Tuesday, 28 October 2025

The Dancing Plague of 1518

 

The Dancing Plague of 1518

Dance at Molenbeek. Pieter Brueghel the Younger (1564-1638)

A depiction of dancing mania, on the pilgrimage of epileptics to the church of Molenbeek

Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons

Having recently twice heard mention of this phenomenon, I wanted to learn more.

 It’s not clear what caused an outbreak of enforced dancing. One theory suggests that it was food poisoning, from eating rye affected by ergot fungus, which can cause hallucinations. This causes twitching and convulsions rather than dancing, but is similar in composition to LSD, and was also implicated in the frenzy surrounding the Salem witch trials.

 An alternative theory proposes that it was mass hysteria related to stress brought about by impoverished living conditions, disease, and starvation.

Whatever the cause, on 14th July 1518, Frau Troffea left her house in Strasbourg and began dancing. After several hours, she fell to the ground, exhausted, but began dancing again the following day. She continued to dance for six days, despite the pain of her bruised and bleeding feet. Others joined the dancing, until around four hundred people were involved. Some danced themselves to death, dying from heart attacks, strokes, or exhaustion.

At the time, in a region where St Vitus was honoured, people believed that prolonged dancing was a punishment visited on sinners.

St Vitus was a Christian martyr from Sicily. He is the patron saint of dancers, comedians, actors, and dogs, and protects against snake bites, storms, oversleeping, and epilepsy. He is most commonly associated with St Vitus’ Dance, which is now known as Sydenham’s Chorea. Sydenham’s chorea is caused by an autoimmune reaction to a streptococcal infection (strep throat) It can cause involuntary twitching of face, hands, and feet, and imbalance and poor coordination, resulting in an unusual gait.

They believed that Frau Troffea had sinned and was controlled by the Devil. They led her, with others, to a shrine in the mountains to atone for their sins.

The dancing mania, Pieter Brueghel

It is believed that sometimes strong men were employed to support exhausted dancers.
Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons

By the beginning of September 1518, the plague began to abate, and the dancing stopped completely after several weeks. Although the Strasbourg outbreak is probably the best-documented, there were at least ten similar occurrences centuries before, all equally inexplicable.                       

50 comments:

  1. History has a lot of fascinating events, and we may never know the reasons for many of them. I remember reading about this many years ago. I would tend to believe the mass hysteria for both the dancing plague and the Salem witch hunt, but who knows it could be a combination, of causes.

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    1. Part of the fun of not knowing the exact cause is the indulgence in speculation.

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  2. That is the sort of event that makes me curious to find out exactly what was the real cause. I suppose we shall never know.

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    1. It is still being discussed all these centuries later - maybe the answer will be discovered with a new outbreak of manic dancing. 😉

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  3. Thank you for the information. It always makes me smile to read about the myriad of occupations and things a Saint is patron o

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    1. The saints are certainly kept busy, some more than others.

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  4. It’s fascinating how the dancing mania of 1518 reflects both the physical and psychological turmoil of the time, blurring the line between illness, faith, and collective human response to suffering

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  5. Thanks for doing the research. Genuinely interesting. Perhaps you should consider changing the name of your blog to "Janiceopedia".

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  6. I knew it was something like St Vitus, but I had something closer to Vitall in my head. It's good to know a bit more about it.

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    1. We are lucky now to have modern medicine to alleviate many ailments.

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  7. It must have been heartbreaking, seeing family caught up in something like this. I would never rule out the effect of the human mind, even if it started as a physical symptom. The human mind is a very strange thing indeed.

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    1. Quite so. We can be led into activities we might not otherwise consider if the urge is strong enough.

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  8. How interesting. People my age would have heard of St Vitus dance but I doubt many knew what was behind it. It's not a surprise to learn that it has been renamed.

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    1. It's good to know what causes it, and that it can be treated.

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  9. Pieter Brueghel the Younger was full of detail.
    I am very pleased to read your post, a topic I hadn't thought of for a few years. Thanks for the link to:
    "Strasbourg’s Dancing Plague of 1518 - the devil, mass mania or ergot poisoning?"
    https://melbourneblogger.blogspot.com/2020/12/strasbourgs-dancing-plague-of-1518.html

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    1. Your blog post was much more informative than mine. Thank you for the link. 😊

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  10. Wow that’s freaky. I never heard of it before. That’s one dance party I wouldn’t want to be a part of. Thanks for educating me on this peculiar bit of history. In the 1920’s here in the US they had those marathon dances that started out benign but got crazy with people dying, going mad and injuring themselves. Crazy times.

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    1. Those were sad, bad times, when people forced themselves to continue dancing to earn money.

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  11. What a horrible affliction and very interesting too.

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  12. I've heard of the St Vitus dance and associated it with epilepsy, remembering how my brother twitched and squirmed as he had a minor episode most days.

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    1. Epilepsy is so uncomfortable to watch, and makes the watcher feel so helpless. Did your brother grow out of it?

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  13. Wow...where is horror film version of this strange history? Fingers crossed.

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    1. It is surprising that no-one has turned it into a film yet. Waiting now with bated breath . . .

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  14. I've heard of St Vitus Dance as a condition but I knew nothing else. A fascinating post.

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  15. I love all your history research - this is a fascinating story and very weird.

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    1. It must have been quite frightening to see, and even more so to have to dance in such a manner.

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  16. One of those fascinating mysteries I love to read about.

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    1. Shall we ever know the true cause?? Probably not, but we can continue to speculate.

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  17. a 3rd alternative is caregiver for bed bound hubby.! I have been beset by plagues this past year and sincerely hope this one doesn't come here. wow, who knew this, I did not

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    1. I'm sure you feel like this most days at present, and for months past.

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  18. Now, I must read all about this.. I had no idea.

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  19. Perfect story for the season.

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  20. Sounds nightmarish! Very interesting though.
    Alison in Devon x

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  21. Sounds like the basis for a horror movie!

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    1. It does. I wonder why no-one has selected it as a subject?

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  22. Weird and sad at the same time...

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  23. Terrifying for those afflicted.

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