5644 Aflalo , F. G. 501 ; 2596 ; 5226 Agelasto , C. 2010 Aherne , S. 5645 Ainscow , L. 2937 Ainslie , C. M. 3569 ... C. W. 5489 Anderson , C. 4644 Anderson , E. 760 Anderson , J. 2262 Anderson , J. R. L. 6982 Anderson , R. A. 4965 ...
Martin Polley provides a survey of sport in Britain since 1945 and examines sport's place in British culture. He discusses issues of class, gender, race, commerce and politics, as well as analysing contemporary sport.
An authoritative, one stop overview of the history of sports in Britain from the earliest times to the present.This remarkable volume should become the standard reference source for the history...
This five volume set is a comprehensive collection of primary sources on sports in the late Victorian and Edwardian eras.
One solution to this was the informal creation of ' sub - clubs ' within the wider organization , and sport played an important part in this process . ... The Macmillan Dictionary of Sport and Games ( 1980 ) , pp . 123-30 .
First published in 2004. This five-volume major work is a comprehensive collection of primary sources which examine changing attitudes to sport in the late Victorian and Edwardian eras.
... (Lords Cricket Ground, London): Buckley, G.B. (1940) The Scores of Cricket Matches (Unpublished, 1940) Buckley, G.B. (1942) Cricket Notices (Unpublished, 1942) Buckley, G.B. (1954) Historical Gleanings (Unpublished, 1954) Buckley, ...
smock and petticoat , flinging the bar for a silver plated mug , eating a hot hasty pudding for a silver tablespoon , and a bull bait , with a bull calf going to the owner of the best baiting dog . Animal sports were a familiar scene ...
3 J. Strutt , Glig - garmena angel deod : or The Sports and Pastimes of the People of England , London , 1801 ) ; new edition 1903 , reprinted ... 37 and J.A. Cuddon , MacMillan Dictionary of Sport and Games , London , 1980 , p .
This book examines the complex transformation of British sport in the second half of the twentieth century.
Wray Vamplew examines the linkages between sport, gambling, crime and spectator violence, and concludes that many supposedly 'recent' developments (notably football hooliganism) in fact have their origins in this, the 'Golden Age' of sport ...