In July of 1518, a woman stepped into a Strasbourg street and began to dance. She did not stop. What began as a solitary, frantic performance soon exploded into a city-wide epidemic of uncontrollable movement. Why would hundreds of people dance themselves to the point of collapse, injury, and even death?
This episode investigates one of history's most bizarre medical mysteries. We journey to the sweltering summer in the Holy Roman Empire, where a single dancer, Frau Troffea, ignited a plague that saw over four hundred citizens consumed by an irresistible compulsion to dance without rest. We explore the frantic, failed remedies of the time—from building stages to hiring musicians—and the chilling physical toll on the dancers' bodies.
We’ll sift through the leading modern explanations, from mass psychogenic illness and religious mania to toxic ergot poisoning, separating historical fact from folklore. Listen to understand how a perfect storm of famine, disease, and profound social stress may have manifested in one of humanity's most terrifying and enigmatic physical reactions.
#DancingPlague #Strasbourg #MassHysteria #HistoricalMystery #1518 #Ergotism #HolyRomanEmpire
Hosted by Ibnul Jaif Farabi. Produced by Light Knot Studios (lightknotstudios.com).