In the nineteenth century, commercial entertainment functioned as proto-sportive embodied heritage, as demonstrated through the career of Joseph Liphard (1798–1858) and his circus troupe, drawing on dispersed European press sources. Moving beyond historiographies that treat modern sport as a product of club- and federation-based institutionalization, a pre-institutional world structured by competitive discipline, market rationality, and repeated public validation is reconstructed. Liphard’s trajectory – from percussive virtuosity and displays of physical dexterity in the 1820s and 1830s, through complex acrobatic and horse-riding productions in the 1840s, to menagerie exhibitions in the 1850s – reveals the progressive stabilization of training practices, role specialization, and ensemble coordination that anticipated later sporting rationalities. These practices constituted a form of intangible heritage transmitted through family apprenticeship and itinerant ensemble work, operating outside the institutional channels that later defined modern sport and the authorized heritage frameworks. The 1850s shift toward menagerie exhibitions and the display of human curiosities further exposes how commercial spectacle integrated bodily mastery with the staged control of nature – practices that constitute difficult heritage whose ethical complexities persist into the present. Tracing these divergent afterlives makes visible a proto-sportive field that sport historiography has largely omitted from its origin narrative.
Rozmiarek et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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