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| 1.
The oldest surviving written version of the Laws of Cricket dates from which year? |
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| 2.
Towards the end of the eighteenth century, a village in Hampshire had a famous cricket club, which was prepared to take on all-comers and could boast of beating "all England" more than once. What was the name of this village? |
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| 3.
Which London cricket ground was first opened in 1787? |
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| 4.
On July 7 to 9, 1806, a match was played at Lord's which was in due course to become an annual fixture, and an important event in the English sporting and social calendar. What game was this? |
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| 5.
John Willes, a Kentish cricketer in the early nineteenth century, is traditionally associated with which development in the game? |
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| 6.
The earliest English cricket festival was established in 1842 at which town in Kent? |
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| 7.
The earliest sporting club to adopt distinctive colours is generally supposed to be a "wandering" cricket club, formed in 1845 in London. What is the name of this club? |
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| 8.
Professional touring XIs played a prominent part in mid-19th century English cricket. Who formed the All-England XI in 1846? |
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| 9.
John Wisden, the founder of the famous Cricketers' Almanack, was himself a great cricketer in his time. His name still appears in the records section of the Almanac. What feat did he achieve at Lord's on July 15, 1850? |
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| 10.
In which year did Wisden's Almanac first appear? |
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