Monday, December 3, 2007

Ancient Egyptian plays bowling

Italian archeologists have found in Egypt what may be the world's oldest indoor bowling alley. A spacious room, with a shallow lane running through into a pit and two heavy stone balls lying nearby, was found at an ancient site in the province of Al-Fayyum, 90 kilometers (56 miles) south of Cairo, and appears to be man's first attempt to create an area for a game that was to become the prototype for modern-day bowling.

The site dates back to the Ptolemaic era, which began in 332 B.C with Ptolemy I Soter declaring himself Pharaoh of Egypt following Alexander the Great's conquest, and ended with the Roman conquest in 30 B.C. The bowling room was apparently part of a residential building, with papyruses, pottery and copper utensils found at the site in abundance.

It's believed that two players would throw balls from the two ends of a lane. The one throwing a smaller ball aimed to get the ball in a hole, while one throwing a larger ball tried to block the other's shot. The lane is made from three pieces of joint marble.

Source : dsc.discovery.com

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2 comments:

Kyle and Svet Keeton said...

Bowling is cool but the little Big Foot is better.

Good articles. Funny how that Monkey just walks upright now. Shows that they can just like humans and never run on all fours again.

Could us Humans be the result of monkeys and high fevers??

Kyle

Anonymous said...

Hey great posts. I loved reading about the monkey and the Dove.....and this one is amazing too! we CAN learn so much from ancient cultures