the original cause was the Black Death, or bubonic plague, which killed half of the people of Europe between 1347 and 1351 and left many survivors mired in despair: a few vented their panic and grief in dance. John Waller, taking up Hecker’s interpretation, argues that the dancing epidemics were mass psychogenic illnesses, generated by fear and spread by imitation. The most dramatic outbreaks followed periods of renewed hardship, he observes – the Rhine flooded in 1373 and 1374, submerging streets and homes, while Strasbourg in 1518 had undergone a decade of famine, sickness and savage cold. Kélina Gotman describes the epidemics as symptoms of social upheaval, surges of primitivity and excess. Wild dancers appear, she writes, ‘where
there is a fault line in civilisation, a rupture and an opening, out of which they seem to spill’.
Some have suggested that the frantic dancing along the Rhine was really an outbreak of delirious convulsions caused by ergot, a psychotropic mould that can form on damp rye – and that the flooding of the fields around the river had poisoned the people’s bread. But the sociologist Robert Bartholomew argues that the mania was more likely sparked by pilgrims from Hungary, Poland and Bohemia who danced as a form of worship, and were joined by locals in the towns through which they passed. He cites the French chronicler Jean d’Outremeuse, who wrote on 11 September 1374: ‘there came from the north to Liege … a company of persons who all danced continually. They were linked with clothes, and they jumped and leaped … They called loudly on St John the Baptist and fiercely clapped their hands.’
Bartholomew points out that in the Middle Ages a dance could be an act of expiation. In the summer of 1188 the royal clerk Gerald de Barri described a ritual at a church in Wales, in which men and women danced at the shrine of St Almedha, then danced ‘round the churchyard with song, suddenly falling to the ground as in a trance, then jumping up as in a frenzy’. As they danced, they acted out their misdemeanours, miming the way in which they had unlawfully driven a plough on a feast day, or cobbled a pair of shoes. They were then led back to the altar, where they were ‘suddenly awakened, and coming to themselves’. Their dissociated dancing was understood as a spiritual state, through which they touched on their transgressions and sought absolution.