LITERATURE FOR VOLUME XTranscriber’s NotesINDEX FOR VOLUME X
- A
- Abdallah (Bournoville and Paulli), [152].
- Academicism (French, Italian), [171].
- Academies of dancing, [151f];
- (Egyptian), [17];
- (Chinese), [31f], [34];
- (Cadiz, Spain), [46f];
- (Greek), [71];
- (French), [86f], [94f], [99], [105], [151];
- (Russian), [90f], [105];
- (Copenhagen Ballet School), [165];
- (College of Rhythmic Gymnastics, Hellerau), [234ff].
- Accentuation, [238].
- Accompaniment (in Spanish dances), [211].
- Accordion (in English folk-dance), [116f].
- Ach, du lieber Augustin, [131].
- Acting (in relation to ballet), [250], [252].
- Adam, Charles-Adolphe (as ballet composer), [151], [152], [158].
- Æschylus, [55], [66].
- African Bantu, [iii].
- African guitar, [47].
- Ai Ouchnem, [105].
- Akté, Aino, [205].
- Albinus (Roman consul), [76].
- Alexander I, Czar of Russia, [131], [181].
- Alexis Mihailowitch, Czar, [179].
- Algiers, [21].
- All in a Garden Green (British folk-dance), [120].
- Allan, Maud, [201], [206].
- Allard, Mlle. (ballet dancer), [101].
- Allemande, [144], [146].
- Alliamatula (Roman dancer), [77].
- Almeiis, [18], [21ff].
- Amaterasu (Japanese deity), [35f].
- America (future of dancing in), [261f].
- American Indians, [iv], [38f].
- Ammon, Temple of (Egyptian school of dancing in), [17].
- Anabasis (quoted), [55f].
- Andalusia (folk-dancing), [106], [107f].
- Andersen, Hans Christian, [167].
- Androgeonia (Greek hero), [54].
- Angerstein, Wilhelm (cited), [128f].
- Anglin, Mlle. (ballet dancer), [91].
- Anna, Empress of Russia, [90].
- Anna Ivanovna, Empress of Russia, [179].
- Anne of Denmark (English Queen, patron of the masque), [83], [84], [119].
- [d’]Annunzio, Gabriele, [165].
- Antagonism to dancing (of Western Church), [9], [103], [129];
- (of Roman consuls), [76].
- Antoine et Cléopatre (ballet), [102].
- Aphrodite, [61], [67], [69], [70];
- (compared to Venera), [24];
- (mysteries), [61].
- Apollo, [54], [56], [57], [59], [69f];
- (mysteries), [61].
- Apostles, [80].
- [L’]Après-midi d’un Faun, (Debussy), [232].
- Arabesques (in Egyptian dances), [18];
- (in French ballet step), [95].
- Arabia (Stomach Dance), [3], [22];
- (Graveyard Dance), [21];
- (Axis Dance), [22];
- (character of dancing), [46ff];
- (influence of, on Spanish dances), [112].
- ‘Arabian Nights,’ [226].
- Aragon (folk-dancing), [107f].
- Arcadia, [55], [57], [60].
- Architecture, [235], [265];
- (development of, synchronous with dancing), [46];
- (American), [263].
- Areja, Francesca, [180].
- Arensky, Anton Stephanovich, [183], [224].
- Ariadne, [56].
- Aristides, [54].
- Aristophanes (cited), [52], [55], [61].
- ‘Ark of the Covenant,’ [iii], [10], [43].
- Arkona (Hartmann), [152].
- Armenia (folk-dancing), [138f].
- Artemis, [iv], [64].
- Arts (primitive, in India), [24];
- (common basis of), [235].
- Asparazases (Indian nymphs), [26].
- Aspasia (Greek dancer), [54], [70], [94].
- Assemblé (French ballet step), [95], [98].
- Astafieva, Seraphine, [220], [221], [224].
- Astral Dance (Egyptian), [iv], [13f], [63].
- Athenæus (quoted), [55], [60];
- (cited), [59].
- Athens (dancing at festivals), [53];
- (theatre of Dionysius), [64f];
- (Mænad Dance), [69].
- Auber, Daniel-Esprit, [103].
- Augustus (Roman Emperor), [73], [75].
- Aulos (Greek flute), [58].
- Austria, [102].
