Difference between revisions of "Timeline of Quizbowl History"
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+ | Hello to any editors of this page. Here is a brief summary of the templates and formatting being employed: | ||
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+ | 1. The bulk of the content on this page consists of a table with two columns: one for high school history, and the other for collegiate. When there is an item that pertains to both or an item relating to middle school history, the box spans both columns. | ||
+ | 2. The beginning section ("Ancient", "Early History") uses a "Main page box" template, which is the same formatting employed on the main page and several of its maintenance pages. This allows use of a full-width header. | ||
+ | 3. The remainder of the page uses the "History table header" and "History table row" templates. The contents of these templates are formatted to look like table rows, so they should only be used within the <table></table> tags that wrap the that entire section. | ||
+ | 4. Both the header and row templates can take an argument of name "hs" and one of name "college", which place comments into one of the two columns. A single template can have both. | ||
+ | 5. The row templates also have arguments of name "both" and "ms", which span both columns and apply a color scheme. | ||
+ | 6. The row templates are intended to represent events in a specific year. | ||
+ | 7. The row templates should come in chronological order whenever possible - if there are events in middle school and one of high school or college, the current suggestion is to have the hs/college section above the middle school one. | ||
Note to future CSS editors: the margin here is 4px all around instead of just 4px on top because the bottom portion of the page is a table and there is spacing on the tbody that cannot be squashed in MediaWiki sites. | Note to future CSS editors: the margin here is 4px all around instead of just 4px on top because the bottom portion of the page is a table and there is spacing on the tbody that cannot be squashed in MediaWiki sites. | ||
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+ | Feel free to ping me in the discussion page if you have questions -Kevin Wang | ||
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Revision as of 10:08, 19 January 2022
A timeline of quizbowl history, with a focus on the game's development in the United States. For more targeted discussions of the game's history in other countries, see quizbowl in Canada or quizbowl in the United Kingdom.
Ancient
c. 32 AD
- Chapter 70 of Suetonius's Life of Tiberius describes the emperor peppering expert grammarians with mythological trivia such as "Who was the mother of Hecuba?," "What name did Achilles have among the girls?," and "What were the Sirens accustomed to singing?" In context, this anecdote takes place sometime between the death of Sejanus in 31 AD and Tiberius's own death in 37. While there are many prior examples in ancient literature of riddles and similar, this is the oldest known example of asking difficult factual questions of presumed educated people for the amusement of those involved.
- Note that, even though Suetonius observed over 1900 years ago that such questions are taking knowledge of mythology "to a silly and laughable extreme" ("usque ad ineptias atque derisum"), at least the first two have come up in quizbowl on multiple occasions.
Early History
1938
- Information Please (a panel quiz show) debuts on NBC radio, hosted by Clifton Fadiman. The show will stay on radio until 1951. In the summer of 1952, it will appear on television.
- On the 17 May, 1943 episode, Boris Karloff and Jan Struther became the first on the show to use buzzers, since they were calling in from Hollywood to New York and thus unable to raise their hands to answer.
1940
- Quiz Kids debuts on local Chicago radio. The show runs for 13 years, and other versions eventually pop up in New York, Canada, San Antonio, and Los Angeles. One of the early winners in Chicago is young James Watson, future Nobel laureate and co-discoverer of the double helix nature of DNA.
1945
- The final season of BBC program Transatlantic Quiz is aired on the NBC Blue Radio Network. Hosted by Alastair Cooke, this show involved a panel of Americans competing with a panel of Brits via undersea cable to promote Anglo-American relations during the second World War.[1]
Start of High School Quizbowl | Start of College Quizbowl | ||||||
1946
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1946
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1948
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1949
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1953
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1957
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1959
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1961
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1962
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1962
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1965
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1965
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1968
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1969
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1970
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1976
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The Advent of the NCT | |||||||
1977
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1978
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1981
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1983
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1984
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1988 | |||||||
1989
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The Early Modern Era of college quizbowl | |||||||
1990
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1991
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1994
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1996
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1996
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1996
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1997
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1997
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The Early Modern Era of high school quizbowl | |||||||
1998
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1999
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1999
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2000
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2001
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2005
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2006
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2008
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2008
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The Modern Era of college quizbowl | |||||||
2009
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2009
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The Modern Era of high school quizbowl | |||||||
2010
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2011
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2013
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2014
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2014
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2016
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2017
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2018
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2019
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2020
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2021
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