Pellet: Difference between revisions

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|Term=Pellet
|Term=Pellet
|Game Family=Baseball
|Game Family=Baseball
|Location=Scotland
|Location=Scotland (Orkney)
|Description=<p>(Cat&rsquo;s Pellet, Cat&rsquo;s Pallet, Gidigadie) - per MacLagan. This game is played like Tip-Cat, but with a ball and a one-handed bat, and with plugging instead of crossing to put runners out. An Orkney game. Elsewhere MacLagan described the game as using four small holes in a twelve-foot square. An 1882 source finds a usage of &ldquo;cat&rsquo;s pellet&rdquo; in 1648, and defines it as &ldquo;a game, perhaps the same as tip-cat.&rdquo; Court records from 1583 seem to indication that the game &ldquo;Cat&rsquo;s Pallet&rdquo; was also called Gidigadie, at least in the Manchester area.</p>
|Game Regions=Britain
|Sources=<p>MacLagan, "Additions to 'the Games of Argyleshire'", page 87.</p>
|Game Eras=1800s,Pre-1700,Predecessor
<p>R. C. MacLagan,&nbsp;<em>The Perth Incident of 1396 from a Folk-lore Point of View</em>&nbsp;(Blackwood and Son, 1905), page 54.</p>
|Description=<p>(Cat’s Pellet, Cat’s Pallet, Gidigadie) - per MacLagan (1905). This game is played like Tip-Cat, but with a ball and a one-handed bat, and with plugging instead of crossing to put runners out. An Orkney game. Elsewhere MacLagan described the game as using four small holes in a twelve-foot square. An 1882 source finds a usage of “cat’s pellet” in 1648, and defines it as “a game, perhaps the same as tip-cat.Court records from 1583 seem to indication that the game “Cat’s Pallet” was also called Gidigadie, at least in the Manchester area.</p>
<p><em>The Encyclopedic Dictionary</em>&nbsp;(Cassel, Peter and Galpin, 1882), page 625.</p>
|Sources=<p>MacLagan, R. C. "Additions to 'the Games of Argyleshire'." <em>Folklore, </em>volume 16, no. 1 (1905), page 87.</p>
<p>J. Harland,&nbsp;<em>A Volume of Court Leet Records of the Manor of&nbsp;Manchester&nbsp;in the&nbsp;</em></p>
<p>R. C. MacLagan, <em>The Perth Incident of 1396 from a Folk-lore Point of View</em> (Blackwood and Son, 1905), page 54.</p>
<p>Sixteenth<em>&nbsp;Century</em>&nbsp;(Chetham Society, 1864), page 156.</p>
<p><em>The Encyclopedic Dictionary</em> (Cassel, Peter and Galpin, 1882), page 625.</p>
<p>J. Harland, <em>A Volume of Court Leet Records of the Manor of Manchester in the </em>Sixteenth<em> Century</em> (Chetham Society, 1864), page 156.</p>
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Latest revision as of 08:40, 28 November 2012

Glossary of Games
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Game Pellet
Game Family Baseball Baseball
Location Scotland (Orkney)
Regions Britain
Eras 1800s, Pre-1700, Predecessor
Description

(Cat’s Pellet, Cat’s Pallet, Gidigadie) - per MacLagan (1905). This game is played like Tip-Cat, but with a ball and a one-handed bat, and with plugging instead of crossing to put runners out. An Orkney game. Elsewhere MacLagan described the game as using four small holes in a twelve-foot square. An 1882 source finds a usage of “cat’s pellet” in 1648, and defines it as “a game, perhaps the same as tip-cat.” Court records from 1583 seem to indication that the game “Cat’s Pallet” was also called Gidigadie, at least in the Manchester area.

Sources

MacLagan, R. C. "Additions to 'the Games of Argyleshire'." Folklore, volume 16, no. 1 (1905), page 87.

R. C. MacLagan, The Perth Incident of 1396 from a Folk-lore Point of View (Blackwood and Son, 1905), page 54.

The Encyclopedic Dictionary (Cassel, Peter and Galpin, 1882), page 625.

J. Harland, A Volume of Court Leet Records of the Manor of Manchester in the Sixteenth Century (Chetham Society, 1864), page 156.

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