Online Encyclopedia

TAMBURELLO (called in Piedmont Tabasso)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 388 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TAMBURELLO (called in Piedmont Tabasso)  , a court
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game popular in Italy, particularly in the
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northern provinces . It is a modification of the ancient game of Pallone (q.v.), bearing the same general relation to it as Squash does to Racquets . A full-sized Tamburello Court, which need not be as true and even as that for Pallone, is 90 to 100 yards long and
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half as wide, divided laterally through the
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middle by a
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line (cordino) into two equal spaces, the battuta and the rimessa . Three players regularly form a side, each carrying in one hand an implement called tamburello, resembling a tambourine (whence the name), which is a round
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frame of wood upon which is tightly stretched a cover of horse-hide . A rubber ball about the
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size of a
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lawn-tennis ball is used . One of the players opens the service (battuta), which is made from a small square called the trampolino, situated at one corner of the battuta but outside the court . The service must be over the middle line . The ball must then be
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hit from side to side over the line, the side failing to return it or sending it out of court losing a point . The game is scored like lawn-tennis, four points constituting a game, counting 15+ 15 +10+10 . Tamburello, a less expensive game than Pallone, is popular with the
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lower classes, who use it as a
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medium for betting .

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