How China Invented Every Sport EVER
It is a common misconception that, while the British invented every sport, they are crap at all of them. Don’t get us wrong, the second bit is 100 percent accurate. But scratch the surface and you’ll discover that it was in fact the Chinese that invented every sport.
That’s right. All of them. Ever.
Take golf. The British - more specifically the Scottish - stake a claim to it. Who would you trust, a whisky-soaked rabble who also declare the invention of the telephone (Italian) and the television (German) as their own, or those impartial researchers at the Chinese Golf Association?
According to evidence from Chinese paintings and books, the game chui wan (ball hitting) predates golf in Scotland by nearly 400 years. In the 11th century book Dōngxuān lu, author Wei Tai relates how a southern Tang official teaches his daughter to dig goals in the ground and drive a ball into them.
“Professionals have concluded that golf only arrived in Scotland after it was exported to Europe by Mongolian travelers during the late Middle Ages,” Says doctor Cui Lequan, researcher from the China Sports Museum. We bet none of Genghis Khan's generals dared beat him...
The British reckon hockey is theirs too, but for 1,000 years the Daur people of Inner Mongolia have been playing a game called beikou, which entails whacking a more-or-less-ball-like knob of apricot root around with long wooden branches. For night games, there is an ignitable ball covered in felt.
Much, much (much!) later, when the British version of field hockey came to China, the Daurs recognized it as a Flash Harry version of their ancient and noble - if rustic - game, and took it up instinctively; five of the players on the 2008 Chinese Olympic men’s team came from the area.
Known as cuju, the game is mentioned in two historical texts, the Zhan Guo Ce and the Records of the Grand Historian, both written well before Jesus was even a twinkle in the Big Man in the Sky’s eye.
In a move that predates the 1914 no man’s land England-Germany Christmas Truce classic by over two millennia, after leading his troops north to attack the nomadic Xiongnu, the general Huo Qubing (140–117 BC) allowed his soldiers to construct a playing field for a kick about.
And it doesn’t bear thinking how many petty squabbles could have turned nasty had warlords of Later Han (947–950 AD) not invented a game called shoushiling. Translated as ‘hand-command,’ it has become popularized around the world as that most judicious of dispute adjudicators: Rock-paper-scissors.
This article first appeared in the October 2009 issue of That's Shanghai. For more articles like this, click "Read more" below.