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Stilt Dancing.—XIII. Century

Stilt Dancing.—XIII. Century.jpg State Carriage of the Fourteenth CenturyThumbnailsStreet and apse of Saints John and Paul, in RomeState Carriage of the Fourteenth CenturyThumbnailsStreet and apse of Saints John and Paul, in RomeState Carriage of the Fourteenth CenturyThumbnailsStreet and apse of Saints John and Paul, in RomeState Carriage of the Fourteenth CenturyThumbnailsStreet and apse of Saints John and Paul, in RomeState Carriage of the Fourteenth CenturyThumbnailsStreet and apse of Saints John and Paul, in RomeState Carriage of the Fourteenth CenturyThumbnailsStreet and apse of Saints John and Paul, in Rome

Materials for Dancing, specifies masques, castanets, and a ladder of ten rounds. I apprehend the ladder-dance originated from the ancient pastime of walking or dancing upon very high stilts. A specimen of such an exhibition is here given from a MS. roll in the Royal Library, written and illuminated in the reign of Henry III. The actor is exercising a double function, that is, of a musician, and of a dancer.