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7 WAYS CHILDREN USED TO PLAY THROUGHOUT HISTORY

Fonte: https://sudeleycastle.co.uk/news/7-ways-children-used-to-play-
throughout-history

1. Life on the road

In Victorian Britain, cars were scarce, which meant the country’s streets were a
place for play – despite the fact that many children spent most of their time
working. Children would share toys such as hoops, marbles and skipping ropes.
Other games included tag and hopscotch – which are still played in schools and
playgrounds today.

2. Wheely good fun

In the 1930s, many families were too poor to afford manufactured toys, which
meant children would have to find creative ways of making their own fun.
Scooters were popular amongst many children around this time as they would
salvage scrap wood and ball bearings for the wheels. They would often spend
longer refining their designs and making improvements to their toys than they
did actually playing with them.

3. Life’s a ball

Children in Ancient Rome often played ball games with defined rules, much like
modern hockey or volleyball games today. One popular game involved drawing
circles on the floor and bouncing a ball inside the circle without other players
catching it – all the while moving around the circle to distract other players. If no
one caught the ball, the player who made the move would win a point.

4. A dangerous game to play

Examinations of coroner’s reports and subsequent inquests have found that


child’s play in the Tudor era wasn’t as safe as previously thought, with a number
of infant deaths being linked to play. There are examples of children drowning
while picking flowers, falling into a ditch while making ‘mud cakes’, and even
getting fatally wounded while playing with a foal. In fact, one inquest looking into
the deaths registered between 1551 and 1560 found that 37 children died while
playing.

5. Resourceful Play

In Ancient Greece, there were no manufactured toys beyond small pottery figures
and rag dolls, so children had to be resourceful. Often, children would play with
balls made from rags or inflated pigs’ bladders and use the ankle bones of sheep
to play various catching games.

6. Top of the swaps

Many toy factories during the Second World War were required to make guns,
plane parts and other pieces of equipment needed for the country’s war effort.
This meant there was a shortage of new toys so children would swap with one
another at ‘toy exchanges’. Any toys which were made during the war would be
themed for the era – from planes and tanks, to battleships and toy soldiers. They
would be crafted from paper or card as more substantial materials such as metal
or rubber were needed for the war.

7. Fun fit for a queen

Despite having a subdued, serious childhood herself, Queen Victoria ensured that
all of her nine children would have happy upbringings. The children spent many
of their younger years helping Albert to build the ‘Swiss Cottage’ at their holiday
home on the Isle of Wight. Albert encouraged the children to learn through play
and taught them skills which he believed would make them better adults. From
laying the foundations of the cottage to tending to their allotment, play for the
royal children was fun, yet productive in making them into well-rounded adults.

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