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Football rules' Cambridge 'birthplace' marked by sculpture | Football rules' Cambridge 'birthplace' marked by sculpture |
(about 13 hours later) | |
A sculpture to mark the "birthplace" of the first set of football rules has been unveiled. | |
Cambridge University students first posted rules for the game on Parker's Piece in 1848, with elements later adopted by the Football Association. | Cambridge University students first posted rules for the game on Parker's Piece in 1848, with elements later adopted by the Football Association. |
A granite sculpture inscribed with the original rules in seven languages is due to go on display. | A granite sculpture inscribed with the original rules in seven languages is due to go on display. |
Co-sculptor Neville Gabie said it "marked Cambridge and acknowledged that football has become a global language". | Co-sculptor Neville Gabie said it "marked Cambridge and acknowledged that football has become a global language". |
It is said the original rules for the game were developed by students playing on Parker's Piece, a common near the city centre, leading to claims that Cambridge is therefore the birthplace of the game. | |
An existing plaque on the common celebrates how the "Cambridge Rules" became the "defining influence on the 1863 Football Association rules". | An existing plaque on the common celebrates how the "Cambridge Rules" became the "defining influence on the 1863 Football Association rules". |
The new sculpture was created from a 10-tonne block of stone split into nine different bases, four of which will be displayed on Parker's Piece and the others placed across the globe. | The new sculpture was created from a 10-tonne block of stone split into nine different bases, four of which will be displayed on Parker's Piece and the others placed across the globe. |
Locations include a favela in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, where a young women's football team play, and Chennai, India, near a hostel for abandoned children. | Locations include a favela in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, where a young women's football team play, and Chennai, India, near a hostel for abandoned children. |
Mr Gabie, a Forest Green Rovers season ticket-holder, said: "While I want to mark the birthplace of modern football I also want [the sculpture] to be about people's experience of football around the world as something which can really provide a social good." | Mr Gabie, a Forest Green Rovers season ticket-holder, said: "While I want to mark the birthplace of modern football I also want [the sculpture] to be about people's experience of football around the world as something which can really provide a social good." |
Fellow sculptor Alan Ward said the £150,000 project, funded by developers, would take "a little bit of Cambridge" to those places. | Fellow sculptor Alan Ward said the £150,000 project, funded by developers, would take "a little bit of Cambridge" to those places. |
Mr Ward, a Norwich City fan, said: "When this project came up I think what we found so fascinating was it was this small part of land in Cambridge where the rules were written and passed around the world." | Mr Ward, a Norwich City fan, said: "When this project came up I think what we found so fascinating was it was this small part of land in Cambridge where the rules were written and passed around the world." |
A website, Cambridge Rules 1848, was launched to ask for people's football stories from around the world. | A website, Cambridge Rules 1848, was launched to ask for people's football stories from around the world. |
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