Showing posts with label dancing plague. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dancing plague. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 22, 2024

The Last Dance Mania of the Medieval World

Imagine you were one of them...

In Strasbourg, in July 1518, the last big dancing plague took place. It was started by Frau Troffea, who, one day, left her house, went out on the street, and started moving in a way that many said resembled some kind of dance. Eventually, an exhausted middle-aged woman was dragged up the mountain to the Saint Vitus shrine, the patron saint of people with epilepsy, in the hope she'd stop. In the meantime, many others took to the streets dancing. By the summer's end, about 400 people were plagued with dancing, and some of them died.

If this event, and similar others that occurred throughout Europe, is still unexplained today, it is because historians have focused mainly on the lives and the doings of people in power, and for centuries, the rest of us were regarded (and discarded) as expandable.


The Dancing Plague of Strasbourg was an awkward occurrence even for the people of the time. But we know more about it because it involved a larger population over a few summer weeks, and city officials tried different methods to end the madness without success. Among other cases of choreomania, this is the best documented because of the recordings made by the council of Strasbourg and other eyewitnesses.

At the time, Strasbourg was a significant political and commercial center, a mix of cultural influences and traditions in the Holy Roman Empire at the French border. Its history goes back to the Roman Empire in the second century BC when it was called Argentoratum. The city was the capital of a free-standing republic controlled by guilds until 1681 when it was incorporated into the French kingdom. As for religion, the inhabitants were mainly Catholics except for pockets of the Jewish population. Just a few months before, on October 1517, Martin Luther revolutionized the religious landscape by posting his 95 Theses to reform the catholic church. Although his ideas spread like fire, aided by the new printing press technology, it would be a few more years before Strasbourg adhered to Protestantism. This is still important as Protestants do not recognize saints, and St Vitus was one of the protagonists in the dancing mania of 1518.



The dancing plague began in July 1518, when a woman known to us by the name of Frau Troffea began to dance uncontrollably, followed by dozens in just a week and jumping, within a month, to hundreds of people dancing compulsively. Both men and women, young and old, were affected, and many danced for days or even weeks. They danced restlessly and helplessly. Some collapsed, exhausted. Their feet were bruised, scratched, raw, infected. Some died of strokes or other causes.

Contemporaries tried to find the cause of this plague, and in doing so, they advanced numerous theories. From Paracelsus, who blamed women for trying to make fools of their husbands through this behavior, to the medics of medieval Strasbourg, who advanced the "overheated blood" theory, or simply, fever, they all tried to find an explanation for what was happening.

The hypotheses were wild, but the actions to stop it were insignificant. The Council of Strasbourg, after listening to their doctors who said that the cure rests in sweating the bad blood through…more dancing! decided to encourage the mania. So they cleared out the city's horse market space and built a dancing ring, encouraging people to join in, plagued or not. To make it seem more natural, they also hired musicians, tambourines, fiddlers, pipes, and so on, to sing the dancing tune. They copied the Tarantella example from Southern Italy, where people believed in curing spider bites by incessant dancing. But the dancing plague didn't stop. More people joined in, pretending to be entranced because the officials provided free food and drink. Some women even hope to cure infertility or other illnesses.

But a few days into this continuous dancing, weaker people started to die. One source records 15 deaths in one day. The authorities, seeing that the bad blood hadn't been eradicated, stopped the music and the voluntary choreomania, and dismantled the stage. They deduced that the physicians were wrong, and the affliction must be a curse—a damnation.

Officials took further measures like confining people to their homes and banning fine clothing and jewelry, and ultimately when everything else failed, they gathered the remaining maniacs, tied them up on carriages to prevent falls or running away, and climbed the steep hills that ascend the mountains to St. Vitus shrine. There, the dancers were given red shoes and left to the mercy of the Saint. We do not have information about what happened to them. It came to us that the city regained its normalcy shorter afterward, and no other case of the dancing plague was recorded in the region. As a fan fact, the last recorded choreomania case was in Madagascar in 1863.

Today, Strasbourg is the host for the Council of Europe, an organization created to protect democracy and human rights.

 








Here is a summary of the last big dancing plague of Europe:

The Dancing Plague of 1518, which took place in Strasbourg (Alsace), then part of the Holy Roman Empire, is one of history's most unusual and puzzling events. Here are some key facts about it:

1.    Outbreak Origin: The dancing plague began in July 1518 when a woman named Frau Troffea stepped into the streets of Strasbourg and began to dance uncontrollably. For a week, dozens of people joined her in this strange, compulsive dancing.

2.    Number of Participants: It is reported that 400 people were dancing within a month, seemingly unable to stop.

3.    Symptoms: Participants appeared to be in a trance-like state. They danced without rest, and many reportedly collapsed from exhaustion, with some even dying from heart attacks, strokes, or sheer fatigue.

4.    Attempts to Control It: Authorities in Strasbourg believed a fever or supernatural affliction caused the dancing. They initially tried to encourage the dancing by setting up music and professional dancers, hoping it would "burn itself out." This strategy backfired, as even more people were drawn into the plague.

5.    Religious Explanations: At the time, religious authorities believed the event was a punishment from St. Vitus, the patron saint of dancers and epileptics. People thought the dancers were cursed or had angered the Saint.

6.    Cures: Eventually, after other interventions failed, the authorities banned music and dancing and built a shrine for St. Vitus. The dancers were taken to the shrine, where religious rituals were performed to heal them.

7.    Possible Causes:

o   Mass Hysteria or Psychogenic Illness: Many modern historians and psychologists believe the event was a case of mass hysteria (now called mass psychogenic illness). People may have been under significant stress due to famine, disease, and harsh living conditions, and the outbreak was a physical manifestation of collective psychological distress.

o   Ergotism: Another theory suggests the dancing plague might have been caused by ergotism, a condition resulting from eating bread made from grain infected with ergot, a hallucinogenic mold. Ergot poisoning can cause convulsions and hallucinations, but this theory is debated since not all symptoms match.

8.    End of the Plague: After several weeks, the dancing gradually subsided. The plague ended by September 1518, but the event left a lasting mark on the region.

9.  Legacy: The Strasbourg dancing plague is one of the most famous examples of "dance mania" or "choreomania," a phenomenon recorded in various parts of medieval and early modern Europe. However, the 1518 outbreak was one of the largest and most well-documented instances.

This example of bizarre human behavior remains one of history's unsolved mysteries, as its exact causes are still debated. 


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