter of conjecture.
Sir Flinders Petrie,
the well-known British Egyptologist, reported that during his
excavations he found in the grave of a young Egyptian, various
rounded objects which led him to believe that they were used
for playing with by rolling them along the ground in a game
similar to what we now call Bowls.
It was established
that these . -- over seven thousand years ago. From Egypt it
spread to Greece and Rome.
The Romans played
"Bocci", and that word is still used in Italy today.
We can doubtless thank them for introducing the game to England.

From Egypt
bowls spread to Greece and Rome.
|
Nor
is such factual evidence confined to Egypt. Stone Age
excavations in other parts of the world have confirmed
that some sort of game was played with rounded rocks
which were rolled or bowled to a peg or other marker.
Among other
places, it was played by ancient Aztecs, North American
Indians, in China, and in Polynesia. |
Bowls
in Polynesia
The ancient Polynesians,
particularly in Hawaii, played a game with elliptical bowls,
about 10 cm (4 inches) in diameter, fashioned from stone; these
were bowled to stone marker discs called Ula, and the game was
called Ula Maika. The distance from the bowling area to the
discs was about 18 meters (60 feet).
| When
Captain Cook landed in the Sandwich Islands in 1788, he
found that the natives used whetstone for a purpose other
than sharpening their tools; they were playing a game
with bowls fashioned from the whetstone. "The
bowls were about 3 to 4 inches in diameter and about
one inch across at the edges but thicker at the centre
and rounded very exactly."
In his book "Games
and Pastimes of the Maori", Elsdon Best refers
to some ancient stone discs found on the beach at Tauranga
many years ago. |

Captain
Cook found bowls in the Sandwich Islands
|
He writes that he could not establish positively
the use to which these had been put, but he did say that they
resembled those found in Hawaii, though they were slightly larger.
He assumed that the Maoris had played with
them in a game similar to Ula Maika.
At any rate, the shape of these stones is such
that when delivered with a normal bowling action, they take
bias; that is, they take a curved path, particularly when the
initial speed begins to slow down.
The
Bowl (Maori and Modern)
These Maori bowls
are only a little larger than the composition bowls used today,
and they are of a size which could well have enabled them to
be used for the same general purpose.
Bowls
in Great Britain
The two oldest
British sports are archery and bowls, and in centuries past
there was conflict between the two, mainly during periods of
warfare or national strife.
There is a positive
recorded history of bowls having been played in England as far
back as the 12th century, and it could well have been played
much earlier than that.
From the early
15th century bowls were made of wood, usually yew, ash, oak,
holly, or boxwood.

The King
was afraid that the practice of archery was being neglected
|
Lignum
vitae was not used in the United Kingdom until the 16th
or 17th century; this very hard wood was discovered
by Columbus in the West Indies, in 1493. Lignum vitae
wood is so heavy that it will sink in water.
A separate
article could be written on the evolution of the bowl
as we know it today.
The bowls
used in the early days were merely rounded, without
bias. The bias was not introduced until 1522 due entirely
(it is claimed), to the accidental breaking of a bowl
by Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk; he rushed indoors
and sawed off an ornamental ball from a banister. Accordingly,
one part was flat and it took a curving direction at
the end of its run, instead of continuing on a straight
line. |
Ban
the Bowl" Statutes
The increasing
popularity of bowls in the 14th century, and the fear by King
and Parliament that the practice of archery was being neglected
and that the effectiveness of the archers in battle or military
operations would therefore be lowered, led to Statutes being
passed restricting or forbidding such sports as bowls and tennis:
For instance, during the reigns of Edward III in 1361, Richard
II in 1388, and Henry IV in1409.
However, these
Statutes did not prevent the game from being played, and many
bowling alleys were opened.
In 1511 during
the reign of Henry VIII, a Statute was passed confirming previous
Acts of Parliament and in 1541, Henry VIII consolidated all
earlier Acts and broadened the scope of the prohibitions. (Strangely
enough , this 1541 Act was not repealed until 1845, over three
centuries later, in the reign of Queen Victoria!).
By the Act of 1541
artificers, labourers, apprentices, husbandmen, servants or
serving-men, and other "low-born" people, were specifically
forbidden from taking part in the game of bowls, except at Christmas
in their master's grounds and in his presence. Heavy monetary
fines were provided as penalties for non-observance of the Law.
However, licenses
or permits were granted to some of the larger and more influential
landowners to allow them to play on their own greens.
In 1555, 14 years
later, in the reign of Queen Mary, these licenses were withdrawn
on the grounds that the game of bowls was being used as an excuse
for "unlawful assemblies, conventicles, seditions, and
conspiracies".
References
in Literature
There
is historical evidence to substantiate that Drake played
bowls, but whether the story of Drake finishing a game
of bowls at Plymouth Hoe in July 1588, while the Armada
was sailing up the British Channel is fact or folklore
is not know for certain. But, if he was in fact playing
bowls, then Drake was breaking the Law of the Land!
There are
many references to bowls in Shakespeare: for instance,
in Act III of Richard II -- which incidentally indicates
that women also played the game at that time. |

Shakespeare
includes bowls in Act III of Richard II
|
In the 19th century the law banning
bowls was apparently largely overlooked. It certainly was not
rigorously enforced. Many of the inns had bowling greens, presumably
as an amenity to attract custom, and these probably helped the
game to survive.
Bowls
and the Scots
As with golf, the game of Bowls, with more
or less the same world-wide Laws, owes its existence to the
Scots.
Following on a meeting in Glasgow in 1848,
attended by about two hundred players from various clubs all
with different Laws for playing the game, W.W. Mitchell of Glasgow,
drew up a "uniform code of Laws", and these are the
basis of all subsequent Laws.
In 1892, the Scottish Bowling Association was
formed and in 1893, it drew up rules or Laws based on Mitchell's
Code and also published a Code of Ethics.
In 1903, the English Bowling Association was
formed, the first President being Dr. W. G. Grace, who is much
more acclaimed and remembered for his fame as a cricketer.
The International Bowling Board was formed
in 1905, the foundation members being Scotland, England, Ireland,
and Wales.
New Zealand was first admitted in 1928, as
also were Australia, Canada, South Africa, and the United States
of America. |