as caricatured by Spy (
Leslie Ward) in
Vanity Fair The English club was formed on 4 July 1845 by a group of Old
Harrovians at a dinner party and thus is one of the oldest
cricket clubs still in existence. The English team still plays around 20 matches each year. Also known as
IZ, I Zingari is a wandering (or
nomadic) club, having no home ground. Uniquely for an amateur club,
Wisden reported all of its matches since 1867, but ceased to do so in 2005. I Zingari was founded by
John Loraine Baldwin, the Hon.
Frederick Ponsonby (later 6th
Earl of Bessborough), the Hon.
Spencer Ponsonby (later Sir Spencer Ponsonby-Fane),
Richard Penruddocke Long and
Edward Dewing, who were dining at the Blenheim Hotel in London's
Bond Street after a match against
Harrow School. They decided to form a club to foster the spirit of amateur cricket, and the club rules are famously idiosyncratic. William Boland, a barrister, was appointed the Perpetual President, and remains in post after his death. As a result, the leader of the club is termed its "Governor". Recent Governors of I Zingari have included
Charles Lyttelton, 10th Viscount Cobham (1956 to 1977),
Alec Douglas-Home (1977 to 1989),
George Mann (1989 to ?),
Dennis Silk (? to 2015) and
Mike Griffith (from 2015). Members included
William Henry Goschen. The club was at its strongest in the nineteenth century. It played seventeen
first-class matches between 1849 and 1904, including matches against
the Australians in 1882 and 1884. ==Colours==