• The Dancing Plague of 1518: When Strasbourg Couldn't Stop Moving

  • Mar 11 2025
  • Duración: 14 m
  • Podcast

The Dancing Plague of 1518: When Strasbourg Couldn't Stop Moving

  • Resumen

  • # THE DANCING PLAGUE OF 1518: A CITY SEIZED BY DANCE ## Episode Description In the summer of 1518, a mysterious dancing plague swept through Strasbourg, beginning with one woman and eventually affecting hundreds. This episode explores how a peculiar case of dancing mania transformed into one of history's most bizarre mass phenomena, leading to numerous deaths and leaving historians puzzled for centuries. ## Key Timestamps [00:02:30] Frau Troffea begins her relentless dance [00:05:45] The spread to dozens of dancers [00:08:15] City authorities' catastrophic response [00:12:00] Peak of the crisis and mass casualties [00:15:30] Theories and eventual end of the plague ## Episode Summary In July 1518, Strasbourg witnessed an unprecedented event when Frau Troffea began dancing uncontrollably in the streets. What started as one woman's inexplicable behavior soon spread to hundreds, creating a crisis that would last through the summer. Against the backdrop of religious tension, poverty, and medieval medical understanding, city authorities made the fatal decision to encourage the dancing, resulting in numerous deaths from exhaustion and heart failure. This episode explores the social, medical, and religious responses to this mysterious epidemic, and its lasting impact on our understanding of mass hysteria. ## Key Takeaways • The plague occurred during a period of social and religious upheaval • Authorities' encouragement of the dancing worsened the crisis • Medieval medical and religious treatments proved ineffective • The event affected up to 400 people at its peak ## Historical Figures • Frau Troffea: Initial dancer who sparked the epidemic • Johannes Geiler: Local physician who documented the events • Saint Vitus: Patron saint invoked during the crisis ## Further Reading • "The Dancing Plague" by John Waller • "A Time to Dance, A Time to Die" by Robert E. Bartholomew • "Dancing Mania: A Social Phenomenon" in The Lancet (2009) ## Discussion Question How might modern society respond to a similar inexplicable mass phenomenon? What parallels can we draw between the dancing plague and contemporary mass behavior events? ## Keywords #DancingPlague #Strasbourg #1518 #MassHysteria #MedievalHistory #SocialHistory #StVitus #MedicalHistory #Epidemic
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