Leik Mjul: Difference between revisions

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|Location=Estonia
|Location=Estonia
|Game Regions=Europe
|Game Regions=Europe
|Game Eras=Predecessor, 1800s
|Game Eras=Predecessor
|Invented Game=No
|Invented Game=No
|Description=<p>Leik mjul ("play ball") was a game played on the island of Runo (now called &nbsp;"Ruhnu" and part of Estonia). &nbsp;Little is known about it, but some suggest that it was like rounders.</p>
|Description=<p>Isak Lidstr&ouml;m, a doctoral student at Malm&ouml; University, reports that in studying the isolated island of Run&ouml; in the Baltic Sea, he found a game called "leik mjul" ["play ball"] among the Swedes there prior to World War II.</p>
<p>Edwin Mehl wrote in 1949 that this game evolved from a game taught to locals by the crew of a British ship stranded on the island in 1846. &nbsp;There are indications that it was still played in 1920. &nbsp;Historically occupied by Swedes, the island was transferred to Estonia after World War II.</p>
<p>One source suggests that the game came to the island in the 1840's when a ship from England was stranded, and that perhaps the game evolved from rounders.</p>
<p>Isak Lidstrom, a graduate student at Malmo University in Sweden, reports in March 2016 that he is conducting research on the game.</p>
<p>Isak is preparing a paper on the find for publication, and Protoball plans to update this entry at a later time. His March 2018 summary:</p>
<p>-------</p>
<p>Isak's research report, on April 8, 2016:</p>
<p>Hello!</p>
<p>"After a comparison between the rules of rounders in David Block's appendix&nbsp;&nbsp;(The<em> boy's own book</em> 1828 and The <em>every boy's book</em> 1841) and leik mjul om Run&ouml;, the games seems very similar. In the Run&ouml; game, the pitcher and the batter should stand in a circle, and if the batter is successful, he can run to the first base, the second base, third base in order to reach the circle again. I tried to make a primitive sketch based on the instructions written in Klein&acute;s book: &nbsp;{this sketch does not transfer successfully yet; it displays a field diagram indicating counterclockwise running, a distance of &nbsp;7 meters from home to first and third to home, and 35 meters from first to second and second to third. The pitcher stands about 7 to 10 meters from the batsman.}</p>
<p>A Pitcher</p>
<p>B Batter</p>
<p>C First base/stick (f&aring;rst stakan)</p>
<p>D Second base/stick (an stakan)</p>
<p>E Third base/stick (trejje stakan)</p>
<p>---&nbsp;</p>
<p>"This procedure from the 1841 rules, "<em>In most places it is usual when all the players but one have been caught or struck out, for him to take the &ldquo;rounder&rdquo; &mdash; i.e., strike the ball so far that he can run round to all the bases and then home before the opposite party can get the ball, and &ldquo;ground&rdquo; it, or throw it down on the &ldquo;home&rdquo;&nbsp;</em>has its counterpart in the Run&ouml; game when the last man cries "Nu sl&aring;r jag runders" (Now I bat runders).</p>
<p><em>[Isak's remaining questions] --&nbsp;</em>"I have one question about Mehl's article "Baseball in the stone age". Two times in the article (p. 152, 157) Mehl mentions ball games on Run&ouml;, referring to Per Maigaard. In the foot notes, though, Mehl doesn't cite any written work by Maigaard. In the two articles I have found ("Slagboldspillenes historie", and the article that is published as an appendix in David's book) Maigaard never mentions the Run&ouml; ball games. Do you know if there is any other text or books where Maigaards deals with ball games? Or is it perhaps the case that Mehl cites Maigaard through oral communication?&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;"I find this detective work very exiting and hopefully the work will result in an article published in some history or folklore journal in Sweden, after working out the name of the ship that took rounders to Run&ouml;.&nbsp;Do you think that there might be an international interest in the case, so that it would be worth to write an article in english? I saw for example that there is a journal named NINE: A Journal of Baseball History and Culture.</p>
<p>&nbsp;Kind regards,</p>
<p>Isak</p>
<p>PS -- This in most places is usual when all the players but one have been caught</p>
<p>&nbsp;or struck out, for him to take the &ldquo;rounder&rdquo; &mdash; i.e:</p>
<p>&nbsp;strike the ball so far that he can run round to all the bases and then home before the opposite party can</p>
<p>&nbsp;get the ball, and &ldquo;ground&rdquo; it, or throw it down on the &ldquo;home.or struck out, for him to take the &ldquo;rounder&rdquo; &mdash; i.e.:</p>
<p>., strike the ball so far that he can run round to all the bases and then home before the opposite party can</p>
<p>&nbsp;get the ball, and &ldquo;ground&rdquo; it, or throw it down on the &ldquo;home.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<div>
<p><span lang="EN-GB">"Leik mjul" is definitely related to Swedish br&auml;nnboll, although the latter is a simplified game. &ldquo;Leik mjul&rdquo; is the same game as English rounders, as it was played in the 1840s. Swedish br&auml;nnboll also derives from English rounders. It was introduced by physical educators in the late 19<sup>th</sup>&nbsp;century. It was first called &ldquo;rundboll&rdquo; (roundball) and included a pitching procedure and a base running around five bases. As it was played in the schools, more simplified rules were required. The pitching procedure is gone nowadays &ndash; instead the batsman throws up the ball himself. Even the pitch has changed. It is shaped like a rectangle, with four bases.</span></p>
</div>
<p><span>-- isak</span></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
|Sources=<p>Emails from Isak Lidstr&ouml;m and David Block, 2016-18.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Isak's paper is found at&nbsp;http://kgaa.nu/tidskrifter/bok/arv-2017.&nbsp; Once at this site, click on the "Ladda ned Arv 2017" link.&nbsp; The article is written in English.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
|Sources=<p>Edwin Mehl, "Baseball in the Stone Age," [citation?]</p>
|Source Image=
<p>Email from Isak Lidstrom to David Block, March 24, 2016.</p>
|Comment=
<p>Email from Isak, April 8, 2016</p>
|Query=
<p>Se also chronology entry [[1846.14]], http://protoball.org/1846.14.&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
|Comment=<p>Some questions from Protoball:</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Can you say something about the source of the account you are comparing to the 1828 and 1841 accounts?</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
|Has Supplemental Text=No
|Has Supplemental Text=No
}}
}}

