No edit summary |
No edit summary Tag: Source edit |
||
(11 intermediate revisions by 8 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
+ | {{Imageless}} |
||
⚫ | |||
+ | {{Game or sport infobox |
||
+ | |name=Stinchstock |
||
+ | |image= |
||
+ | |established=[[1105]] or earlier |
||
+ | |players=More than one |
||
+ | *Bladder-guardian |
||
+ | |equipment=*[[Broomstick]]s |
||
+ | *Inflated [[dragon]] bladder |
||
+ | *[[Wand]] {{C|Used by bladder-guardian only}} |
||
+ | |venue= |
||
+ | |affiliation=[[Germany]] |
||
+ | |related= |
||
+ | }} |
||
+ | '''Stichstock''' was an ancient [[Wizardkind|wizarding]] game played on [[broomstick]]s.<ref name="qta"/> |
||
+ | ==History== |
||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | It originated in [[Germany]], and a [[Günther der Gewalttätige ist der Gewinner|painting]] from [[1105]] shows the game. The game consisted of a single twenty-foot pole topped with an inflated [[dragon]] bladder. One player on a [[broomstick]], known as the bladder-guardian, was tied by a rope to the pole, and given the task of defending the bladder. The rope was tied around their waist, and prevented the player from moving more than ten feet away from the pole. The other players would then take it in turns to try and puncture the bladder using the sharpened end of their [[broomstick]]s.<ref name="qta">{{QTA|R|2}}</ref> |
||
+ | |||
⚫ | The bladder-guardian was allowed to use their [[wand]] to defend the bladder. The game ended only when the bladder had been punctured, the bladder-guardian had hexed all other players, or when the bladder-guardian collapsed from exhaustion. The game eventually died out in the [[14th century]].<ref name="qta"/> |
||
+ | |||
+ | ==Etymology== |
||
+ | "Stichstock" roughly translates to "sting stick" in German. |
||
+ | |||
+ | ''Stichstock'' is pronounced ˈʃtɪçʃtɔk; i. e. both ''st'' like ''sht'', ''ck'' like ''k'', ''i'' like in ''wizard'', ''o'' like in ''top'', and ''ch'' like the h in ''human'' in some English dialects. |
||
==Appearances== |
==Appearances== |
||
+ | *{{QTA|R}} {{1st Mention}} |
||
− | *''[[Quidditch Through the Ages (real)|Quidditch Through the Ages]]'' |
||
+ | ==Notes and references== |
||
+ | {{Reflist}} |
||
+ | [[de:Stichstock]] |
||
+ | [[es:Stichstock]] |
||
[[fr:Stichstock]] |
[[fr:Stichstock]] |
||
[[pl:Stichstock]] |
[[pl:Stichstock]] |
||
+ | [[pt-br:Furabexiga]] |
||
[[ru:Штихшток]] |
[[ru:Штихшток]] |
||
[[Category:Broom games]] |
[[Category:Broom games]] |
Latest revision as of 03:04, 26 October 2023
"I show not your face but your heart's desire."
This page "shows not" an image, but just a written article. Please help the Harry Potter Wiki by uploading and adding an image to this article and then removing this template. |
Stichstock was an ancient wizarding game played on broomsticks.[1]
History
It originated in Germany, and a painting from 1105 shows the game. The game consisted of a single twenty-foot pole topped with an inflated dragon bladder. One player on a broomstick, known as the bladder-guardian, was tied by a rope to the pole, and given the task of defending the bladder. The rope was tied around their waist, and prevented the player from moving more than ten feet away from the pole. The other players would then take it in turns to try and puncture the bladder using the sharpened end of their broomsticks.[1]
The bladder-guardian was allowed to use their wand to defend the bladder. The game ended only when the bladder had been punctured, the bladder-guardian had hexed all other players, or when the bladder-guardian collapsed from exhaustion. The game eventually died out in the 14th century.[1]
Etymology
"Stichstock" roughly translates to "sting stick" in German.
Stichstock is pronounced ˈʃtɪçʃtɔk; i. e. both st like sht, ck like k, i like in wizard, o like in top, and ch like the h in human in some English dialects.
Appearances
- Quidditch Through the Ages (First mentioned)
Notes and references
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Quidditch Through the Ages, Chapter 2 (Ancient Broom Games)