According to FIFA, the Chinese competitive game cuju is the earliest form of football for which
there is scientific evidence. Cuju players could use any of the body
apart from hands and the intent was kicking a ball through an opening into a
net. It was remarkably similar to modern football, though similarities to rugby occurred. During
the Han Dynasty (206 BC–220 AD), cuju games were
standardized and rules were established.
Phaininda and episkyros were Greek ball games. An
image of an episkyros player depicted in low relief on a vase at the National
Archaeological Museum of Athens appears on the UEFA European
Championship Cup. Athenaeus, writing in 228 AD, referenced the Roman ball
gameharpastum. Phaininda, episkyros and harpastum were
played involving hands and violence. They all appear to have resembled rugby
football, wrestlingand volleyball more than what is recognizable
as modern football. As with pre-codified "mob
football", the antecedent of all modern football codes, these three
games involved more handling the ball than kicking. Non-competitive
games included kemari in Japan, chuk-guk in Korea and woggabaliri in
Australia.
Association football in itself does not have a classical history. Notwithstanding
any similarities to other ball games played around the world FIFA have
recognised that no historical connection exists with any game played in
antiquity outside Europe. The modern rules of association football are
based on the mid-19th century efforts to standardise the widely varying
forms of football played in the public schools of England. The
history of football in England dates back to at least the eighth century
AD.
The Cambridge Rules, first drawn up at Cambridge University in
1848, were particularly influential in the development of subsequent codes,
including association football. The Cambridge Rules were written at Trinity
College, Cambridge, at a meeting attended by representatives from Eton, Harrow, Rugby, Winchester and Shrewsbury schools.
They were not universally adopted. During the 1850s, many clubs unconnected to
schools or universities were formed throughout the English-speaking world, to
play various forms of football. Some came up with their own distinct codes of
rules, most notably the Sheffield Football Club, formed by former public
school pupils in 1857, which led to formation of a Sheffield FA in
1867. In 1862, John Charles Thring of Uppingham School also
devised an influential set of rules.
The world's oldest football competition is the FA Cup, which was
founded by C. W. Alcock and has been contested by English teams since
1872. The first official international football match also took place
in 1872, between Scotland and England in Glasgow, again at the instigation
of C. W. Alcock. England is also home to the world's first football league,
which was founded in Birmingham in 1888 by Aston Villa director William
McGregor. The original format contained 12 clubs from the Midlands and Northern
England.
The laws of the game are determined by the International Football
Association Board (IFAB). The Board was formed in 1886 after
a meeting in Manchesterof The Football Association, the Scottish
Football Association, the Football Association of Wales, and the Irish
Football Association. FIFA, the international football body, was formed in
Paris in 1904 and declared that they would adhere to Laws of the Game of the
Football Association. The growing popularity of the international game
led to the admittance of FIFA representatives to the International
Football Association Board in 1913. The board consists of four
representatives from FIFA and one representative from each of the four British
associations.
Today, football is played at a professional level all over the world.
Millions of people regularly go to football stadiums to follow their favourite
teams, while billions more watch the game on television or on the
internet. A very large number of people also play football at an
amateur level. According to a survey conducted by FIFA published in 2001, over
240 million people from more than 200 countries regularly play football. Football
has the highest global television audience in sport.
In many parts of the world football evokes great passions and plays an
important role in the life of individual fans, local communities, and even
nations. R. Kapuscinski says that Europeans who are polite, modest, or humble
fall easily into rage when playing or watching football games. The Côte
d'Ivoire national football team helped secure a truce to the nation's civil
war in 2006 and it helped further reduce tensions between
government and rebel forces in 2007 by playing a match in the rebel capital of Bouaké,
an occasion that brought both armies together peacefully for the first time. By
contrast, football is widely considered to have been the final proximate cause for
the Football War in June 1969 between El Salvador and Honduras. The
sport also exacerbated tensions at the beginning of the Yugoslav Wars of
the 1990s, when a match between Dinamo Zagreb and Red Star
Belgrade degenerated into rioting in May 1990.
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