Somewhere in the bustling cities of ancient China’s Warring States era, players began kicking a leather ball through a small opening — and in doing so, started a tradition that would eventually captivate billions of people. The game was called cuju (蹴鞠), and it is the earliest kicking sport for which written historical evidence survives.
What the evidence shows
- Ancient Chinese football: The first recorded mention of cuju appears in the Zhan Guo Ce, a historical text from China’s Warring States period (roughly 475–221 B.C.E.), describing the game being played in the prosperous state of Qi.
- FIFA recognition: The global governing body of football has formally cited cuju as the earliest form of a kicking game backed by documentary evidence, grounding soccer’s origins not in medieval Europe but in ancient East Asia.
- Cuju gameplay: Players competed in teams, kicking a ball through a small opening in a central hoop — using any part of the body except the hands — while preventing it from touching the ground, a set of rules that blends elements of what we now call soccer, volleyball, and hacky sack.
From military drill to imperial pastime
Cuju did not begin as entertainment. Early descriptions from Han dynasty military texts (3rd–2nd century B.C.E.) frame it as physical training for cavalry soldiers — a practical tool for building coordination and stamina. That origin gave it a useful legitimacy that helped it spread.
By the time of the Han dynasty (206 B.C.E.–220 C.E.), cuju had moved well beyond the barracks. The Han emperor Wu Di reportedly played it himself. Rules were standardized. Purpose-built fields called ju chang appeared inside imperial palace grounds. Six crescent-shaped goal posts stood at each end. What had started as a training exercise had become a organized sport with infrastructure to match.
The Tang dynasty (618–907 C.E.) brought further innovation. The old feather-stuffed ball gave way to an air-filled ball with a two-layered hull — an early form of the inflatable ball still used in sports today. The Tang capital of Chang’an was dotted with cuju fields in mansion courtyards and palace grounds. Women’s teams played at an improved competitive level. Scholars and courtiers joined in. The sport had become genuinely cross-class.
A league, a profession, and a commercial edge
Cuju reached its fullest flowering during the Song dynasty (960–1279 C.E.). By then, professional players had emerged — some performing for royal courts, others making an independent living from the sport. A formal cuju league, the Qi Yun She, organized annual national championships. Membership required non-professionals to pay a fee and formally apprentice under a professional, creating a system that guaranteed income for skilled players.
This was, in recognizable terms, a professionalized sport with governing structures, commercial relationships, and mass popularity across social classes. That it happened in 10th-century China — centuries before professional football organizations appeared in Europe — is a fact that rarely features in standard histories of the sport.
The Silk Road carried cuju’s influence outward. Japan’s kemari (written with the same Chinese characters, 蹴鞠) descended from it and is still played ceremonially today. Korea also adopted versions of the game. The inflatable ball technology that spread along trade routes during the Tang era may itself have influenced ball sports far beyond East Asia, though tracing those connections precisely remains difficult.
Lasting impact
The significance of cuju is not merely symbolic. FIFA’s formal recognition of cuju as football’s earliest documented ancestor reframes where the sport’s roots actually lie. For a game now followed by an estimated four billion people worldwide, that origin point matters.
Beyond football, cuju demonstrates something broader: that organized, rule-based sport — with professional players, paying audiences, league structures, and standardized equipment — is not a product of industrial modernity. Ancient Chinese society developed all of it more than a thousand years ago.
The sport also reminds us how knowledge travels. The inflatable ball, one of the most consequential pieces of sports technology ever developed, was a Chinese invention. It moved along the Silk Road. Its descendants are in every gymnasium and stadium on Earth.
Blindspots and limits
The historical record for cuju is uneven. Documentary evidence tells us what elites and military institutions played; what ordinary people in smaller towns experienced, or exactly how far cuju’s influence traveled before written records captured it, is harder to know. The connection between cuju and the eventual development of modern association football in 19th-century England remains indirect — there is no straight line of transmission, and the parallel development of kicking games in many cultures suggests that humanity’s love of a ball and a goal did not require a single point of origin.
Cuju itself declined during the Ming dynasty (1368–1644 C.E.) and eventually faded — a 2,000-year tradition that did not survive into the modern era intact, though revival efforts have taken place in its original home of Linzi.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Cuju
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Marie-Louise Eta becomes the first female head coach in men’s top-flight European football
- Indigenous land rights recognized across 160 million hectares ahead of COP30
- The Good News for Humankind archive on China
About this article
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