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The History of Golf(1)

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The History of Golf(1)

Postby rachelddd on Fri, 06 May 2011 1:51 pm

The History of Golf(1)
Golf as we all know it was invented in Scotland, but its roots stretches back to Flanders. The first record of "Chloe" is from 1353 and portrays something that could possibly be described as a mix between hockey and golf played in Flanders (Belgium) with ping g15 irons . The game was preferably played on ice and the players used sticks curved at the bottom to move balls from starting point to finish point. Since Scottish and Dutch merchants traveled a lot between the two regions and traded together with each other, the game played in Flanders with taylorMade r9 forged irons quickly spread to Scotland where it developed on the grassy Scottish fields and very soon ceased to be a winter game. It was the Scots that began to dig holes in the ground instead of simply selecting a finishing point with callaway diablo octane tour driver . Digging a hole in the Dutch ice had normally not seen a good idea. Although the game changed a great deal after being introduced in Scotland, the balls where still generally imported from Flanders. The more patriotic Scots claim that golf instead evolved from different stick-and-ball games that we understand were played all over the British Isles as early as the middle Ages. These games were inspired by a stick-and-ball game and introduced to the British Isles by the Romans. The first record of the term golf is from 1457 when King James II of Scotland outlawed golf and even soccer, given that the games were so popular with the clubs of taylormade r11 fairway wood that they made the king's archers skip their practice and play golf and soccer instead. James III re-issued this law in 1471 and James IV followed in his footsteps with all new bans in 1491. Golf did however keep on its development in Scotland in spite of the ban. Even during these early days, almost all the essential parts of golf such as Callaway RAZR Hawk Fairway Wood had already been invented. The players used a club to swing a ball into a hole in the ground. The player who managed to get the ball into the hole using the least amount of strokes won. The word gold is derived from the Old Scots words "Goff" or "glove", and these words in turn derive from "kolf" or "kolve", medieval Dutch words which simply meant club such as cheap golf clubs . When the words kolf and kolve were imported to Scotland, the old Scottish dialect transformed the letter K into G, and the game was named Goff, Glove, Glove and Growl.
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