Title of article
The Dancing Plague: a public health conundrum
Author/Authors
Donaldson، نويسنده , , L.J. and Cavanagh، نويسنده , , J and Rankin، نويسنده , , J، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Pages
4
From page
201
To page
204
Abstract
The phenomenon of mass, frenzied dancing affected large populations in various parts of Europe from the thirteenth century and lasted, on and off, for three centuries. The exact aetiology of the Dancing Plague (or Dancing Mania) is still unclear. Retrospective historical review of this public health problem reveals claims for causative factors including demonic possession, epilepsy, the bite of a tarantula, ergot poisoning and social adversity. It seems unlikely that Dancing Mania resulted from a single cause but rather resulted from multiple factors combining with a predisposing cultural background and triggered by adverse social circumstances. Dancing Mania remains one of the unresolved mysteries of public health.
Keywords
Dancing Plague , Dancing Mania , Social adversity , Middle Ages , tarantula , CULTURE
Journal title
Public Health
Serial Year
1997
Journal title
Public Health
Record number
1586236
Link To Document