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Encyclopedia > Francis Willughby's Book of Games

Francis Willughby's Book of Games is a book published in 2003 that printed for the first time a transcription of a seventeenth-century manuscript written by Francis Willughby that was held in the library of the University of Nottingham. The modern edition was editied by Jeffrey L Forgeng, Dorothy Johnston, and David Cram and was published by Ashgate Publishing Company with ISBN 1859284604. 2003 is a common year starting on Wednesday of the Gregorian calendar. ... Francis Willughby (November 22, 1635 - July 3, 1672) was an English ornithologist and ichthyologist. ... The University of Nottingham is a leading research and teaching university in the city of Nottingham, in the East Midlands of England. ...


The manuscript was left uncomplete when Willughby died at the age of 36, but even in its unfinished state it provides an unrivalled insight into the sports and games of his period.


Among the features of the book include descriptions of card games that are otherwise only known from reference in literature. It also includes the first formal study of children's board games to be written in a European language, investigation of the original manuscript has revealed that some of the descriptions of children's game were actually written by an unknown child with later corrections being made by Willughby.


Games in the work include,

  • A Fool Who Bobbed Thee
  • Archery
  • Back Sword
  • Backgammon
  • Bandy-Ball
  • Barley-Breaks
  • Bearbaiting
  • Beast
  • Billiards
  • Blindman Buff
  • Blind Buck a Davie
  • Bone Ace
  • Bowls
  • Bullbaiting
  • Bum to Busse
  • Buying Bees
  • Buying Mustard
  • Call and I Call
  • Capping of verses
  • Card games
  • Charter House
  • Cherry-Stone
  • Cherry-Pit
  • Chess
  • Chock-Stone
  • Christmas Gambols
  • Cob-Castle
  • Cobnut
  • Cockfighting
  • Cook Stool
  • Copshole
  • Cribbage
  • Cropping Oaks
  • Cross and Pile
  • Cross Purposes
  • Cross Questions
  • Crossing of Proverbs
  • Dice
  • Dogfights
  • Doublets
  • Draughts
  • Drawing Cuts
  • Drawing Dun Out of the Mire
  • Drollery
  • Drop Glove
  • Drop pin
  • Drudge Cat
  • Duelling
  • Dust Point
  • England and Ireland
  • Even or Odd
  • Father Fritchard
  • Fencing
  • Fire and No Smoke
  • Fisticuffs
  • Football
  • Fox and Geese
  • Gig
  • Ging
  • Gleek
  • Gliffs
  • Half Almond
  • Handiback
  • Hannikin Cannst Abide It
  • Hawks
  • Heads and Points
  • Hide and Seek
  • Hockback
  • Hockcockles
  • Hop-Frog
  • Horn Billers
  • Horsing
  • Hummers
  • Hunting a Deer in My Lord's Park
  • Hurling
  • In and In
  • Inch Pinch
  • Irish
  • Jack Art Asleep
  • Kibble Heft
  • Kicking
  • King Heywood's Park
  • Kit-Cat
  • Laugh and Lie down
  • Leaping
  • Lend me your skimmer
  • Lilman
  • Loadum
  • Long Laurence
  • Ludus Astronomicus
  • Milking
  • Mill Stones
  • Nine Holes
  • Nine Men's Morris
  • Nine Pegs
  • Noddy
  • One-and-Thirty
  • Pelmel
  • Penny Prick
  • Pitching the Bar
  • Post and Pair
  • Pray Dame Coals
  • Prison Bars
  • Purposes
  • Put
  • Put-Pin
  • Puzzle of the Ship
  • Quoits
  • Riddles
  • Rhyming
  • Robin Alive
  • Ruff and Trump
  • Scotch Hopper
  • Selling of Bargins
  • Selling of Mill Stones
  • Seven Cards
  • Shittlecock
  • Shoeing the Wild Colt
  • Shovel Board
  • Skittle Pins
  • Span-Counter
  • Stoolball
  • Stowball
  • Sword and Buckler
  • Tables
  • Ten pegs
  • Tennis
  • Throwing at Cocks
  • Tick
  • Ticktack
  • Tiring Irons
  • Top
  • Troll Madam
  • Truss-a-Fail
  • Tutball
  • Upper or Nether Choose you Whether
  • Vaulting
  • Whehee
  • Whirligig
  • Wrestling
  • Whole Almond
