Smartest Year Ever

The 1518 Dancing Plague: Real, Deadly, Unexplained? | Smartest Year Ever (Aug 17, 2025)


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 In the sweltering summer of 1518, a woman stepped into the streets of Strasbourg—and began to dance. Within days, dozens joined her. By the end of the month, it was hundreds. They danced without music. Without rest. Some even danced to death.

In the final episode of Mystery Week, Gordy unpacks the chilling story of the Dancing Plague of 1518, one of the strangest historical outbreaks ever recorded. Was it mass hysteria? Ergot poisoning? Or something else entirely?

Backed by medical records, city archives, and centuries of speculation, this bizarre true story continues to baffle historians, neurologists, and psychologists alike. It’s a case study in human behavior, social contagion, and the blurry line between body and belief.

This isn’t a metaphor. It really happened. And the cause remains unsolved.

Sources:

  • Waller, J. (2008). A Time to Dance, a Time to Die: The Extraordinary Story of the Dancing Plague of 1518. Icon Books.

  • Bartholomew, R. (2009). Dancing Plagues and Mass Hysteria. The Psychologist, 22(5).

  • Donaldson, L. J., Cavanagh, J., & Rankin, J. (1997). The dancing plague: a public health conundrum. Public Health, 111(4), 201–204.

  • BBC. (2018). Why Did Hundreds of People Dance Themselves to Death?

  • Smithsonian Magazine. The Dancing Plague of 1518.

#DancingPlague #StrangeHistory #UnexplainedEvents #MedicalMystery #ContagionPsychology #MassHysteria #1518 #SmartestYearEver #DailyFacts Music thanks to Zapsplat.

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Smartest Year EverBy Gordy