History of Curling - Internet Curling
Club
The game itself is more than 500 years old and
its' true origin is hidden in the mist of time, but it was in
Scotland the game evolved during the centuries and also where
the mother club of curling, The Royal Caledonian Curling Club
was formed in 1838. The game has of course evolved through the
years and the latest change on how the game is played was introduced
in 1990 when the free guard zone rule was introduced.
This "first curler" must have been intrigued
by the way the rock moved and by the grumbling sound it made as
it twisted and turned. Other people in the not so distant past
have heard this same sound and have applied it as a nickname for
the game of curling ... it is often referred to as "the roaring
game".
Scots and continental Europeans have engaged
in many a lively dispute as to the true origin of curling. Both
claim to be founders. Did Scots invent the game, or was it imported
by Flemish sportsmen who emigrated to Scotland during the reign
of James VI (James I of England)? Did Europeans engage in some
early form of curling, and did Scots merely adopt and enhance
it? The evidence, based on works of art, contemporary writings,
and archaeological finds, has sparked a number of theories, but
nothing is conclusive.
Some of the earliest graphic records of a game
similar to curling date from 1565. Two oil paintings by the Dutch
master Pieter Bruegel, entitled "Winter Landscape with Skaters
and a Birdtrap" and "Hunters in the Snow", show
eisschiessen or "ice shooting", a Bavarian game played
with a long stick-like handle, that is still enjoyed today. Another
work, an engraving by R. de Baudous (1575 - 1644) after N. van
Wieringen, entitled "Hyems" or "Winter", shows
players who appear to be sliding large discs of wood along a frozen
water-way. Other sketches from around the same time show a Dutch
game called kuting, played with frozen lumps of earth.
The first hand-written record of what could be
called an early curling game dates from February, 1540, when John
McQuhin of Scotland noted down, in Latin, a challenge to a game
on ice between a monk named John Sclater and an associate, Gavin
Hamilton.
The first printed reference to curling appears
in a 17th century elegy published by Henry Adamson, following
the death of a close friend: His name was M. James Gall, a citizen
of Perth, and a gentle-man of goodly stature, and pregnant wit,
much given to pastime, as golf, archerie, curling and jovial companie.
It seems too that the game tempted many people from all walks
of life. Records from a Glasgow Assembly of Presbyterians in 1638
accused a certain Bishop Graham of Orkney of a terrible act: He
was a curler on the ice on the Sabbath.
By the 18th century, curling had become a common
past-time in Scotland. Both the poetry and the prose of the era
provide numerous records of bonspiels, curling societies, and
curling as a great national game.
The real controversy over the birthplace of the game was initiated
by the Reverend John Ramsay of Gladsmuir, Scotland. In his book,
An Account of the Game of Curling (Edinburgh 1811), he argued
in favor of Continental beginnings. His research into the origins
of curling words (examples: bonspiel, brough, colly, curl, kuting,
quoiting, rink, and wick), led him to conclude that they were
derived from Dutch or German. Claiming that most of the words
were foreign, he wrote, but the whole of the terms being Continental
compel us to ascribe to a Contintental origin.
The famous historian, the Reverend John Kerr
contested Ramsay's views and campaigned in favor of Scottish beginnings
to curling. In A History of Curling (1890), Kerr questioned: if
Flemings had brought the game to Scotland in the 1500's, why did
Scottish poets and historians make no special mention of its introduction
before 1600?. He also saw no proof that many of the terms were
Continental, explaining that many were of Celtic or Teutonic origin
(examples: channel stone, crampit, draw, hack, hog, skip, tee,
toesee, tramp, and tricker).
To add to the puzzle, archaeological evidence
of a curling stone (the famous Stirling Stone) inscribed with
the date 1511 turned up, along with another bearing the date 1551,
when an old pond was drained at Dunblane, Scotland.
The true origin of curling is cloudy, lost in time. There is no
doubt or dispute, however, that the Scots nurtured the game. They
improved equipment, established rules, turned curling into a national
past-time, and exported it to many other countries throughout
the world.
|