- L’Autômne Bacchanale, [186], [187].
- Auvergne (folk-dancing), [121].
- Axis Dance (Arabian), [22].
- B
- Baba Yaga (Russian ballet), [152], [179].
- Bacchanalian dance, [65].
- Bacchus (Greek and Roman god), [54], [65], [69], [74];
- (Roman orgies), [75f].
- Bach, Johann Sebastian, v, [102f];
- (bourrées), [121];
- (courantes), [145].
- Bacon, Sir Francis (cited on masques), [83].
- Bagpipes (in Morris dance), [115];
- (in English Sword Dance), [116];
- (in Irish jig), [120];
- (in Roumanian folk-dance), [137].
- Baken Amen (Egyptian tablet), [20].
- Bakst, Léon, [183].
- Balakireff, Mily Alexejevich, [104], [152], [171], [181], [231f], [256].
- Ballerina’s tunic, [215].
- Ballet (origin), [8], [10];
- (18th cent.), [14];
- (Russian), [23], 170ff;
- (French), 86ff;
- (defined by Noverre), [89];
- (Italian), [124];
- (classic), [151ff];
- (Danish), [162ff];
- (plots), [163].
- Ballet des Ardents (French court dance), [81].
- Ballet du Carrousel (performed at Tuileries), [86f].
- Ballet slipper, [216].
- Ballotté, [98].
- Barefoot dancing, [197], [201].
- Barrett, S. A. (cited on plot of Dream Dance), [39].
- Barrison, Gertrude, [203].
- [Le] Basque (French ballet dancer), [87].
- Bathyllus (Roman dancer), [73], [74f].
- Battements, [95].
- Bayaderes, [25], [27], [28].
- [Les] Bayederes (French ballet), [153].
- Beauchamp (director of French Academy of Dancing), [87].
- Beaugrand, Leontine (ballerina), [159f].
- Beck, Hans (Danish ballet dancer), [164].
- Beerbohm, Max (quoted on Genée), [167f].
- Beethoven, v, [102f], [200], [206].
- Begutcheff (director of Moscow ballet), [177].
- Bekeffy, [182].
- Belle Fatma [La] (20th cent. Egyptian dancer), [22].
- Bellicrepa saltatio (Roman dance), [73].
- Bells (in Morris Dance), [114].
- Benares, [25].
- Benois, [183], [226], [229], [230].
- Benserade, [86].
- Berlin, [203f].
- Berlin Museum (painting of Sword Dance), [115f].
- Bernay, Mlle. (ballerina), [159].
- Berri, Duchess de, [81].
- Bibasis (Greek dance), [61], [62].
- Bible (cited), [19]; (quoted), [43], [44].
- Bilibin, [183].
- Birds (courtship dances of), [6].
- Björnson, Björnstjerne, [104].
- Blache (ballet composer), [102].
- Black Forest (dance of the), [130].
- Blasis, [91], [102];
- (quoted on Bolero), [109].
- Bogdanova (ballerina), [151], [183].
- Bohemia (folk-dancing). See [Slavic folk-dances].
- Bolero (Spanish folk-dance), [50], [109], [112].
- Bondina (Andalusian folk-dance), [106].
- Borodine, Alexander, [171], [228], [256].
- Botta, Bergonzio, di, [81f].
- Botticelli, [45].
- Bournoville, Antoine August, [104], [151], [152], [162f], [164f], [166], [168], [169].
- Bourrée, [121f].
- Boyars, [141], [178].
- Boys (training of, as dancers), [183].
- Brahma, [25].
- Brahma und Bayaderen (German ballet), [164].
- Brahminism (relation to dancing), [25ff].
- Brahms, Johannes, [125], [254].
- Brandenburg, Hans, [202].
- Brass instruments (in 15th cent. Italian ballet), [82f].
- Brass plates (Indian), [27].
- Breobrashenskaya, [183], [185], [188].
- Breton dances, [121].
- Brisé (ballet-step), [98].
- British Museum, [18], [20].
- Buckingham House (British folk-dance), [120].
- Buddhism, [36].
- Bugaku Dance (Japanese), [38].
- Bulgaria (folk-dancing). See [Slavic folk-dances].
- Burchard, Bishop of Worms, [129].
- Burette (cited on Greek dance), [63].
