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Rules of AFL is an episode from the seriesAustralia’s Heritage – National Treasures with Chris Taylor, produced in 2009.
Series Synopsis
Take a voyage of discovery with Chris Taylor as he reveals the secrets behind a fascinating mix of treasures from Australia’s National Heritage List. In the third season of five-minute documentaries in the National Treasures series, Taylor travels around Australia delivering historical snapshots of objects and places from the National Heritage List. He talks with experts and enthusiasts, revealing fascinating insights into our famous and not-so-famous past.
Australia’s Heritage – National Treasures with Chris Taylor is a Screen Australia National Documentary Program produced in association with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and made with the assistance of the Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts.
Teachers and students should consult their state or territory’s curriculum and learning programs.
For information on state and territory curricula
Go to:State and territory curriculum – Curriculum Corporation
The history of the beginnings of Australian Rules football is intertwined with the development of cricket in the colony of mid 19th century Victoria.
The Melbourne Cricket Club (MCC) was the first cricket club in Victoria, formed in 1838. The Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) was later established in 1853 when Lieutenant-Governor La Trobe provided 10 acres of land in Yarra Park to theMCC. Originally theWurundjeri-willam, a clan of theWoiworung and part of the Kulin nation, lived in this area. Historical records indicate many large gatherings of Aborigines in the area during the 1830s and 1840s.
In 1858 Tom Wills and other members of theMCC devised the first ten rules of the Melbourne Football Club, which became the first codified rules of Australian Rules football. It has been claimed, but not proven, that in inventing Australian Rules, Wills was influenced by an Aboriginal game called Marn Grook (also known as Marngrook), which he had observed and played when a boy while living in Victoria’s Western District.Australian Rules was played on theMCG for the first time in 1859, a winter game devised for utilising the shape of existing local parks and cricket ovals, unlike the other football sports of rugby and soccer, played on rectangular pitches. Initially, though, a soccer ball was used, but later a spheroid rugby ball was preferred.Since the late nineteenth century theMCG has been the symbolic home of football, first in Victoria, where the Victorian Football League (VFL) was formed in 1896 and, with the establishment of the Australian Football League (AFL) in 1990, in Australia as a whole.The rules of football have altered and considerably expanded since 1858, and are constantly being modified.
Geoffrey Blainey,A Game of Our Own: The Origins of Australian Football, Black Ink, Melbourne, 2003
Greg De Moore,Tom Wills: His Spectacular Rise and Tragic Fall, Allen & Unwin, Crows Nest,NSW, 2008
Keith Dunstan,The Paddock that Grew: The Story of the Melbourne Cricket Club, Cassell Australia, Melbourne, third edition 1988
Brian Matthews,The Temple Down the Road, Penguin, Camberwell, Vic, 2003
Go to:National Heritage: Melbourne Cricket Ground
Go to:The ten rules of Australian football in 1859
Go to:Australian Rules and Rugby in the 19th century