cambuca
English
Etymology
From Middle English camboke, from Late Latin cambuca (“hooked rod or stick”) referring to the 'club' used to play the game. Compare cammock.
Noun
cambuca (uncountable)
- (historical) A 12th-century English game somewhat similar to golf in that it was played with a wooden ball similar to a golf ball.
- 2001, Paul B. Newman, Daily life in the Middle Ages, page 162:
- […] there were actually several golf-like games played from the mid-13th Century onwards. One of these games was pell mell, the forerunner of modern croquet, which involved hitting the ball back and forth over a short distance and having to drive the ball through a hoop at either end of the course. Among the everyday activities recorded in the stained glass of cathedrals, one window at Gloucester Cathedral preserves the image of a cambuca player about to strike his ball.
- (historical) A curved stick used to strike the ball in the game of pall mall.
- (obsolete) A pastoral staff.
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