The origins
of golf are
unclear and much debated. However, it is generally accepted that modern golf
developed in Scotland
during the Middle Ages. The game did not find international
popularity until the late 19th century, when it spread into the rest of the United Kingdom and then
to the British Empire and the United
States
A
golf-like game is, apocryphally, recorded as taking place on 26 February 1297,
in Loenen aan de Vecht, where the Dutch played a game with a stick and leather
ball. The winner was whoever hit the ball with the least number of strokes into
a target several hundred yards away. Some scholars argue that this game of
putting a small ball in a hole in the ground using golf clubs was also played in 17th-century Netherlands and that this predates the game in
Scotland. There are also other reports of earlier accounts of a golf-like game
from continental Europe.
In the
1261 Middle-Dutch manuscript of the Flemish poet Jacob van Maerlant's Boeck Merlijn mention is made of a ball game "mit ener
coluen" (with a colf/kolf [club]). This is the earliest known mention in
the Dutch language of the game of
colf/kolf as
played in the Low Countries.
In
1360, the council of Brussels banned the game of colf: "... wie
met colven tsolt es om twintich scell’ oft op hare overste cleet ..." (he
who plays at colf pays a fine of 20 shillings or his overcoat will be
confiscated).
In 1387,
the regent of the county of Holland, Zeeland and Hainaut, Albrecht of Bavaria, sealed a charter for the city of Brielle, in which it was forbidden to play any
game for money. One of the exceptions to this ordinance was "den bal
mitter colven te slaen buten der veste" (to play the ball with a club
outside the town walls). Two years later, in 1389, the regent Albrecht offered
the citizens of Haarlem a field called ‘De Baen’ (the course)
to be used exclusively for playing games – especially colf – because these were
too dangerous within the city walls.
In
1597 the crew of Willem Barentsz played "colf" during their
stay at Nova Zembla, as recorded by Gerrit de Veer in his diary:
Den 3. April
wast moy claer weder met een n.o. wint ende stil, doen maeckten wy een colf toe
om daer mede te colven, om also onse leden wat radder te maeckten, daer wy
allerley middelen toe zochten.
(The 3rd of April the weather was nice
and clear with a north-easterly wind and quiet, then we made a colf [club] to
play colf with, and thus make our limbs more loose, for which we sought every
means
Early golf in Scotland
The
modern game of golf is generally considered to be a Scottish invention. A spokesman for the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St.
Andrews, one of the oldest
Scottish golf organisations, said "Stick and ball games have been around
for many centuries, but golf as we know it today, played over 18 holes, clearly
originated in Scotland." The word golf,
or in Scots gowf
[gʌuf], is usually thought to be a Scots alteration of Dutch "colf" or "colve"
meaning "stick, "club", "bat", itself related to the Proto-Germanic language *kulth-
as found in Old Norse kolfr
meaning "bell clapper",
and the German Kolben
meaning "mace or club".The Dutch term Kolven
refers to a related sport.
The
first documented mention of golf in Scotland appears in a 1457 Act of the
Scottish Parliament, an edict issued by King James II of Scotland prohibiting the playing of the games
of gowf and football as these were a distraction from archery practice for military purposes Bans
were again imposed in Acts of 1471 and 1491, with golf being described as
"an unprofitable sport". Mary, Queen of Scots was accused by her political enemies
of playing golf after her second husband, Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley, was murdered in 1567.George Buchanan subsequently wrote that she had been
playing "sports that were clearly unsuitable to women". Golf was
banned again by parliament under King James IV of Scotland, but golf clubs and balls were bought
for him in 1502 when he was visiting Perth, and on subsequent occasions when he
was in St Andrews and Edinburgh.
An
entry in the Town Council Minutes of Edinburgh for 19 April 1592 includes golf in a
list of pursuits to be avoided on the Sabbath.
The
account book of lawyer Sir John Foulis of Ravelston records that he played golf at Musselburgh Links on 2 March 1672, and this has been
accepted as proving that The Old Links, Musselburgh, is the oldest playing golf course in
the world. There is also a story that Mary, Queen of Scots, played there in
1567.
Instructions, golf club rules and
competitions
The
earliest known instructions for playing golf have been found in the diary of Thomas Kincaid, a medical student who played on the
course at Bruntsfield Links, near Edinburgh University, and at Leith Links. His notes include his views on an
early handicap system. In his entry for 20 January 1687 he
noted how "After dinner I went out to the Golve", and described his Golf stroke:
I
found that the only way of playing at the Golve is to stand as you do at
fenceing with the small sword bending your legs a little and holding the
muscles of your legs and back and armes exceeding bent or fixt or stiffe and
not at all slackning them in the time you are bringing down the stroak (which
you readily doe)
The
oldest surviving rules of golf were written in 1744 for the Company of
Gentlemen Golfers, later renamed The Honourable
Company of Edinburgh Golfers,
which played at Leith Links. Their "Articles and Laws in Playing at Golf, now preserved in the National Library of Scotland, became known as the Leith Rules and the document supports
the club's claim to be the oldest golf club, though an almanac published about
a century later is the first record of a rival claim that The Royal Burgess Golfing Society had been set up in 1735. The
instructions in the Leith Rules
formed the basis for all subsequent codes, for example requiring that
"Your Tee must be upon the ground" and "You are not to change
the Ball which you strike off the Tee".
