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A Dance in the Gallery

A Dance in the Gallery.jpg A Mediæval Street and Town HallThumbnailsRepresentation of a man extracting the jewel from a toad's headA Mediæval Street and Town HallThumbnailsRepresentation of a man extracting the jewel from a toad's headA Mediæval Street and Town HallThumbnailsRepresentation of a man extracting the jewel from a toad's headA Mediæval Street and Town HallThumbnailsRepresentation of a man extracting the jewel from a toad's head

In the illustration, reproduced from Mr. Wright’s “Domestic Manners of the English,” we have a curious picture of a dance, possibly in the gallery, which occupied the whole length of the roof of most fifteenth-century houses; it is from a MS. of fifteenth-century date.
In all these instances the minstrels are on the floor with the dancers, but in the latter part of the Middle Ages they were probably—especially on festal occasions—placed in the music gallery over the screens, or entrance-passage, of the hall.