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Football's Ancient Chinese Ancestor: How Cuju Became the World's Game

March 28, 2026 Β· 4 min read

The Fact

The modern game of soccer (football) has its roots in 'Cuju,' a game played in China during the Han Dynasty.

Ask most people where football was invented and they will say England. They are not wrong in any practically important sense: the Football Association was founded in London in 1863, and the standardized rules developed there formed the basis for the global game. But the deeper history of kicking a ball through a goal traces not to Victorian England but to Han Dynasty China, where a sport called Cuju was played by soldiers, courtiers, and commoners alike more than two thousand years ago. FIFA, the sport's global governing body, formally recognized China as the birthplace of football in 2004.

What Cuju Was

Cuju (蹴鞠, literally "kick ball") was played with a leather ball stuffed with feathers or hair and involved kicking it through a net or goal without using the hands. The exact rules varied by era and social context β€” there were versions played between two teams with goals at opposite ends of a field, and a more refined version where players competed to keep the ball in the air and pass it through a small hole in a silk net suspended on poles, with no opposing team. The latter version, emphasizing individual skill and ball control rather than physical competition, was popular at the imperial court.

Cuju appears in Chinese texts from the Han Dynasty (206 BCE – 220 CE) in contexts that make clear it was already an established and widely practiced activity. The Han military used it as training for soldiers to improve fitness, coordination, and teamwork. Later dynasties β€” particularly the Tang (618–907 CE) and Song (960–1279 CE) β€” saw Cuju reach its peak of cultural prominence, with professional players, established venues, and documented rules. Song Dynasty texts describe inflated ball versions and techniques that read as recognizable precursors to modern ball control skills.

The Global Spread of Kicking Sports

The lineage from Cuju to modern football is not direct or simple. Football as played today derives most immediately from the English public school games that were codified in 1863. But the persistence of kicking games across cultures and centuries β€” Greeks and Romans played Episkyros and Harpastum respectively, indigenous cultures in the Americas played various ball games, Japanese Kemari was played from the 7th century β€” suggests that the impulse to kick a ball through an objective is not a single invention but a recurrent human behavior that took different forms in different places.

What makes Cuju particularly significant in the historical record is its documentation and longevity. We have detailed written accounts of its rules, paintings depicting it, and evidence of professional organization. The Tang Dynasty poet Du Fu wrote admiringly of Cuju players. The Song Dynasty saw organized leagues and what appear to be professional players supported by wealthy patrons. The cultural infrastructure of a popular sport β€” regular competition, skilled practitioners, public interest, professional support β€” existed in China centuries before analogous structures appeared in England.

FIFA's Recognition and What It Means

When FIFA President Sepp Blatter traveled to Zibo, China in 2004 and stated that football "was born in China," he was making a statement with diplomatic and cultural dimensions as well as historical ones. The recognition of China as football's birthplace acknowledges that the history of the world's most popular sport extends well beyond the Victorian England that standardized it, into a longer and more geographically diverse story about human play.

Modern football's global success rests on the English codification of consistent rules that allowed the game to spread through colonial networks and commercial contact. But the reason a standardized kicking game found global purchase so readily may be partly because the underlying activity β€” controlling a ball with the feet, pursuing a goal, competing within a defined space β€” had already proven itself appealing across multiple independent human cultures over thousands of years. Cuju was not the origin of football in any direct sense, but it is evidence that football, in some essential form, is an ancient human game.

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FactOTD Editorial Team

Published March 28, 2026 Β· 4 min read

The FactOTD editorial team researches and verifies every fact before publication. Our mission is to make learning effortless and accurate. Learn about our process β†’

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