Subscribe | Archive | Random
Hall of Fame

About

I'm 25 and I come from all over New England. I collect old things and share them on the internet. Occasionally other things will find their way in as well.

If you enjoy my blog, please feel free to recommend it to others!

Credit

Unless otherwise credited, all photos, postcards, etc., are from my personal collection.

Also, the amusing quotes accompanying my photos are sometimes gleaned from TweetsofOld and sometimes from my own old-newspaper browsing.

Questions or Comments?

Direct them over here!

Search

Following


04 July 2010, 12:08 pm

The Dancing Plague of 1518.

In July of 1518, a woman referred to as Frau Troffea stepped into a narrow street in Strasbourg, France and began a fervent dancing vigil that lasted between four and six days. By the end of the week, 34 others had joined her and, within a month, the crowd of dancing, hopping and leaping individuals had swelled to 400.

Authorities prescribed “more dancing” to cure the tormented movers but, by summer’s end, dozens in the Alsatian city had died of heart attacks, strokes and sheer exhaustion due to nonstop dancing.

(Read More)

  1. chinchinandmuckmuck reblogged this from whitneygifford and added:
    I feel like this would be a good way to die. Keep on boogieing, Muck Muck
  2. violettskyes reblogged this from whitneygifford
  3. dsfgdgfsh reblogged this from whitneygifford
  4. whitneygifford posted this