Archers in Competition Archery is the practice of using a bow to shoot arrows. ... Backgammon set, 19th century Backgammon is a board game for two players. ... Bear_baiting in the 18th century, engraving, 1796 Bear_baiting is a blood sport that was a popular entertainment from at least the 11th century in which a bear is secured to a post and then attacked by a number of dogs. ... Pool table with cue ball, object balls, cue stick, and rack Billards balls Billiards is a game played on a table with low rubber boundary around the edges, small balls, and a cue, a stick that is used to push the white ball into other balls. ... Men playing bowls Bowls (or Lawn Bowls) is a precision sport where the goal is to roll slightly radially asymmetrical balls (called bowls) closer to a smaller white ball (the jack) than ones opponent is able to do. ... Bull-baiting was a popular amusement, particularly in 17th and 18th-century England, in which trained bulldogs attacked a tethered bull. ... A card game is any game using playing cards, either traditional or game-specific. ... Chess is a board game and mental sport for two players. ... Binomial name Corylus avellana L. The Common Hazel (Corylus avellana L.) is a shrub native to Europe and Asia. ... The Cock Fight by Jean-Léon Gérôme (1847) A cockfight is a contest, held in a cockpit between two fighting cocks (roosters) trained to severely injure and/or kill one another. ... Cribbage pegging Cribbage or Crib is a card game that involves forming combinations of cards over a series of hands to accumulate points. ... Heads or Tails is a coin-tossing game. ... Cross Purposes was released by British heavy metal band Black Sabbath in 1994. ... Rolling dice A die (Old French de, from Latin datum something given or played [1]) is a small polyhedral object (usually a cube) suitable as a gambling device (especially for craps or sic bo). ... starting position on a 10×10 draughts board Draughts, also known as checkers, is a group of board games between two players which involve diagonal moves of uniform pieces and mandatory captures by jumping over the enemys pieces. ... For an account of the Steven Spielberg film, see Duel (movie). ... Fencing - Wikipedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ... This article deals with the history and development of the different sports around the world known as football. For links to articles on each of those sports, please see the list in the Football today section of this article. ... Look up Gig in Wiktionary, the free dictionary Gig may be: A slang term for a musical engagement A contraction for gigabyte An archaic term for a type of light carriage A type of spear A similarly designed type of fishing tackle A contraction for Captains Gig, a type... Hawks is a 1988 British comedy film about two terminally ill patients: an English lawyer named Bancroft (Timothy Dalton) and a young American football player (Anthony Edwards), who decide to sneak out of their hospital rooms and live life to its fullest for whatever time they have left. ... Hide and seek (sometimes also called hide and go seek) is a popular tag variant that is best played in areas with lots of potential hiding spots, such as a forest or a large house. ... Hurling is a team sport of Celtic origin, played with sticks and a ball. ... Kicker redirects here. ... Hand milking Milking is the term given to the act of removing milk from the mammary glands of an animal, typically cows (cattle) and sometimes goats. ... Nine Mens Morris is a two-player strategy game with a long history in Europe. ... Noddy is a fictional character created by British childrens author Enid Blyton. ... A put option (sometimes simply called a put) is a financial contract between two parties, the buyer and the seller of the option. ... A riddle is a puzzle, consisting of text with a question to answer. ... This article is about the poetic technique. ... Stool ball is a historical ball game, originating in southern England, where variants are still played in some schools. ... For other uses, see Table. ... Tennis balls This article is about the sport, tennis. ... A top with sides marked in Braille A top, or spinning top, is a childrens toy that can be spun on an axis, balancing on a point. ... In architecture, a vault is an arched structure of masonry, forming a ceiling or canopy. ... Wrestling may refer to: Sport wrestling Professional wrestling grappling This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ...


 
 

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