- Buriat dances (compared to American Indian), [39].
- Butterfly Dance, [192].
- Byzantium (painting of Hebrew dancing), [44];
- (influence of, in Lithuanian folk-dance), [135f];
- (influence on Russian ballet), [188].
- C
- Cabriole (in Egyptian dance), [20];
- (in Bibasis), [62];
- (French ballet step), [95].
- Cachucha (Spanish folk-dance), [111], [156].
- Cadiz, Spain (centre of ancient dancing), [10];
- (dancers from, in Rome), [76].
- Calcutta, [25].
- Caligula (Roman emperor), [76].
- Calumet (American Indian), [39].
- Calzvaro, [34f].
- Camargo, Mlle. (French ballet dancer), [94], [99], [100].
- Canaries (English and German social dance), [150].
- [The] Caprices of Galatea (ballet by Noverre), [90], [99].
- Carmencita (Spanish dancer), [210].
- [Le] Carnaval de Venise (French ballet), [94], [153].
- Caroles (mediæval dances), [81].
- Carpæa (Greek dance), [55f].
- Caryatis (Spartan dance), [54f].
- Castanets (in Spanish folk-dance), [106], [107], [110], [112].
- Castil-Blaze, François-Henri-Josef, quoted (on mediæval strolling ballet), [80f];
- (on French ballet), [93];
- (on Camargo), [100];
- (on origin of waltz), [131].
- Castor and Pollux, [54].
- Catherine the Great, [141].
- Caucasia (folk-dancing), [140].
- Cerezo, Sebastian (Spanish dancer), [109].
- Cerito, Fanny (ballerina), [158f].
- Cervantes (cited on Chaconne), [145].
- Chaconne (Italian and Spanish social dance), [145f].
- Changement de pied, [98].
- Charles I, King of England, [84].
- Charles II, King of England, [119], [145].
- Chassé (ballet step), [94], [95].
- Cheremias (Spanish instruments), [79].
- China, [3], [9], [30ff];
- (attitude of moralists in, toward dancing), [30];
- (court dancing), [32];
- (musical instruments), [32];
- (dancing of, adopted in Japan), [36].
- Chinese Wedding (ballet by Calzevaro), [34f].
- Chippewas, [39].
- Chironomia (in Greek choreography), [71].
- Choirs (in Egyptian temples), [17].
- Chopin, Frédéric, [136], [200], [206], [221].
- Choral dances (of Russian peasants), [177f].
- Choreographic principle (vs. dramatic), [251].
- Choreography (Chinese), [30];
- (mediæval), [78ff];
- (in 17th cent. France), [87f];
- (French development), [94f];
- (influence of democracy), [102];
- (Finnish), [133];
- (naturalistic school), [195ff];
- (plastomimic), [247ff].
- Chorley, Henry Fothergill (quoted on Elssler), [156].
- Chorovody (Russian ballad folk-dance), [140f].
- Chrisis (ballet), [206], [207f].
- Christian moralists (antagonism to dancing), [9].
- See also [Church, Roman].
- Chronos, [59].
- Chrotal (Greek instrument), [58].
- Church, Roman (hostility to dancing), [81], [103], [129];
- (dancing in, during Middle Ages), [78], [79f].
- Cicero (quoted), [72].
- [La] Cinquantaine (French ballet), [91].
- Clary (French ballet), [94].
- Classics, musical (dance music by), v.
- [The] Clemency of Titus (ballet by Noverre), [90].
- Cleonica (Greek dancer), [70].
- Cleopatra (as dancer), [17f].
- Cleopatra (ballet), [23].
- Cléopatre (ballet), [223ff].
- Clermont, Comte de, [100].
- Clothing (decorative purpose of, for the dance), [6].
- Collins, Lottie, [189], [192f].
- Comédie Française, [101].
- Confucius, [33];
- (honored in Japanese dance), [38].
- Coördination (of intellect and nerves), [238].
- Copenhagen School, [151].
- Coperario, John, [84].
- Copiola, Galeria (Roman dancer), [77].
- Coppélia (ballet), [160], [166f], [175].
- Cordax (Greek Satyr dance), [61], [63f].
- Corkscrew (folk-dance), [134f].
- Corpus Christi (festival of, with church dancing), [78f].
- Corsaire (French ballet), [152].
