How a Medieval Street Riot Built the FIFA World Cup: The History of Football - Episode 8
What is the single most-watched event in human history? It’s not a space landing or a royal wedding - it is a football match, drawing up to a billion people to their screens at the exact same moment. But long before billionaire owners, satellite TV, and state-backed clubs, the world’s most popular sport started as a literal medieval riot.
I trace the journey of how a simple ball game conquered the planet, from military training fields in Han Dynasty China 2,000 years ago where soldiers kicked feather-stuffed leather balls into bamboo nets, to the brutal ball courts of Mesoamerica where civilisations played for religious stakes using solid rubber. I also dive into the beautiful, muddy stories of communities right across history - from railway workers in 1870s industrial Britain building the clubs that billionaires buy today, to Brazilian street corners where marginalised players took a rigid European export and completely reinvented it into an improvisational art form.
Whether you call it football or soccer, you will never look at the pitch the same way again.
In this episode, I explore:
• The Archery Threat: How English kings spent five centuries passing laws to outlaw football because young men were spending more time kicking pigs' bladders through town squares than practicing their military longbows.
• The Pub Divorce of 1863: The dramatic story of a stormy meeting at London’s Freemasons Tavern where an argument over running with the ball permanently broke football and rugby apart, physically leaving us with two completely different shaped balls.
• The Ultimate Saturday Escape: How the punishing grind of the Industrial Revolution accidentally built modern fan culture, giving factory workers a fierce sense of community, belonging, and tribal pride on their only free afternoon of the week.
• The Propaganda Weapon: The dark 20th-century history of how dictators like Benito Mussolini recognized the psychological power of the pitch, turning the 1934 World Cup into a manufactured geopolitical stage for national image and state legitimacy.
• The Sovereign Wealth Era: The massive financial paradigm shift of the late 20th century that transformed local identities into global corporate brands, leading directly to the modern era of state-backed clubs and multi-billion-dollar broadcast rights.
Music Credits:
Track: "Algoma" by Ross Bugden
Listen here: https://youtu.be/oHK9oF2Z7Q?si=4g5VvOleYon70rW [https://youtu.be/_oHK9oF2Z7Q?si=_4g5VvOleYon70rW]