Latest revision as of 08:40, 18 January 2022

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Game Leik Mjul
Game Family Baseball Baseball
Location Estonia
Regions Europe
Eras Predecessor
Invented No
Description

Isak Lidström, a doctoral student at Malmö University, reports that in studying the isolated island of Runö in the Baltic Sea, he found a game called "leik mjul" ["play ball"] among the Swedes there prior to World War II.

One source suggests that the game came to the island in the 1840's when a ship from England was stranded, and that perhaps the game evolved from rounders.

Isak is preparing a paper on the find for publication, and Protoball plans to update this entry at a later time. His March 2018 summary:

 

"Leik mjul" is definitely related to Swedish brännboll, although the latter is a simplified game. “Leik mjul” is the same game as English rounders, as it was played in the 1840s. Swedish brännboll also derives from English rounders. It was introduced by physical educators in the late 19th century. It was first called “rundboll” (roundball) and included a pitching procedure and a base running around five bases. As it was played in the schools, more simplified rules were required. The pitching procedure is gone nowadays – instead the batsman throws up the ball himself. Even the pitch has changed. It is shaped like a rectangle, with four bases.

-- isak

 

 

Sources

Emails from Isak Lidström and David Block, 2016-18.

Isak's paper is found at http://kgaa.nu/tidskrifter/bok/arv-2017.  Once at this site, click on the "Ladda ned Arv 2017" link.  The article is written in English.  

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