THE DANCE
Historic Illustrations of Dancing from 3300 B.C. to 1911 A.D.
BY AN ANTIQUARY
LONDON JOHN BALE, SONS & DANIELSSON, LTD. 83-91, GREAT TITCHFIELD STREET, OXFORD STREET, W
Respectfully dedicated to Dr. Eleanor Maxwell.Sandro
Botticelli
1911

PREFACE
CHAPTER I
Egyptian, Assyrian, Hebrew and Phoenician Dancing.
CHAPTER II Dancing with the Greeks.
CHAPTER III
Etruscan-South Italian, Roman Dancing, etc.
CHAPTER IV
The "Early English" and "Mediaeval" dance to the fourteenth century.
CHAPTER V Society dancing from the fifteenth century.
CHAPTER VI
The Modern Theatre Dance.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
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This sketch of the iconography of the dance does not pretend to be a
history of the subject, except in the most elementary way. It may be taken
as a summary of the history of posture; a complete dance cannot be easily
rendered in illustration.
The text is of the most elementary description; to go into the subject
thoroughly would involve years and volumes. The descriptions of the
various historic dances or music are enormous subjects; two authors alone
have given 800 dances in four volumes.
It would have been interesting if some idea of the orchesography of the
Egyptians and Greeks could have been given; this art of describing dances
much in the manner that music is written is lost, and the attempts to
revive it have been ineffective. The increasing speed of the action since
the days of Lulli would now render it almost impossible.
It is hoped that this work may be of some use as illustrating the
costume, position and accessories of the dance in various periods to those
producing entertainments.
To the reader desirous of thoroughly studying the subject a
bibliography is given at the end.
Footnote 1: Thompson's complete collection of 200 country
dances performed at Court, Bath, Tunbridge, and all public assemblies,
with proper figures and directions to each set for the violin, German
flute, and hautboy, 8s. 6d. Printed for Charles and Samuel Thompson, St.
Paul's Churchyard, London, where may be had the yearly dances and
minuets. Four volumes, each 200 dances. 1770-1773.
Historic Illustrations of Dancing.
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Fig. 1: Dancing to the clapping of bands. Egyptian, from
the tomb of Ur-ari-en-Ptah, 6th Dynasty, about 3300 B.C. (British
Museum.) |
Egyptian, Assyrian, Hebrew, and Phoenician Dancing. The Ritual Dance of
Egypt. Dancing Examples from Tomb of Ur-ari-en-Ptah, 6th Dynasty,
British Museum. Description of Dancing from Sir G. Wilkinson; of the
Egyptian Pipes and Hieroglyphics of Dancing, &c. Phoenician Round
Dances, from a Limestone Group found at Cyprus, and Bronze Patera from
Idalium, Cyprus.
In this work it is not necessary to worry the reader with speculations
as to the origin of dancing. There are other authorities easily accessible
who have written upon this theme.
Dancing is probably one of the oldest arts. As soon as man was man he
without doubt began to gesticulate with face, body, and limbs. How long it
took to develop bodily gesticulation into an art no one can guess—perhaps
a millennium.
In writing of dancing, one will therefore include those gesticulations
or movements of the body suggesting an idea, whether it be the slow
movement of marching, or the rapid gallop, even some of the movements that
we commonly call acrobatic. It is not intended here to include the more
sensual movements of the East and the debased antique.
Generally the antique dances were connected with a religious ritual
conceived to be acceptable to the Gods. This connection between dancing
and religious rites was common up to the 16th century. It still continues
in some countries.
In some of the earliest designs which have come down to us the dancers
moved, as stars, hand in hand round an altar, or person, representing the
sun; either in a slow or stately method, or with rapid trained gestures,
according to the ritual performed.
Dancing, music and poetry were inseparable. Dancing is the poetry of
motion, and its connection with music, as the poetry of sound, occurs at
all times. In our own day musical themes are marked by forms originally
dance times, as waltz time, gavotte time, minuet time, etc.
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Fig. 2: Greek figures in a solemn dance. From a vase at
Berlin. |
Amongst the earliest representations that are comprehensible, we have
certain Egyptian paintings, and some of these exhibit postures that
evidently had even then a settled meaning, and were a phrase in the
sentences of the art. Not only were they settled at such an early period
(B.C. 3000, fig. 1) but they appear to have been accepted and handed down
to succeeding generations (fig. 2), and what is remarkable in some
countries, even to our own times. The accompanying illustrations from
Egypt and Greece exhibit what was evidently a traditional attitude. The
hand-in-hand dance is another of these.
The earliest accompaniments to dancing appear to have been the clapping
of hands, the pipes,
the guitar, the tambourine, the castanets, the cymbals, the tambour, and
sometimes in the street, the drum.
The following account of Egyptian dancing is from Sir Gardiner
Wilkinson's "Ancient Egypt"/p>
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Fig. 3: The hieroglyphics describe the dance.
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"The dance consisted mostly of a succession of figures, in which the
performers endeavoured to exhibit a great variety of gesture. Men and
women danced at the same time, or in separate parties, but the latter
were generally preferred for their superior grace and elegance. Some
danced to slow airs, adapted to the style of their movement; the
attitudes they assumed frequently partook of a grace not unworthy of the
Greeks; and some credit is due to the skill of the artist who
represented the subject, which excites additional interest from its
being in one of the oldest tombs of Thebes (B.C. 1450, Amenophis II.).
