
Miss Tipapin going for all nine,
British Museum
Games where you roll or throw something at some sort of target to make it fall over are documented since at least medieval times, maybe even in ancient Egypt. Such games have only evolved marginally since then! Whether its kegel, the nine-pin bowling of the Teutonic world, the ten-pin bowling of the American world, quilles which is played in France, or skittles, a game which is recorded from before Tudor times in England the principle is much the same.
Mind you the detail is very different. I hadn’t realised quite how many variations in the game survive in Britain – each with their own specific rules but don’t worry I’m not going to try and explain them all. These games were sometimes played indoors but in early modern Britain they were more often played in gardens… particularly those attached to inns and hostelries

from Every Woman’s Encyclopaedia, 1910
Read on to find out more about the origins and history of skittles in the beer garden and elsewhere… Continue reading








![Massonia echinata L.f. [as Massonia angustifolia L.f.] Curtis’s Botanical Magazine, t. 693-739, vol. 19: t. 736 (1804) [S.T. Edwards]](https://thegardenhistory.blog/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/7730.jpg?w=250&h=429)

You must be logged in to post a comment.