- Corybantes, [54].
- Cosiers (Spanish church dancers), [79f].
- Cossack folk-dances, [2].
- Costume. See [Dress].
- Cotillion, [122].
- Country Dance (English), [113], [115].
- Coupé (in Egyptian dance), [20].
- Coupé dessous (ballet-step), [95].
- Coupé lateral (ballet-step), [95].
- Courante, [86], [87f], [145f].
- Court ballets (French), [83].
- Court dancing (in China), [32f];
- (at Jerusalem), [43], [44];
- (in Seville), [47];
- (in England), [83ff];
- (in France), [86f], [121f];
- (in Germany), [129];
- (in Russia), [141f].
- See also [Social dancing].
- Courtship dances (of birds), [6].
- Covent Garden (Mlle. Sallé at), [99].
- Craig, Gordon (cited on French ballet), [214].
- Crane Dance (Greek), [69].
- Crete, [54].
- Crimea (folk-dancing), [140].
- Crowne, John, [83].
- Cupid and Bacchus (French ballet), [87].
- Curetes (Cretan dancers), [54].
- Cybele, [54].
- Cyclops, [59].
- Cymbals (in Greek dances), [71].
- Czardas (Hungarian folk-dance), [125f].
- D
- Daedulus, [53].
- Dalcroze. See [Jacques-Dalcroze].
- Daldans (Swedish folk-dance), [134].
- Dance music (classical), v.
- Dance of Baskets (in Eleusinian mysteries), [68].
- Dance of Feathers (Chinese court dance), [33].
- Dance of the Five Senses (modern Indian dance), [209].
- Dance of the Flag (Chinese dance), [33].
- Dance of the Four Dimensions (Egyptian dance), [16].
- Dance of the Glasses (pseudo-Egyptian dance), [22].
- Dance of the Golden Calf, [44].
- Dance of Greeting (Arabian), [49].
- Dance of Humanity (Chinese dance), [33].
- Dance of Innocence (Greek), [iv].
- Dance of the Knees (in Dionysian Mysteries), [68f].
- Dance of the Mystic Bird (Chinese), [33].
- Dance principles, [2].
- Dancing defined, [2].
- Dancing girls (Greek), [57].
- Dancing Mandarins, [34].
- ‘Dancing the music,’ [248].
- Danish ballet (influence on Russian), [164f].
- Dansomanie [La] (French ballet), [92], [131].
- Dante (cited), [iii].
- Daphnis and Chloë, [68].
- Dargason (British folk-dance), [120].
- Dargomijsky, Alexander Sergeyevitch, [104], [181].
- Dauberval, [89], [91], [101].
- Daughter of the Pharaoh (ballet), [21].
- Davenant, Sir William, [84].
- David, King of Israel, [10], [43], [44].
- Davillier, Baron, quoted (on mediæval church dance), [79];
- (on Spanish folk-dance), [106];
- (on Seguidilla), [110f].
- Death Dance (Fakir dance compared to), [28].
- [The] Death of Ajax (ballet by Noverre), [90].
- Debussy, Claude, [232].
- Degeneration (of ballet), [189ff].
- Delians, [59].
- Delibes, Léo, [151], [152], [167].
- Delicias caditanas (Cadiz dancers in Rome), [77].
- Delphic Festivals, [69].
- Delsarte, François Alexandre, [207], [211f], [214].
- Demetrius, [67], [69];
- (Mysteries), [61].
- Demi-cabriole (ballet-step), [95].
- Demi-coupé (ballet-step), [95].
- Democracy (effect of, on choreography), [102].
- Democratic basis of dancing, [171].
- Denmark (folk-dancing), [134];
- (ballet), [162ff];
- (influence on Russian ballet), [169].
- [Le] Déserteur (French ballet), [92].
- Desmond, Olga, [22], [193], [212].
- Despreaux (Parisian ballet dancer), [101].
- Desrat (cited on Eleusinian Mysteries), [67].
- Devadazis (Indian temple dancers), [26].
- Devil’s Dance (Finnish folk-dance), [133]
- Diaghileff, Warslof, [219f].
- Diaghileff ballet, [176], [185], [200].
- Diana (Greek goddess), [54].
- Didelot, Charles-Louis, [151], [154], [161], [164f], [180f].
