Thursday, 6 September 2012

History of tennis game| tennis game history



               The Ancient Egyptians actually played ball games as part of their religious ceremonies. These traditions and the whole concept of ball games spread into Europe in the 8th century influenced by the Moors. It was the meeting of Eastern culture and Christianity that gave rise to tennis

            An Englishman, Major Walter C. Wingfield, invented lawn tennis (1873) and first played it at a garden party in Wales by its inventor, the early game was played on an hourglass-shaped court, widest at the baselines and narrowest at the net. In creating the new sport, Wingfield borrowed heavily from the older games of court tennis and squash racquets and probably even from the Indian game of badminton.
              Court tennis is also known as royal tennis. It originated in France during the middle Ages and became a favorite of British royalty, including Henry VIII. The progression from court tennis, which used an unresistant sheepskin ball filled with sawdust, sand, or wool, to lawn tennis depended upon invention of a ball that would bounce.
            Lawn tennis caught on quickly in Great Britain, and soon the All England Croquet Club at Wimbledon held the first world tennis championship (1877). Restricted to male players, that event became the famous Wimbledon Tournament for the British National Championship, still the most prestigious event in tennis. In 1884 Wimbledon inaugurated a women's championship. Soon the game became popular in many parts of the British Empire, especially in Australia.
              Tennis spread to the United States by way of Bermuda. While vacationing there, Mary Ewing Outer bridge of New York was introduced (1874) to the game by a friend of Wingfield. She returned to the United States with a net, balls, and rackets, and with the help of her brother, set up a tennis court in Staten Island, N.Y. The first National Championship, for men only, was held (1881) at Newport, R.I. A women's championship was begun six years later, and in 1915 the National Championship moved to Forest Hills, N.Y. Since 1978 what is now the United States Tennis Association Billie Jean King National Tennis Centre in Flushing, N.Y., has hosted the event (known as the U.S. Open). The Tennis Hall of Fame is in Newport, R.I.


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