146/304
[ stop the slideshow ]

Herodias Tumbling with her Servant

Herodias Tumbling with her Servant.jpg Herodias TumblingThumbnailsHow a crossbowman should approach animalsHerodias TumblingThumbnailsHow a crossbowman should approach animalsHerodias TumblingThumbnailsHow a crossbowman should approach animalsHerodias TumblingThumbnailsHow a crossbowman should approach animals

Dancing, in former times, was closely connected with those feats of activity now called vaulting and tumbling; and such exertions often formed part of the dances that were publicly exhibited by the gleemen and the minstrels; for which reason, the Anglo-Saxon writers frequently used the terms of leaping and tumbling for dancing. Both the phrases occur in the Saxon versions of St. Mark's Gospel; where it is said of the daughter of Herodias, that she vaulted or tumbled, instead of danced, before king Herod