- Diodorus (cited), [13].
- Dionysian Mysteries, [61], [68].
- Dionysius of Syracuse, [54].
- Dionysos, [56], [67], [69], [74].
- Dipoda (Greek dance), [61].
- Dohnányi, Ernst von, [166].
- Dohrn, Wolf and Harald, [234].
- Dolci (painting of Salome dance), [45].
- Dominique (Parisian harlequin), [100].
- Don Juan (French ballet), [102].
- ‘Don Quixote,’ [145].
- Doré (painting of church dancing in Seville), [79].
- Dorians, [60].
- Dostoievsky, [104].
- Drama (influenced by Russian ballet), [176].
- Dramatic principle (against choreographic), [251].
- Dream Dance (American Indians), [38ff].
- Drehtanz, [129].
- Dresden, [234].
- Dress (in Greek dancing), [66];
- (of dancers in Seville Cathedral), [79];
- (in English masques), [84];
- (in 18th cent. ballet), [89f];
- (in ballet during French Revolution), [94];
- (in Spanish folk-dances), [112f];
- (of Morris dancers), [115];
- (in English Sword dance), [116];
- (in Hungarian folk-dance), [125];
- (in Esthonian folk-dance), [127f];
- (in Dutch folk-dances), [135];
- (in Slavic dances), [137];
- (in Minuet), [147].
- Drigo, [186].
- Drum (Egyptian), [22];
- (Indian), [27];
- (Chinese), [32];
- (Japanese), [38];
- (American Indian), [39f];
- (in Lou Gue), [81];
- (in Armenian folk-dance), [138].
- Drury Lane, [102].
- Dryad [The] (ballet), [167].
- Dryads, [80].
- Dubois, Théodore, [151].
- Duncan, Elizabeth, [201].
- Duncan, Isadora, [22], [187], 197ff, [204], [206], [211], [212], [213], [214], [244], [247];
- (quoted), [196f];
- (compared with St. Denis), [210];
- (influence in Russia), [218f];
- (pupils), [248].
- Duncan School, [197f], [248].
- Duport (Paris ballet dancer), [91], [101f].
- Dupré (French ballet dancer), [87].
- Dutch folk-dancing, [135].
- Dynamic expression, [240].
- E
- Ear-training (in Jacques-Dalcroze School), [240].
- Education (necessity of, for Greek dancers), [65];
- (liberal, of ballet dancers), [172f].
- Edward VII, King of England, [201].
- Egg Dance (Dutch folk-dance), [135].
- Egypt (temple dancing), [iv], [8], [15ff];
- (musical instruments), [8];
- (relation of dancing and religion), [9], [247], [262];
- (secular dancing), [15ff], [20f];
- (influence of, in modern choreography), [22];
- (influence of, on Hebrew dancing), [43f];
- (worship of Pan), [57];
- (strophic principle in choreography of), [63];
- (history of, in Greek education), [65];
- (influence of, on Spanish dances), [112].
- Egyptian Wedding Scenes (pseudo-Egyptian dance), [22].
- Electricity, [190].
- Eleusinian Mysteries, [67f].
- Elisseieff, Prof, (cited on Egyptian dancing), [21].
- Elizabeth, Queen of England, [84], [145], [150].
- Ellis, Havelock, quoted (on American Indian dances), [iv];
- (on relation of rhythm to life), [vi];
- (on modern Spanish dances), [211].
- Elssler, Fanny, [151], [155ff].
- Emerson, Ralph Waldo (quoted on Elssler), [155].
- Emmanuel (cited on Greek choreography), [70].
- Emmeleia (Greek dance), [iv], [61], [62f].
- Endymatia (Greek dance), [61].
- England (folk-dancing), [113];
- (waltz), [131f];
- (social dancing), [150].
- English Cathedrals (rhythmic ritual used in), [viii].
- Entrechat, [98];
- (in Egyptian dance), [20].
- Erfurt, [129].
- Esclatism (Greek gymnastics), [71].
- [La] Esmeralda (Perrot and Pugni), [152].
- Esthonian folk-dances, [121], [126f].
- Eugenius IV, [78f].
- Eurhythmics (of Jacques-Dalcroze), [234ff].
- Excelsior (ballet), [152].
- F
- Fabiol (in Spanish dance), [79f].
