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Dramatic Rituals

  • Date Submitted: 12/19/2012 06:32 PM
  • Flesch-Kincaid Score: 59.8 
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With the rise of Christianity throughout the first millennium, dramatic rituals

developed for use during prayer. The Latin mass is the best-known of these rites.

Originally dance movements were part of these pieces as well as music and a dramatic

dialogue. By the Middle Ages these works moved from inside the churches to the out-

of-doors. On church, squares cathedral porches, and marketplaces, miracle plays, and

morality plays that taught the church\'s lessons were enacted in a theatrical way. Rather

than being part of the ritual, however, these pieces had become a form of

entertainment.

Dance was also observed in two other sorts of activity. In dramatic ritual games

with dance movement the passing of the seasons was celebrated, even as it had been

by primitive tribes; and in the works of troubadours and other wandering minstrels,

dance and song were used to express the full range of human emotions.

          Another important rite of the Middle Ages was known as the dance of death. A

ritual procession performed throughout Europe from the 14th to the 16th century, it was

a sort of danced parade that was led by a figure representing death. It was performed

perhaps with the most intensity in the years of the Black Death, a bubonic plague that

swept across Europe beginning in 1373. At once grotesque and graceful, the piece

expressed the anguish of a diseased civilization.

          The dance of death reflected the rituals performed by primitive peoples, who  

had also danced to acknowledge the passing of the seasons of the year and of a

human   life on Earth. Other dances in the Middle Ages did the same. During the annual

May games, for example, dances were performed that celebrated the greening of the

countryside and the fertility of the land. During saints\' days, which echoed the rites
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