THE ORIGIN OF LAWN TENNIS
Ball
games evolved half a millennium before Christ was born, and became
popular in
Egypt, Northern Africa and Asia Minor before
spreading to Europe. The first
ball game to be played with rackets is thought to have been 'tchigan',
a Persian game whose relationship to tennis is rather obscure. A
probable ancestor of the modern game was sphairistike, played in
Ancient Greece.
Tennis
can be traced to
France, where, in the 14th century,
the original game was played with the palm of the hand, and hence
was called Paume. The court was divided in two by a net, with each
half marked in sectors numbered from one to fifteen. The winner of
an exchange counted 15 in his favour and then, successively, 30, 45
and game, so providing the basis for the scoring method of today.
The
term 'tennis' is thought to have been derived from the word 'tenez'
meaning 'hold this', called by a server before beginning a rally.
At
first, gloves were used to protect the hands. Later, simple clubs
similar to rounders bats were introduced, and more sophisticated
bats followed in due course. The first strung racket was introduced
in the 16th century by an Italian priest. This racket was strung
diagonally, and was superseded in 1583 by a fore and aft version.
At this
time Paume reached the height of its popularity in
France, principally among the upper
class and with the enthusiastic support of Louis XIV. The irregular
features of the playing areas of the day, which were mainly
courtyards, have influenced the game of royal tennis, or real
tennis, as it continues to be played today.
Paume
spread to other parts of Europe, and in
England
became known as sphairistike, as in the times of the ancient Greeks.
Following the trend to formulate new games around the mid-19th
century, the ancient game of Paume was amended and played on a
rectangular grass court in the 1860's in a form similar to modern
lawn tennis. The venue was Leamington Spa,
England, where the world's first
lawn Tennis club was formed in 1872.
In 1874
Major Walter Clopton Wingfield, of the British Army Cavalry, framed
rules for the new game, and in July 1874 patented his New and
Improved Court for Playing the Ancient
Game of Tennis. Wingfiield's court was shaped like an hour glass,
with a 12 yard baseline narrowing to seven yards at the net, which
was 14 yards distant, and a modified version of badminton scoring
was used.
When,
in 1877, the All England Croquet Club planned to conduct the First
Gentlemen's Singles Championships (the original Wimbledon
Championships), there were some five versions of lawn tennis being
played, and a committee was appointed to formulate official rules.
They included three major changes from Major Wingfield's rules:
1. The court to be a rectangle 26 yards long and 9 yards wide, and
the net to be hung from 5 feet high posts, each 3 feet outside the
court, to a height of 3 feet 3 inches at the centre.
2. Royal tennis scoring to be adopted in its entirety.
3. One service fault to be allowed without penalty.
With
the exceptions that the net is now hung from 3 feet 6 inch posts to
3 feet at the centre, and the size of the service court has been
changed slightly, these rules have remained substantially unchanged
for a century.
In
those first Championships in 1877, 22 Gentlemen competitors took
part and 200 spectators paid one shilling each for the privilege of
watching them. The winner was Spencer W Gore who beat W C Marshall
in the final 6-1 6-2 6-4.
The
Championships at
Wimbledon is now the greatest tournament in tennis and
is the centre-piece of a truly worldwide game, with almost 200
countries as members of the International Tennis Federation.
Further background on tennis including the rules of the game can be
found
here.