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Jeu de mail


Jeu de mail or jeu de maille (Middle French for 'game of [the] mallet', or sometimes interpreted as 'straw game') is a now-obsolete lawn game originating in the Late Middle Ages and mostly played in France, surviving in some locales into the 20th century. It is a form of ground billiards, using one or more balls, a stick with a mallet-like head, and usually featuring one or more targets such as hoops or holes. Jeu de mail was ancestral to the games palle-malle and croquet, and (by moving it indoors and playing on a table with smaller equipment), billiards.

The first known written record of jeu de mail is a Renaissance Latin text dating to 1416. The mail in the name probably means 'maul, mallet', from Latin malleus. An alternative meaning of "straw" has been suggested (Modern French maille), on the basis that the target hoops used in some versions of the game were sometimes made of bound straw.

Quite popular in various forms in France and Italy in the Late Middle Ages and Renaissance, the game developed into paille-maille in the early modern period, which spread to Scotland then England; this, in turn, eventually led to croquet.

According to Brantôme, King Henry II of France (ruled 1547–1559) was an excellent player of jeu de mail and jeu de paume (a form of that eventually developed into tennis and other raquet sports). Louis XIV (ruled 1661–1715), who hated jeu de paume, was on the other hand enthusiastic about jeu de mail, and the playing court in the gardens of Tuileries Palace was enlarged during his reign.


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