The History of Badminton

 

The History of Badminton



 The History of Badminton: The Peach Cocktail game has been around in Eurasia for centuries, but the modern Badminton game developed as one of the first games of the Battle Door and Carrier Cocktail between British and Indian foreign officials in the mid-19th century. The Beatle Door was the old name for the Rocket. Its true nature is not clear. The name comes from the Duke of Beaufort's Badminton House in Gloucester, but it is not clear why or when.

 In the early 1860s, Isaac Sprite, a toy salesman in London, published a booklet called Battledore A New Game, but it is unknown at this time what he will do after leaving the post. In an article published in Cornhill magazine in 1863, Badminton "played with the hanging bell and the side of the peach, five inches from the ground." The game was originally developed among British immigrants in India and was popular until the 1870s. Badminton, a sport played by woolen balls in place of Sharsiman Cocktail, has been played in Hangzhou since the early 1850s, and the British first replaced Badminton with woolen balls. Loved in the wind or wet weather. Initially, the game was also known as Poona or Poona after the garrison market Pona, a place that was particularly popular, and the first rules of the game were laid down in 1873.

 The People’s Stone initially played the game with one to four players, but it soon became clear that the game had the best performance between two or four opponents. The roosters were covered with Indian rubber and sometimes weighed down with lead in outdoor sports. Although the depth of the net did not affect it, it preferred to reach the ground. The game was played in Pune until 1887 when JHE Hart of the Bath Badminton Club drafted the revised rules. In 1890, Hart and Bagnell Wilde amended the rules. 




These rules were published by the British Badminton Association (BAE) in 1893, and the game was officially launched on September 13 at a house called "Dunbar" in Portsmouth. For the first time, the UAE hosted the Badminton Championships, the English Super Badminton Championships, the Ladies' Doubles, the Women's Doubles and the Mixed Doubles, the 1900s singles, and the 1904 England-Ireland Championships.

 The United Kingdom, Scotland, Wales, Canada, Denmark, France, Ireland, the Netherlands, and New Zealand formed the members of the International Badminton Federation in 1934 and are now known as the Badminton World Association. India joined in 1936 as a member. BWF now controls international badminton. Although introduced in the UK, the male-dominated Badminton tradition has been dominated by Denmark in Europe.

 Asian countries around the world have the upper hand in international competition. China, Denmark, Indonesia, Malaysia, India, Korea, Taiwan ("China Taipei"), and Japan have been producing world-class players, including Chinese men, in recent decades. . Recently a women’s competition The game has become a popular back-to-back game in the United States.

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