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Quiz about Sporticus
Quiz about Sporticus

Sport-icus! Trivia Quiz


Sports have existed since farther back than I can remember. Let's take a peek through the years and be a spectator to some of these terrific sports. Some clues may be provided.

A multiple-choice quiz by funnytrivianna. Estimated time: 4 mins.
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Time
4 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
354,999
Updated
Jul 23 22
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
7 / 10
Plays
285
- -
Question 1 of 10
1. In the times of Ancient Greece, pankration was a sport played by some. Tell me which combined sports were used? (They did not use gloves, surprisingly!) Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. Here in Athens, Greece you can jump aboard my chariot and we can race around the Hippodrome track. Could my chariot be pulled by mules?


Question 3 of 10
3. The Ancient Romans were very much into public competition. What unbelievable thing did the Romans do at the Colosseum? (Do consider the word "unbelievable".) Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. Which of these Roman sports was in fact a chariot race? (Something about the name could mean two.) Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. Ancient Egypt rewarded its winning athletes with a kind of collar or necklace. What was this prize called? (YOU might have to USE some thought here, even with this clue.) Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. There is evidence that the Ancient Egyptians played a form of team hockey.


Question 7 of 10
7. In ancient Japanese times they played a type of soccer. What was the sport called? (The "I" has it!) Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. According to Shintoism, which Japanese sport has been performed since ancient times and is more of a religious ritual than it is a sport? (Big, BIG men) Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. From which country did the ancient sport called Mizo Inchai come? Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. Which of the following sports is not a traditional or an ancient wrestling sport of India? Hint



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Most Recent Scores
Mar 25 2024 : jonnowales: 9/10
Mar 03 2024 : jeremygilbert: 7/10

Score Distribution

quiz
Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. In the times of Ancient Greece, pankration was a sport played by some. Tell me which combined sports were used? (They did not use gloves, surprisingly!)

Answer: Boxing/Wrestling

Pankration was a very grueling sport which combined both boxing and wrestling. In the sport the rules banned biting and gouging any opponent in the nose, mouth or eyes with fingernails. Punching and kicking anywhere on the body was permitted.
2. Here in Athens, Greece you can jump aboard my chariot and we can race around the Hippodrome track. Could my chariot be pulled by mules?

Answer: Yes

Ancient Greece held chariot races. There were two-horse chariots and also four-horse chariots. There were also separate races with foals pulling the chariot. In yet another type of chariot race there were chariots pulled by two mules. The course for such races was made up of twelve laps around the track. The twelve laps were equivalent to nine miles.
3. The Ancient Romans were very much into public competition. What unbelievable thing did the Romans do at the Colosseum? (Do consider the word "unbelievable".)

Answer: Naval battles

The Romans held naval battles in the Colosseum. To do this the central portion of the Colosseum was flooded with water for the competition to take place. This re-enactment was called the naumachiae. The basin in the Colosseum was 79.35m x 47.2m, which was not as large as the Augustinian basin where thousands of men re-enacted battles. Among others, the Pelopennesian War (431 to 404 B.C.) was re-enacted in the Colosseum. Titus, the Roman Emperor from 79 to 81 A.D. gave a naumachiae in the Colosseum based on that battle.
4. Which of these Roman sports was in fact a chariot race? (Something about the name could mean two.)

Answer: Biga

Biga is a two-horse chariot race which was played for sport in ancient Rome. The biga was also used as a form of transportation and also in ceremonies. The driver of a biga is known as a bigarius.

Herpastum was a type of ball game, Naumachia was a sort of re-enactment of naval battles and Sphaeristerium was a large open area where exercising with the use of balls took place after bathing
5. Ancient Egypt rewarded its winning athletes with a kind of collar or necklace. What was this prize called? (YOU might have to USE some thought here, even with this clue.)

Answer: Usekh

The usekh was a large collar or necklace awarded, along with money, to the winners of sporting contests. The large collar covered the athlete's shoulders and chest. Sometimes a Usekh contained amulets and precious stones connected with gold.
6. There is evidence that the Ancient Egyptians played a form of team hockey.

Answer: True

The Ancient Egyptians did play hockey on teams. They played what we call Field hockey. The Egyptians played field hockey as far back into the past as 2500 BCE (Before the Common Era). From the tomb of Kheti, in Beni Hasan, there are images which show this sport being played.
7. In ancient Japanese times they played a type of soccer. What was the sport called? (The "I" has it!)

Answer: Kemari

The sport of Kemari was not unlike a mixture of football/soccer/hacky sack. The players had to keep the ball in the air using parts of their body, except for their hands. Players passed the ball from one to the other in an attempt to not let the ball touch the ground.

The name for the ball was mari and it was generally made from either deer skin or horse skin. The sport was more of a community sport rather than it being a competitive one.
8. According to Shintoism, which Japanese sport has been performed since ancient times and is more of a religious ritual than it is a sport? (Big, BIG men)

Answer: Sumo

Sumo, or Sumo wrestling, has appeared as far back as the Edo era of the seventeenth to nineteenth century. Sumo is a fighting sport played by two powerful wrestlers who don a belt called a Mawashi. When one of the wrestlers is pushed out of the circle (Dohyo) by the other then that wrestler who is still in the circle wins.

Another way to win is for a wrestler to force the other to touch the ground with a body part (aside from the soles of the feet).
9. From which country did the ancient sport called Mizo Inchai come?

Answer: India

Mizo Inchai, a Maniuri game, was a form of wrestling. A player is defeated if both shoulders are pinned to the ground for a count of six (or five seconds). Another way that a contestant is defeated is if he is lifted into the air and kept suspended for a count of six (five seconds).

A third way that a wrestler is defeated is by being pinned to the ground in any position for a count of six (five seconds).
10. Which of the following sports is not a traditional or an ancient wrestling sport of India?

Answer: Asol App

Asol Aap is a canoe race which was run between the six tribes who lived in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. The Nicobarese tribes used canoe's as long as one hundred feet with many participants in each canoe. Today such a race was and still is run with only two teams at a time.
Source: Author funnytrivianna

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor stuthehistoryguy before going online.
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