Others preferred a lively step, regulated by an appropriate tune; and
men sometimes danced with great spirit, bounding from the ground, more
in the manner of Europeans than of Eastern people. On these occasions
the music was not always composed of many instruments, and here we find
only the cylindrical maces and a woman snapping her fingers in the time,
in lieu of cymbals or castanets.
"Graceful attitudes and gesticulations were the general style of
their dance, but, as in all other countries, the taste of the
performance varied according to the rank of the person by whom they were
employed, or their own skill, and the dance at the house of a priest
differed from that among the uncouth peasantry, etc.
"It was not customary for the upper orders of Egyptians to indulge in
this amusement, either in public or private assemblies, and none appear
to have practised it but the lower ranks of society, and those who
gained their livelihood by attending festive meetings.
"Fearing lest it should corrupt the manners of a people naturally
lively and fond of gaiety, and deeming it neither a necessary part of
education nor becoming a person of sober habits, the Egyptians forbade
those of the higher classes to learn it as an amusement.
"Many of these postures resembled those of the modern ballet, and the
pirouette delighted an Egyptian party 3,500 years ago.
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Fig. 4: Egyptian hieroglyphic for "dance."
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"The dresses of the females were light and of the finest texture, a
loose flowing robe reaching to the ankles, sometimes with a girdle.
"In later times, it appears more transparent and folded in narrow
pleats.
Some danced in pairs, holding each other's hand; others went through a
succession of steps alone, both men and women; sometimes a man performed
a solo to the sound of music or the clapping of hands.
"A favourite figure dance was universally adopted throughout the
country, in which two partners, who were usually men, advanced toward
each other, or stood face to face upon one leg, and having performed a
series of movements, retired again in opposite directions, continuing to
hold by one hand and concluding by turning each other round (see fig.
3). That the attitude was very common is proved by its having been
adopted by the hieroglyphic (fig. 4) as the mode of describing 'dance.'"
Many of the positions of the dance illustrated in Gardner Wilkinson are
used at the present day.
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Fig. 5: Cyprian limestone group of Phoenician dancers, about
6½ in. high. There is a somewhat similar group, also from Cyprus, in
the British Museum. The dress, a hooded cowl, appears to be of great
antiquity. |
The ASSYRIANS probably danced as much as the other nations, but amongst
the many monuments that have been discovered there is little dancing
shown, and they were evidently more proud of their campaigns and their
hunting than of their dancing. A stern and strong people, although they
undoubtedly had this amusement, we know little about it. Of the
Phoenicians, their neighbours, we have some illustrations of their dance,
which was apparently of a serious nature, judging by the examples which we
possess, such as that (fig. 5) from Cyprus representing three figures in
hooded cowls dancing around a piper. It is a dance around a centre, as is
also (fig. 6) that from Idalium in Cyprus. The latter is engraved around a
bronze bowl and is evidently a planet and sun dance before a goddess, in a
temple; the sun being the central object around which they dance,
accompanied by the double pipes, the harp, and tabour. The Egyptian origin
of the devotion is apparent in the details, especially in the
lotus-smelling goddess (marked A on fig. 6) who holds the flower in the
manner shown in an Egyptian painting in the British Museum (fig. 7).
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Fig. 6: Phoenician patera, from Idalium, showing a religious
ritual dance before a goddess in a temple round a sun emblem.
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From the Phoenicians we have illustrated examples, but no record,
whereas from their neighbours the Hebrews we have ample records in the
Scriptures, but no illustrations. It is, however, most probable that the
dance with them had the traditional character of the nations around them
or who had held them captive, and the Philistine dance (fig. 6) may have
been of the same kind as that around the golden calf (Apis) of the desert
(Exodus xxxii. v. 19).
When they passed the Red Sea, Miriam and the maidens danced in chorus
with singing and the beating of the timbrel (tambour). (Exodus xv. v. 1.)
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Fig. 7: Female figure smelling a lotus. From a painting in
the British Museum. |
King David not only danced before the ark (2 Samuel vi. v. 16), but
mentions dancing in the 149th and 150th Psalm. Certain historians also
tell us that they had dancing in their ritual of the seasons. Their
dancing seems to have been associated with joy, as we read of "a time to
mourn and a time to dance"; we find (Eccles. iii. v. 4) they had also the
pipes: "We have piped to you and you have not danced" (Matthew xi. v. 17).
These dances were evidently executed by the peoples themselves, and not by
public performers.
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Fig. 8: Dance of Bacchantes, painted by the ceramic
painter, Hieron. (British Museum.) |
Footnote 1: Egyptian music appears to have
been of a complicated character and the double pipe or flutes were
probably reeded, as with our clarionet. The left pipe had few stops
and served as a sort of hautboy; the right had many stops and was
higher. The single pipe, (a) "The recorder" in the British Museum, is
a treble of 10-1/2 in. and is pentaphonic, like the Scotch scale; the
tenor (b) is 8-3/4 in. long and its present pitch—

Footnote 2: Vol. i., p. 503-8.
Footnote 3: There is a picture of an
Egyptian gauffering machine in Wilkinson, vol. i., p. 185.
The Dance (by An Antiquary), Anonymous
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