The earliest documented source for a group ball game in Great Britain comes from Wales.
Historia Brittonum (The History of the Britons), written in the ninth century, depicts events after the
end of Roman rule and forms the basis of the
Arthurian legend. The book is accredited to Welsh monk and historian
Nennius who supposedly had access to 5th century sources which have not survived. The preface, which appears in several recensions credited to Nennius, is considered by some historians to be a later embellishment by an anonymous writer. Others believe
Historia Brittonum to be a collection of stories from the 7th century. Regardless of erroneous historical content, the main text does demonstrate that group ball games were understood in the 9th century and that the author of chapter 41 believed these games were played by the
Britons. The oldest surviving transcript dates to c.1100 A.D.
"In consequence of this reply, the king sent messengers throughout Britain, in search of a child born without a father. After having inquired in all the provinces, they came to the field of Ælecti, in the district of Glevesing, where a party of boys were playing at ball. And two of them quarrelling, one said to the other, "O boy without a father, no good will ever happen to you." Upon this, the messengers diligently inquired of the mother and the other boys, whether he had had a father? Which his mother denied, saying, "In what manner he was conceived I know not, for I have never had intercourse with any man;" and then she solemnly affirmed that he had no mortal father. The boy was, therefore, led away, and conducted before Vortigern the king." at
Gloucester Cathedral By the 4th century
Britannia was divided into four provinces. The province of
Britannia Prima extended its influence over what is now Wales and the
West Country. The
district of Glevesing referred to in the story is likely to be
Colonia Nervia Glevensium founded as a
Roman fort in the 1st century which later developed into a colony for retired
legionaries. Some
Latin inscriptions show this place name abbreviated to Glev'vm/
Glevum. According to chapter 49 of Historia Brittonum it was here on the banks of the
River Severn that the ancestors of King Vortigern founded the city of
Gloucester (Brythonic name "Cair Gloui") where a medieval ball game is known to have been played. In
Gloucester Cathedral, built in on the site of an abbey founded 678 or 679, a
carved wooden relief on a
misericord dated to the 14th century shows a scene from a "medieval football" game where two players are challenging for the ball. The small ball illustrated is more compatible in size to a Cnapan-type ball than the larger
bladder inflated or
stuffed ball used in
similar mob games. An alternative theory is that the "district of Glevesing" was the 5th-century sub-Roman petty Kingdom of
Glywysing named after the legendary Welsh King
Glywys who probably took his name from the then demised Roman colony. Glywysing is located in modern day
Glamorgan. How the field sport recorded by Nennius relates to cnapan from the same region is unclear. Little information is known about the origins of cnapan, due to the age of the sport and the lack of historical records created for relatively inconsequential matters as playing ball games. It does seem to originate from the
Middle Ages as a form of "organised chaos", to relieve the back-breaking monotonous work of daily life. George Owen of Henllys says, in his
Description of Pembrokeshire (1603), that it had been a form of war training for the "Ancient Britons", used to improve strength and stamina. ==Rules of play==