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Kid 25's
Library Exhibits
Polo
History on HorseBback
Polo
Polo
(by
Drybrough, T. B
)
Spalding's official roller polo guide
(by
Morse, Jacob C., ed
)
Polo past and present
(by
Dale, T. F. (Thomas Francis)
)
Polo
(by
Drybrough, T. B
)
Polo
(by
Brown, J. Moray (James Moray)
)
Polo
has not produced a bevy of celebrated, well known athletes, but its historical significance spans millennia. The exact origin of the game is speculative. Pakistan, Iran, Mongolia, India, and China have all claimed polo as their own, but it most likely was a recreational pastime played by mounted nomads in Central Asia, where it later spread to Persia and beyond.
Emperor Shapur II
, the tenth shahanshah of the longest reigning monarch in Iranian history, learned to play polo when he was only seven. A Persian miniature from the poem Guy-O Chawgân (“The Ball and the Polo Mallet”), dating back 1546 A.D., shows courtiers playing a game of polo. In the neighboring Byzantine Empire,
Emperor Basil I
was reportedly an excellent player; however, his son and successor,
Emperor Alexander
, succumbed to exhaustion during play.
In the early 19th century, the modern game of polo was derived from Manipur, India, where anyone who owned a pony was a welcomed participant.
Pulu
, the name of the wooden ball that was then used in the game, was anglicized into polo when Lieutenant Joseph Ford Sherer visited and played at the historic Imphal Polo Ground in the 1850s. T. B. Drybrough's illustrated guide
Polo
, published in 1898, just 40 years after Sherer's visit, reflects how Britain was largely responsible for the sport's westward expansion. Drybrough provides detailed descriptions of rules, accessories, club management, polo ponies, and much more in his work. That same year, an American athletic company published a guide,
Spalding's Official Roller Polo Guide
, an early variant of the sport.
Now polo is played professionally all around the world, from the Dominican Republic to Switzerland, and is an active sport in over 70 countries. In 2015, Argentina, had nine of the top ten ranked polo players.
Elephant polo
is played in South Asia, yak polo is played in Mongolia. Polo is a respected sport in each place in which it is played, and is inexorably linked to the rich histories of a great many places. World Library offers a wealth of information about polo's historical significance, including T.F. Dale's work
Polo: Past and Present
.
By Logan Williams
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