Soccer Aqsaqtuk History

1301 Words3 Pages

There's been a point in everyone's lifetime that they lost a game or bet and ended up being a poor sport about the situation. The game of soccer has been around for many years and in earlier days, perhaps the seventeenth century, there were cases of “accidental stabbings” that would occur more often than not. The losing teams were almost never the victim of the horrific act. Kings and queens have had many problems throughout the years that resulted in soccer being banned as well. Although times have changed soccer is still an interesting sport with a long history and many stories behind it. History tells us when soccer started and exactly how it has evolved into our modern day play. The earliest records of soccer were 5000-300 BC in China. …show more content…

Many eskimos chose to play on ice with a round ball stuffed with moss, caribou hair, and grass. The concept of the game was still the same, they would try to get the ball through a small hole in the ice with two teams playing against each other. Although, it was uncertain how many people played on a team or other small details but we do know they called the sport aqsaqtuk which literally means “soccer on ice.” Believe it or not, there was even a legend over two villages playing against each other with the goals ten miles apart. Of course, we don’t know if this legend is true, but we do know for certain that aqsaqtuk was played with any free time eskimos had available in 1600. (Admin …show more content…

This was the first form of soccer played in the United States by native American Indians. They played this in the Jamestown Settlement in 1620. Pasuckaukohowog wasn’t easy, it was very aggressive and rough with real cases of “accidental” stabbings between players.We don’t know exactly how these stabbings happened but Indians in North America didn’t feel the need to set laws over the game or stop playing pasuckaukohowog which, on the bright side, did benefit and develop soccer in the long run. The field in this game was half a mile wide with one mile between each goal and up to 1,000 people playing on the field at a time according to Woods (n.p). Native Americans were lucky to be able to play some form of soccer even if it did have major issues unlike other countries who would ban or not have soccer in general.
England remained upset that they couldn’t play soccer, which they called football in 1605 and still today. It resulted with the sport becoming legal and pleased the Englishmen once again. The englishmen were also pleased “that the United States football was played among the Northeastern universities and colleges of Harvard, Princeton, Amherst and Brown.” (Wood n.p.) This big step for soccer happened in 1820; soccer became much more popular in America, it is now the seventh most popular sport in our country that holds many people passionate for the game. (Zac n.p.).

Open Document