The
1744 competition for the Gentlemen Golfers’ Competition for the Silver Club, a
trophy in the form of a silver golf club provided as sponsorship by Edinburgh Town Council, was won by surgeon John Rattray, who was required to attach to the
trophy a silver ball engraved with his name, beginning a long tradition.
Rattray joined the Jacobite Rising of 1745 and as a result was imprisoned in Inverness, but was saved from being hanged by
the pleading of his fellow golfer Duncan Forbes of Culloden, Lord President of the Court of Session. Rattray was released in 1747, and won
the Silver Club three times in total.
Early excursions
In 1603 James VI of Scotland succeeded to the throne of
England. His son Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales
and his courtiers
played golf at Blackheath, London, from which
the Royal Blackheath Golf Club traces its origins. There is evidence that
Scottish soldiers, expatriates and immigrants took the game to British colonies
and elsewhere during the 18th and early 19th centuries. In the early 1770s, the
first African golf course was built on Bunce
Island, in Sierra Leone, by British slave traders. The Royal Calcutta Golf Club (1829) and the
club at Pau (1856) in south western France are notable
reminders of these excursions and are the oldest golf clubs outside of the
British Isles and the oldest in continental Europe respectively. However, it
was not until the late 19th century that Golf became more widely popular
outside of its Scottish home.
The late
19th-century boom
In the 1850s Queen
Victoria and Prince Albert built Balmoral
Castle in the Scottish Highlands. The railways came to St
Andrews in 1852 By the 1860s there were fast and regular services from London to Edinburgh.
The royal enthusiasm for Scotland, the much improved transport links and the
writings of Sir Walter Scott caused a boom for tourism in Scotland and a wider interest in
Scottish history and culture outside of the country This period also coincided
with the development of the Gutty;
a golf ball made of Gutta Percha which was cheaper to mass-produce, more
durable and more consistent in quality and performance than the feather-filled
leather balls used previously. Golf began to spread across the rest of the
British Isles. In 1864 the golf course at the resort of Westward
Ho! became the first new club in England since Blackheath, and the
following year London Scottish Golf Club was founded on
Wimbledon Common. In 1880 England had 12 courses, rising to 50 in 1887 and over
1000 by 1914. The game in England had progressed sufficiently by 1890 to
produce its first Open Champion, John Ball. The game also spread further across
the empire. By the 1880s golf clubs had been established
in Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, Canada and South Africa. Singapore followed
in 1891. Courses were also established in several continental European resorts
for the benefit of British visitors
American golf
Evidence of early golf in what is
now the United States includes a 1739 record for a shipment of golf equipment
to a William Wallace in Charleston, South Carolina, an
advertisement published in the Royal Gazette of New
York City in 1779 for golf clubs and balls, and the establishment of the
South Carolina Golf Club in 1787 in Charleston. However, as in England, it was
not until the late 19th century that golf started to become firmly established.
Several clubs established in the 1880s
can make claim to be the oldest extant in the country, but what is not disputed
is that as a result of two competing "National Amateur Championships"
being played in 1894, delegates from the Newport Country Club, Saint Andrew's Golf
Club, Yonkers, New York, The
Country Club, Chicago Golf Club, and Shinnecock Hills Golf Club met in New
York City to form what was to become the United States Golf Association
(USGA). By 1910 there were 267 clubs.
During the Roaring
Twenties the game expanded greatly in popularity and by 1932 there were
over 1,100 golf clubs affiliated to the USGA. In 1922 Walter
Hagen became the first native born American to win the British Open Championship. The expansion of the game
was halted by the Great Depression and World
War II, but continued in the post war years. By 1980 there were over 5,908
USGA affiliated clubs. That figure grew to over 10,600 by 2013.
Japan
After the Meiji
restoration of 1868 Japan made a concerted effort to modernise its economy
and industry on western lines. Japanese came to Europe and America to establish
trade links and study and acquire the latest developments in business, science
and technology, and westerners came to Japan to help establish schools,
factories, shipyards and banks.
In 1903 a group of British
expatriates established the first golf club in Japan, at Kobe.
In 1913 the Tokyo Golf club at Komazawa was established for and by native
Japanese who had encountered golf in the United States. In 1924 The Japan Golf
Association was established by the seven clubs then in existence. During the
1920s and early 30's several new courses were built, however the great
depression and increasing anti-Western sentiment limited the growth of
the game. By the time of the Japanese attacks against the USA and British Empire in 1941 there were 23
courses. During the subsequent war most of the courses were requisitioned for
military use or returned to agricultural production.
In the postwar period, Japan's
golf courses came under the control of the occupying forces. It was not until 1952 that
courses started to be returned to Japanese control. By 1956 there were 72
courses and in 1957 Torakichi Nakamura and Koichi Ono won the Canada Cup (now World Cup) in Japan, an
event that is often cited as igniting the post-war golf boom. Between 1960 and
1964 the number of golf courses in Japan increased from 195 to 424. By the
early 1970s there were over 1,000 courses. The 1987 Resort Law that reduced protection on agricultural land and
forest preserves created a further boom in course constructionand by 2009 there
were over 2,400 courses. The popularity of golf in Japan also caused many golf
resorts to be created across the Pacific Rim. The environmental effect of these
recent golf booms is seen as a cause for concern by many.
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