DANCERS (DANSATORES, CHORIZANTES):
A set of wild enthusiasts in the fourteenth and
fifteenth centuries, whose peculiarities offered one
of those strange mixtures of physical, spiritual,
and moral elements to be found in the popular
life of the Middle Ages. They made their appear
ance at Aachen in the Summer of 1374, coming
from southern Germany, and then spread east
ward to Cologne, southward to Metz, and westward
into Hainault. Their membership was numbered
by thousands, of both sexes, and almost exclusively
from the lower classes. They danced madly
through the streets and in and out of the churches
for hours at a time, until they were completely
exhausted. They paid no attention to the amazed
spectators, their minds being taken up with the
contemplation of the most fantastic visions. Some
times they imagined that they were wading in a
stream of blood, to get out of which they leaped
wildly in the sir; others saw heaven opened and
Christ upon his throne. The morbid mental condition
which undoubtedly underlay these actions
took the form of the popular notions of the day.
It is probable that in many cases it was only simulated,
and that lazy rascals joined and imitated
the Dancers to get a share in the gifts which were
freely bestowed upon them; and these excited
mobs offered a natural breeding-ground for immorality
of all kinds. The clergy and the people
at large, however, sought no natural psychological
explanation of the phenomena, but regarded the
dancers as demoniacs; the priests attempted to
help them by exorcism, while the populace was
inclined to attribute their misfortune to unworthy
priests, whose baptism had not sufficient validity to
expel the demons. The dancers in their delirium
invoked St. John Baptist, which may be connected
with the fact that the outbreak occurred while the
old popular celebration of his festival at midsummer,
with its many excesses, was still observed. A Simi
lar epidemic occurred at Strasburg in 1418. Here
it was customary to invoke St. Vitus for the cure of
the malady, on account of the old tradition which
has led to the application of the name " St. Vitus's
dance " to the disease technically known as chorea.
(A. HAucs.)
BIBLIOGRAPHY: J.
F. C. Hecker, Die growen
Voikekrank
heiten des Mitteialtars, ed. A. Hirsch, pp. 143-193, Berlin,
1865, Eng. tranal. of earlier edition, pp. 81-138, London,
1846 (where the authorities are given and reference made
to similar phenomena elsewhere);
Encyyciopadia B
ri
tannica, xotiii. 60, s.v. " Tarantiem "; P. Fr6ddricq, Corpus
documentorum inquisitionis
Neerlandica, i
. 231 sqq.,
Ghent, 1889; idem, De wcten des paesslaars to der
dansers
in de
Nedarlanden, Brussels,
1897.
DANCING: Dancing as a religious observance
occupied an important place in the ceremonies of all
ancient religions. It is connected with sacred processions (as in the Babylonian and Egyptian festivals)
and with community rites at the altar, the sacred
tree, or the sacred atone (cf., e.g., the account of
such dances which comes from Cyprus, M. H. Ohnefalsch-Richter, Kypros,
die BiTiel and
Homer, Berlin, 1893, Eng. tranal., London, 1893, plates lxxxiii.
6, exxvii. 4, etc.). In the Mohammedan festival
at Mecca the march around the Kaaba still ' remains the culminating point of the celebration.
The Old Testament reports that at the great Baal
sacrifice on Mt. Carmel the priests went " limping " around the altar (I Kings xviii. 26, R. V.
margin), and mention is made also of dancing
around the golden calf (Ex. xxxii. 19). Sacred
processions fell into disuse in the worship of Yahweh after the ark was transferred to Solomon's
Temple; but the bringing of the ark into the
Temple (I Kings viii. 1 aqq.) and its conveyance to
Zion (II Sam. vi. 5) were accomplished in the manner usual in sacred processions. David and all
Israel danced before the ark. Processions and
dances without the ark formed an important part
of festal celebrations (cf. the description of such a
procession in Ps. lxviii. 25), at triumphal festivals
(Ex. xv. 20; Judges xi. 34), and at the annual
festival at Shiloh (Judges xxi. 21). Indeed, the
whole celebration takes its name from them, the
Hebrew
hhagg
signifies the festival procession or
dance. This remained true till the latest period
of Jewish history. For the Psalmist the dance
around the altar was part of the proper praise of
God (Ps. cxlix. 3, cl. 4). On the evening of the
feast of atonement the celebration was closed by
dances of the maidens of Jerusalem in the vineyards (Taanit iv. 8). A peculiarity of the feast of
tabernacles was the processions of those carrying
branches of citron and'°ˇpalm around the altar of
burnt offering, and even more especially the torchdances of the most prominent men on the night
between the first and second days of the festival. .
Naturally, dancing also formed a part of the secular festivals (Jer. xxxi. 4, 13; Matt. xi. 17; Luke
vii. 32, xv. 25), and at the banquets of the nobles
dancing women could not have been lacking (cf.
the Egyptian customs), although they are mentioned nowhere in the Old Testament (but note the
dance of the daughter of Herodias, Matt. xiv. 6).
I. BENZINQER.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
John Spencer, in B. Ugolinus, Thesaurus
antiquitatum s
acrarum,
gaii. 1133, 34 vole.,
Venice,
1744
1769; R. Vow,
Der
Tans
and seine GeschiAte, Berlin,
1868;
F.
Delitsseh, Iris,
pp. 189-206,
London,
1889; W.
Smith,
Dictionary/
of
(creek and Roman Antiquities,
ii. 592-594,
ib. 1891; H. B.
Tristram, Eastern Customs,
pp. 207-210,
ib.1894;
Mrs. L. Grove, Dancing,
ib.1895;
M. Emmanuel,
La Danse grecque antique, d'aprh lei monuments hgurks,
Paris,
1876; DB, i. 549-551; EB, i. 998-1001; JE, iv.
424-426.
DANEAU, dd"n5' (DANNAZUS), LAMBERT:
French Protestant; b. at Besugency-sur-Loire
(15 m. s.w. of Orl4ans) 1530; d. at Castres (80
m. w. of Montpellier) Nov. 11, 1595. He was of
Roman Catholic family, began the study of law at
Orldans, went to Paris in 1547,
:and
returned to
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399 RELIGIOUS ENCYCLOPEDIA DeBtzsch
Demon
DEMETRIUS OF ALEXANDRIA. See
ORIGEN,
I., § 3.