The Dance (by An Antiquary), Anonymous continued....
Etruscan-South Italian, Roman Dancing, etc.
CHAPTER III.Etruscan, South Italian and Roman Dancing. Illustrations from the Grotta
dei Vasi, the Grotta della Scimia, and the Grotta del Triclinio, Corneto.
Funeral Dances from Albanella, Capua, &c. Pompeii and the Baths of
Constantino. The Dances of the Etruscans and South Italians. The Roman,
Dance of the Salii. The Bellicrepa. The social position of Dancing. The
Chorus.
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Fig. 19: Etruscan bronze dancer with eyes of diamonds, found
at Verona. Now in the British Museum. |
One of the most important nations of antiquity was the Etruscan,
inhabiting, according to some authorities, a dominion from Lombardy to the
Alps, and from the Mediterranean to the Adriatic.
Etruria gave a dynasty to Rome in Servius Tullius, who originally was
Masterna, an Etruscan.
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Fig. 20: Etruscan dancer. From a painting in the Grotta dei
Vasi dipinti—Corneto. |
It is, however, with the dancing that we are dealing. There is little
doubt that they were dancers in every sense; there are many ancient
sepulchres in Etruria, with dancing painted on their walls. Other
description than that of the pictures we do not possess, for as yet the
language is a dead letter. There is no doubt, as Gerhardt
suggests, that they considered dancing as one of the emblems of joy in a
future state, and that the dead were received with dancing and music in
their new home. They danced to the music of the pipes, the lyre, the
castanets of wood, steel, or brass, as is shown in the illustrations taken
from the monuments.
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Fig. 21: Etruscan dancing and performances. From paintings in
the Grotta della Scimia Corneto, about 500 B.C. |
That the Phoenicians and Greeks had at certain times immense influence
on the Etruscans is evident from their relics which we possess (fig. 20).
A characteristic illustration of the dancer is from a painting in the
tomb of the Vasi dipinti, Corneto, which, according to Mr. Dennis,
belongs to the archaic period, and is perhaps as early as 600 B.C. It
exhibits a stronger Greek influence than some of the paintings. Fig. 21,
showing a military dance to pipes, with other sports, comes from the Grotta della Scimia, also at Corneto; these show a more purely
Etruscan character.
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Fig. 22: Etruscan Dancing. From the Grotta del Triclinio.—Corneto.
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The pretty dancing scene from the Grotta del Triclinio at
Corneto is taken from a full-sized copy in the British Museum, and is of
the greatest interest. It is considered to be of the Greco-Etruscan
period, and later than the previous examples (fig. 22).
There is a peculiarity in the attitude of the hands, and of the fingers
being kept flat and close together; it is not a little curious that the
modern Japanese dance, as exhibited by Mme. Sadi Yacca, has this
peculiarity, whether the result of ancient tradition or of modern revival,
the writer cannot say.
Almost as interesting as the Etruscan are the illustrations of dancing
found in the painted tombs of the Campagna and Southern Italy, once part
of "Magna Grecia"; the figure of a funeral dance, with the double pipe
accompaniments, from a painted tomb near Albanella (fig. 23) may be as
late as 300 B.C., and those in figs. 24, 25 from a tomb near Capua are
probably of about the same period. These Samnite dances appear essentially
different from the Etruscan; although both Greek and Etruscan influence
are very evident, they are more solemn and stately. This may, however,
arise from a different national custom.
That the Etruscan, Sabellian, Oscan, Samnite, and other national dances
of the country had some influence on the art in Rome is highly probable,
but the paucity of early Roman examples renders the evidence difficult.
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Fig. 23: Funeral dance in the obsequies of a female. From a
painted tomb near Albanella. |
Rome as a conquering imperial power represented nearly the whole world
of its day, and its dances accordingly were most numerous. Amongst the
illustrations already given we have many that were preserved in Rome. In
the beginning of its existence as a power only religious dances were
practised, and many of these were of Etruscan origin, such as the
Lupercalia, the Ambarvalia, &c. In the former the dancers were demi-nude,
and probably originally shepherds; the latter was a serious dancing
procession through fields and villages.
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Fig. 24: Funeral dance. From Capua.
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A great dance of a severe kind was executed by the Salii, priests of
Mars, an ecclesiastical corporation of twelve chosen patricians. In their
procession and dance, on March 1, and succeeding days, carrying the
Ancilia, they sang songs and hymns, and afterwards retired to a great
banquet in the Temple of Mars. That the practice was originally Etruscan
may be gathered from the circumstance that on a gem showing the armed
priests carrying the shields there are Etruscan letters. There were also
an order of female Salii. Another military dance was the Saltatio
bellicrepa, said to have been instituted by Romulus in commemoration
of the Rape of the Sabines.
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Fig. 25: Funeral dance from the same tomb.
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The Pyrrhic dance (fig. 13) was also introduced into Rome by Julius
Caesar, and was danced by the children of the leading men of Asia and
Bithynia.
As, however, the State increased in power by conquest, it absorbed with
other countries other habits, and the art degenerated often, like that of
Greece and Etruria, into a vehicle for orgies, when they brought to Rome
with their Asiatic captives even more licentious practices and dances.
As Rome, which never rose to the intellectual and imaginative state of
Greece in her best period, represented wealth, commerce, and conquest, in
a greater degree, so were her arts, and with these the lyric. In her best
state her nobles danced, Appius Claudius excelled, and Sallust tells us
that Sempronia "psaltere saltare elegantius"; so that in those days ladies
played and danced, but no Roman citizen danced except in the religious
dances. They carried mimetic dances to a very perfect character in the
time of Augustus under the term of Musica muta. After the second
Punic war, as Greek habits made their way into Italy, it became a fashion
for the young to learn to dance. The education in dancing and gesture were
important in the actor, as masks prevented any display of feature. The
position of the actor was never recognized professionally, and was
considered infamia. But the change came, which caused Cicero to say
"no one danced when sober." Eventually the performers of lower class
occupied the dancing platform, and Herculaneum and Pompeii have shown us
the results.
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Fig. 26: Bacchante leading the Dionysian bull to the altar.
Bas-relief in the Vatican. |
In the theatre the method of the Roman chorus differed from that of the
Greeks. In the latter the orchestra or place for the dancing and chorus
was about 12 ft. below the stage, with steps to ascend when these were
required; in the former the chorus was not used in comedy, and having no
orchestra was in tragedies placed upon the stage. The getting together of
the chorus was a public service, or liturgia, and in the early days of
Grecian prosperity was provided by the choregus.
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Fig. 27: Bacchante. From a fresco, Pompeii, 1st century B.C.
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Tiberius by a decree abolished the Saturnalia, and exiled the dancing
teachers, but the many acts of the Senate to secure a better standard were
useless against the foreign inhabitants of the Empire accustomed to
sensuality and licence.
Perhaps the encouragement of the more brutal combats of the Coliseum
did something to suppress the more delicate arts, but historians have told
us, and it is common knowledge, what became of the great Empire, and the
lyric with other arts were destroyed by licentious preferences.
The Dance (by An Antiquary), Anonymous
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