8/2/2023 0 Comments Snooker billiards gameIn the Officers Mess at Jubbulpore in India, gambling games such as pyramids and life pool were very popular, and coloured balls, as well as the reds, were used. The term snooker is reported to have been given to the game by Colonel Sir Neville Chamberlain in 1875. These youngsters, of billiard playing parents, who travelled throughout the empire, played an important roll in the development of modern snooker. The influence of the wealthy classes extended to the army and to the British Empire as their sons took up positions of influence in the armed forces. ''Few Towns of note therein which hath not a publick Billiard -Table'' (3) The reference to 1600 by ‘The Billiard Congress of America’ is somewhat imprecise as scholars agree that the first known published version of Anthony and Cleopatra was as part of the First Folio in 1623, though critics generally agree that the play was composed in 1607-08.Īnd seventy-five years later, the first book of billiard rules remarked of England ‘In 1600* the game was so familiar to the public that Shakespeare mentioned it in ‘Anthony and Cleopatra’,Ĭleopatra "Let it alone let's to billiards: come Charmian", (2) Most of our information of the early games comes from accounts of playing by Royalty and other nobles but, there is evidence of it being played by people from all walks of life 'For a long time only men were allowed to use the cue women were forced to use the mace because it was felt they were more likely to rip the cloth with the sharper cue'. There is an amusing quote in 'Billiards' by The Billiard Congress of America. The handle was called a queue, (tail in French) and this word has changed to cue. This proved more convenient, especially when the ball to be hit was near the edge of the table, and this method slowly took over. The hoop and stick were abandoned after a while and in the 1600’s people started to use the handle of the mace, on occasion, to strike the ball. The original game was played on a six-pocket table with a croquet-like hoop, an upright stick and balls, which were pushed, rather than struck, with a mace (a stick with a special wooden end, which replaced the mallet). There is some indication that the game reached England via Spain. The name billiards is a French derivative of 'billart' (mace) or 'bille' (ball). The game is principally an outdoor game, which has been taken indoors, lifted onto a wooden table with a green cloth to simulate and represent grass. The origin of billiards is shrouded in mystery it is a number of centuries old and was probably derived from a form of croquet played during the fifteenth century in northern Europe. The history of snooker can't be understood without first mentioning its sister game "billiards", which is centuries older than snooker, which is a relatively young game.
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