World's oldest bowling alley found in Egypt

by ryan | May 31, 2007 at 09:45 am
14763 views | 10 Recommendations | 4 comments

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Helena mesmerised by bowling ball

Helena mesmerised by bowling ball

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The Flintstones may have been the pioneers of ancient bowling, but this recent find by Italian archeologists reveals that others may have been bowling in bare feet and loincloths too.

Italian archeologists have found in Egypt what may be the world's oldest indoor bowling alley, Egyptian media said Monday.

A spacious room, with a shallow lane running through into a pit and two heavy stone balls lying nearby, was found at an ancient site in the province of Al-Fayyum, 90 kilometers (56 miles) south of Cairo, and appears to be man's first attempt to create an area for a game that was to become the prototype for modern-day bowling, archeologists taking part in the excavations were reported as saying.

The site dates back to the Ptolemaic era, which began in 332 B.C with Ptolemy I Soter declaring himself Pharaoh of Egypt following Alexander the Great's conquest, and ended with the Roman conquest in 30 B.C.

The period bowling room was apparently part of a residential building, with papyruses, pottery and copper utensils found at the site in abundance.

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Jordan Yerman
Jordan Yerman
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 11:11 on May 31st, 2007

It's amazing how humans put knowledge and technology to use: when a culture discovers things like friction, trajectory and the behavior of spheres when rolled, they invent bowling. This has continued to this day, with so much tech taht was spawned during the space race being used for entertainment. Good stuff.

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Barry Artiste

Wonders never cease, I hope to see this article in my National Geographic issue in the future. Sometimes the most rudimentary, non techie object gives the greatest pleasure. Bowling, stick, line and a hook, a kite etc.

It would not surprise me the builders of pyramids would have invented bowling, as they had invented so many other things in use today such as pi.

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radiant guy

That's soemthing I didn't know :D

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Yail Bloor

Doesn't compare to Nile Bowling!  Who needs regulation lanes!  Or even fully functional pin mechanisms...as long as you have the dvd souq...

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Jordan Yerman
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