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| Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: dance of death |
For more information on dance of death, visit Britannica.com.
| Music Encyclopedia: Dance of death |
A medieval and Renaissance symbolic representation of death as a skeleton (or a procession of skeletons) leading the living to the grave; in more recent times, a dance supposedly performed by skeletons, usually in a graveyard. Goethe's poem Der Todtentanz lent impetus to the 19th-century tradition of the dance of death as a midnight revel by resurrected skeletons and inspired Liszt's Totentanz and, indirectly, Saint-Saëns's Danse macabre.
| Dictionary of Dance: danse macabre |
The image of Death as a dancer, urging mankind forward in its heedless dance to destruction extends far back to ancient art and ritual but was particularly widespread during the 14th and 15th centuries. A 20th-century adaptation of this concept can be seen in Jooss's Green Table (1932).
| French Literature Companion: Danse macabré |
Jean Lefèvre uses the expression in 1376- so spelt consistently until the 16th c.—and may possibly have written a poem so named, but the first documented manifestation of the theme in France are the frescos painted at the Cimetière des Innocents in Paris in 1424-5. They consisted iconographically of a series of couples, a mummified Mort with a living victim, arranged hierarchically, lay and cleric, from pope and emperor to hermit and babein-arms, and framed by images of an Acteur (author). Underneath were verses, each dancer being allocated one eight-line octosyllabic stanza: the message combines a memento mori with satisfaction at Death's levelling of the estates. The frescos were destroyed, but the verses were copied and printed in 1485 by the Parisian printer Guyot Marchant, with fine engravings possibly drawn from the Innocents. A Danse macabré des femmes followed in 1486, possibly devised by Martial d'Auvergne. Several uncertainties subsist: the word macabré is unknown before 1376 and its precise meaning is obscure (it has been traced to Hebrew and Arabic roots); the motif may have German origins; the idea of a dance may have roots in folklore; the message may be related to mendicant sermons. Its popularity, however, was remarkable: images and verses were copied in churches all over France, and in manuscripts and incunabula. The motif remained popular beyond the 16th c. and figures in 18th-c. chapbooks [see BibliothéQue Bleue].
— Jane Taylor
| Columbia Encyclopedia: Dance of Death |
Bibliography
See facsimile of G. Marchand's Dance of Death (1945); H. Holbein, Dance of Death (1538, new ed. 1972); study by L. P. Kurtz (1934).
| Wikipedia: Danse Macabre |
Dance of Death, also variously called Danse Macabre (French), Danza Macabra (Italian and Spanish), Dança da Morte (Portuguese), or Totentanz (German), is a late-medieval allegory on the universality of death: no matter one's station in life, the dance of death unites all. La Danse Macabre consists of the personified death leading a row of dancing figures from all walks of life to the grave, typically with an emperor, king, youngster, and beautiful girl—all skeletal. They were produced to remind people of how fragile their lives and how vain the glories of earthly life were.[1] Its origins are postulated from illustrated sermon texts; the earliest artistic examples are in a cemetery in Paris from 1424.
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The earliest artistic example is from the frescoed cemetery of the Church of the Holy Innocents in Paris (1424). There are also works by Konrad Witz, in Basel (1440); Bernt Notke, in Lübeck (1463); and woodcuts designed by Hans Holbein the Younger and executed by Hans Lützelburger (1538).
The deathly horrors of the 14th century—such as recurring famines; the Hundred Years' War in France; and, most of all, the Black Death—were culturally digested throughout Europe. The omnipresent possibility of sudden and painful death increased the religious desire for penitence, but it also evoked a hysterical desire for amusement while still possible; a last dance as cold comfort. The danse macabre combines both desires: similar to the popular mediaeval mystery plays, the dance-with-death allegory was originally a didactic play to remind people of the inevitability of death and to advise them strongly to be prepared all times for death (see memento mori and Ars moriendi).
The earliest examples of such plays, which consisted of short dialogues between Death and each of its victims, can be found in the direct aftermath of the Black Death in Germany (where it was known as the Totentanz, and in Spain as la Danza de la Muerte). The French term danse macabre most likely derives from Latin Chorea Machabæorum, literally "dance of the Maccabees." 2 Maccabees, a deuterocanonical book of the Bible in which the grim martyrdom of a mother and her seven sons is described, was a well-known mediaeval subject. It is possible that the Maccabean Martyrs were commemorated in some early French plays or that people just associated the book’s vivid descriptions of the martyrdom with the interaction between Death and its prey. Both the play and the evolving paintings were ostensive penitential sermons that even illiterate people (who were the overwhelming majority) could understand.
Furthermore, church frescoes dealing with death had a long tradition and were widespread; e.g., the legend of the three men and the three dead: on a ride, three young gentlemen meet the skeletal remains of three of their ancestors who warn them, Quod fuimus, estis; quod sumus, vos eritis (What we were, you are; what we are, you will be). Numerous if often simple fresco versions of that legend from the 13th century onwards have survived (for instance, in the hospital church of Wismar). Since they showed pictorial sequences of men and skeletons covered with shrouds, those paintings can be regarded as cultural precursors of the new genre.
A danse macabre painting normally shows a round dance headed by Death. From the highest ranks of the mediaeval hierarchy (usually pope and emperor) descending to its lowest (beggar, peasant, and child), each mortal’s hand is taken by a skeleton or an extremely decayed body. The famous Totentanz in Lübeck’s Marienkirche (destroyed by an Allied bomb raid in WW II) presented Death as very lively and agile, making the impression that the skeletons were actually dancing, whereas their dancing partners looked clumsy and passive. The apparent class distinction in almost all of these paintings is completely neutralized by Death as the ultimate equalizer, so that a sociocritical element is subtly inherent to the whole genre. The Totentanz of Metzin, for example, shows how a pope crowned with his tiara is being led into hell by the dancing Death.
Generally, a short dialogue is attached to each victim, in which Death is summoning him or her to dance and the summoned is moaning about the near-death. In the first printed Totentanz textbook (Anon.: Vierzeiliger oberdeutscher Totentanz, Heidelberger Blockbuch, approx. 1460), Death addresses, for example, the emperor:
At the bottom end of the Totentanz, Death calls, for example, the peasant to dance, and he answers:
The earliest known depiction of a print shop appears in a printed image of the Dance of Death, in 1499, in Lyon, by Mattias Huss. It depicts a compositor at his station, which is raised to facilitate his work, and a person running the press. To the right of the print shop, an early book store is shown. Early print shops were gathering places for the literati.
Musical examples include
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