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A Short History of Polo
Polo is
thought to have originated in China and Persia around 2,000 years ago.
The name of the game may well come from the word “pholo” meaning 'ball'
or 'ballgame' in the Balti language of Tibet.
The first recorded game took place in 600BC between the Turkomans and
Persians (the Turkomans won). In the fourth century AD, King Sapoor II
of Persia learned to play, aged seven. In the 16th century, a polo
ground (300 yards long and with goalposts eight yards apart) was built
at Ispahan, then the capital, by Shah Abbas the Great.
The Moguls were largely responsible for taking the game from Persia to
the east and, by the 16th century, the Emperor Babur had established it
in India. (It had already long been played in China and Japan, but had
died out by the time the West came in contact with those countries). In
the 1850s, British tea planters discovered the game in Manipur (Munipoor)
on the Burmese border with India. They founded the world’s first polo
club at Silchar, west of Manipur. Other clubs followed and today the
oldest in the world is the Calcutta Club which founded in 1862.
Malta followed in 1868 because soldiers and naval officers stopped off
there on their way home from India. In 1869, Edward “Chicken” Hartopp,
of the 10th Hussars, read an account of the game in The Field magazine
while stationed at Aldershot and, with fellow officers, organised the
first game. Then known as “hockey on horseback,” it was played on a
hastily-rolled Hounslow Heath where a shortlist of about 10 rules was
also hastily assembled.
But, it was John Watson (1856-1908), of the 13th Hussars, who formulated
the first real rules of the game in India in the 1870s. He later formed
the celebrated Freebooters team who won the first Westchester Cup match
in 1886. He was a key player at the All Ireland Polo Club which was
founded in 1872 by Horace Rochfort of Clogrenane, County Carlow.
The first polo club in England was Monmouthshire, founded in 1872 by
Captain Francis “Tip” Herbert (1845- 1922), of the 7th Lancers, at his
brother's estate at Clytha Park, near Abergavenny. Others, including
Hurlingham, followed quickly.
Handicaps were introduced by the USA in 1888 and by England and India in
1910.
The first official match in Argentina took place on 3rd September 1875.
The game had been taken there by English and Irish engineers and
ranchers.
In 1876, Lt Col Thomas St.Quintin, of the 10th Hussars, introduced the
game to Australia. He is credited with being the Father of Australian
Polo. Two of his brothers stayed on there as ranchers and helped the
game to develop. In the same year, polo was introduced to the USA by
James Gordon Bennett Junior who had seen the game at Hurlingham during a
visit to England.
Today, more than 77 countries play polo. It was an Olympic sport from
1900 to 1939 and has now been recognised again by the International
Olympic Committee.
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