(Redirected from J. C. Thring)'H. (Henry) de Winton and J. C. (John Charles) Thring' were influential in the development of modern
codes of football. In
1848, at
Cambridge University they published a set of rules —
Cambridge Rules — that were widely adopted in
England. These influenced the development of
Association football,
Australian rules football, and subsequent games.
Winton and Thring both attended
Shrewsbury School before going to Cambridge.
In
1848, they called a meeting at
Trinity College, Cambridge, with representatives from
Eton,
Harrow,
Rugby,
Winchester and Shrewsbury. An eight-hour meeting took place, and the Cambridge rules were produced. No copy of these rules now exists, but a revised edition from about
1856 is held in the library at Shrewsbury School.
A later revision produced in October 1863 were brought to the table at an early meeting of
The Football Association (FA) in December. The adoption of some of the ideas from this set of rules led to the decision of the FA to make hacking and carrying illegal, thus precipitating the split with
rugby football. The Cambridge rules were therefore the basis of the FA's
Laws of the Game.
Thring also produced another set of rules when he was a master at
Uppingham School in 1862, which he called
The Simplest Game. These rules are also known as the
Uppingham Rules.