How will you die?
No one knows, but it’s a chapter in our
lives we will all reach someday.
It could be from an illness, an accident,
or if you’re fortunate enough, you might
pass away peacefully in your sleep, when you’re
old and ready to.
But what about something completely different?
An unconventional death that’s out of the
norm.
That’s what we’ll be exploring today,
in this episode of The Infographics Show:
Death by Dancing.
In July 1518, the residents of the city of
Strasbourg, which at that time was part of
the Holy Roman Empire, were struck by a sudden,
uncontrollable urge to dance.
The whole episode started when a lady known
as Frau Troffea went into the street and began
to shake her stuff.
She kept up her silent solo dancing routine
for nearly a week, and as she continued to
dance, her moves became infectious, with other
people soon joining in.
At the end of the first week, 34 others were
jigging along by Troffea’s side, and it
was clear the dancing was not going to stop.
The numbers quickly grew, and within a month,
the dancing epidemic had claimed 400 new individuals,
twisting, turning, hopping, and leaping on
the Strasbourg streets.
Local physicians were baffled, but they somehow
came to the conclusion that the phenomenon
must be due to a condition known as hot blood,
and their remedy to fix this fever was more
dancing.
Those infected needed to shake the illness
away.
So a stage was constructed, professional dancers
were brought in, and the town hired a band
to provide backing music.
But the rigorous dancing routine did nothing
to cool the residents’ blood, and instead
had the opposite effect.
Many of the dancers collapsed from exhaustion,
and some even died from stroke or heart attacks.
This bizarre episode carried on into September,
meaning some had danced their socks off for
a full two months!
Eventually the dancers were taken away to
a mountaintop shrine to pray for absolution.
It seemed only God could fix this crazy dancing
disorder.
The Strasbourg dancing plague might sound
like an imaginary tale, but it’s well documented
in 16th century historical records, and surprisingly,
it’s not the only case of this strange epidemic.
Similar incidents took place in Germany and
Switzerland, but nothing near the scale of
the case at Strasbourg in 1518.
What could have led the people of Strasbourg
to dance themselves to death?
According to historian and Michigan State
University professor, John Waller, who authored
a paper on the topic, the explanation is most
likely connected to St. Vitus.
St Vitus was a Catholic saint, who 16th century
Europeans believed had the power to curse
people with this dancing plague.
But it was not just the curse of the saint
that set the town to jiggle; disease and famine
were both prevalent in Strasbourg at the time,
and the heightened anxiety of the sick individuals
may have triggered the superstitious belief
of the saint’s curse.
In Waller’s book A Time to Dance, A Time
to Die: The Extraordinary Story of the Dancing
Plague of 1518, he says: "That the event took
place, is undisputed."
Waller explained that historical records documenting
the deaths from the plague, such as cathedral
sermons, physician notes, local and regional
chronicles, and even notes issued by the Strasbourg
city council are all "unambiguous on the fact
that the victims danced.
These people were not just trembling, shaking
or convulsing; although they were entranced,
their arms and legs were moving as if they
were purposefully dancing," he said.
Another theory suggests that the community
of dancers might have ingested ergot, a toxic
fungus that grows on damp rye and causes spasms
and hallucinations.
The same substance used to manufacture the
psychedelic drug, LSD.
Waller’s theory seems believable, but then
how could people dance for days when disease
and famine had engulfed the town?
Where did they get their energy from?
Sociologist Robert Bartholomew from Australia's
James Cook University proposed a different
theory, that the dancers were performing an
ecstatic ritual of a religious sect, but Waller
responded, "there is no evidence that the
dancers wanted to dance."
So maybe Waller was right.
The death dance was a phenomenon known as
"mass psychogenic illness," a form of mass
hysteria usually preceded by intolerable levels
of psychological distress, that caused the
dancing epidemic.
After all, according to Wikipedia, 7 other
cases of the dancing plague were reported
in the same region during the medieval era,
and one in Madagascar in 1840.
And there were also other strange plagues
which back up the psychological elements of
Waller’s idea, including a laughing epidemic
that went on for 18 months in Tanzania.
So, death by the dancing disease, a curse
from a cruel saint, or people tripping out
on LSD?
We may never know the truth, but dancing to
your deathbed may not be the worst way 
to say goodbye.
Can you think of any other diseases that make
people behave in bizarre ways?
Let us know in the comments.
Also, be sure to check out our other video
called What Happens When You Die?!
Thanks for watching, and, as always, don’t
forget to like, share, and subscribe.
See you next time!