- Fackeltanz, [128], [130].
- Fakir dances, [28f].
- Falkenfleth, Haagen (quoted on Jörgen-Jensen), [165].
- Fandango (Spanish folk-dance), [50], [105], [106f], [112].
- Farandole (French folk-dance), [121];
- (as court dance), [122].
- [La] Farandole (Dubois), [152].
- [La] Farruca (Spanish folk-dance), [111].
- Fauns, [80].
- Faust (ballet by Perrot), [158].
- Feodorova, Sophie, [221], [224].
- Ferrabosco, Alfonso, [84].
- Festen i Albano (Danish ballet), [163].
- Festival of the Sacred Bull (Egyptian), [15f].
- Festival of the Supreme Being (French strolling ballet), [93f].
- Festivals (Roman), [74], [75f].
- Finland (folk-dances), [2], [121], [132];
- (compared to American Indian dances), [39];
- (rune tunes), [63];
- (horn dance), [117];
- (naturalistic school), [205].
- Fiorella (ballet), [163f].
- Fire Bird [The], [231].
- Fire Dance, [192].
- Fleure (ballet step), [98].
- Fleury (quoted), [101].
- Flitch, J. E. Crawford, quoted (on Fuller), [190f].
- Floralia (Roman festivals), [75].
- Flore et Zéphire (French ballet), [152], [154].
- Florence (court ballet), [90];
- (folk-dance), [124].
- Flower Dance, [192].
- Flute (in Egyptian dance music), [iv], [8];
- (in Indian dance music), [27];
- (in Chinese dance music), [32];
- (in Japanese dance music), [38];
- (in American Indian dance music), [41];
- (in Arabian dance music), [49];
- (in Greek dance music), [56], [58f], [61], [70];
- (in Roman dance music), [74], [76];
- (in 15th cent. Italian ballet), [82].
- Fokina, Vera, [171], [220], [221], [224].
- Fokine, [vi], [219f], [220], [228], [231], [244].
- Folk-dances, [266];
- (rel. to sex instinct), v;
- (Spanish), [105ff];
- (Italian), [122ff];
- (German), [128f];
- (Finnish), [132f];
- (Scandinavian), [133];
- (Dutch), [135];
- (Lithuanian), [135f];
- (Polish), [136];
- (Slavic), [136ff];
- (Armenian), [138f];
- (Russian), [139ff], [171].
- Folk-songs, [265];
- (Russian), [183].
- Forlana (Italian folk-dance), [124].
- Fouetté (French ballet step), [97].
- Fouetté pirouette (in Egyptian dances), [18].
- Fountain of Magic Dances (in Eleusinian Mysteries), [67].
- Fox Dance (Greek), [69].
- France (rhythmic church ritual), [iii-f], [81];
- (folk-dancing), [2], [121ff], [262];
- (court dancing), [10];
- (grand court ballets), [83], [86ff], [247];
- (democratic influence), [102];
- (waltz), [131];
- (influence of, on Russian ballet), [171];
- (naturalistic school), [205].
- French Academy of Dancing, [94f], [99], [105].
- French ballet, [86ff];
- (modern criticism of), [214ff].
- French Revolution, [92], [93f], [148].
- Froehlich (Danish composer), [163].
- Fuentes (cited on Seguidilla), [109f].
- Fuller, Loie, [189], [190ff].
- Fuller, Margaret (quoted on Elssler), [155].
- Funeral dances (Japanese), [36];
- (Greek), [54].
- G
- Gade, Niels W., [133], [151].
- Gaita (Spanish instrument), [106].
- Galcotti (ballet composer), [152].
- Galeazzo, Visconti, Duke of Milan, [10], [81].
- Galen (quoted), [54].
- Galeotti, Vincenzo Tomaselli, [162].
- Galicia (church dancing), [78];
- (folk-dancing), [106].
- Galliard, [149f].
- Gardel, Maximilian (ballet composer), [14], [89], [91], [131], [148], [151], [162].
- [El] Garrotin (Spanish folk-dance), [111].
- Gautier, Théophile, [152], [158];
- (quoted on Elssler), [157].
- Gavotte, [70], [86], [148].
- Gedeonoff, [181].
- Geltzer (Russian ballet dancer), [185].
- Genée, Adeline, [151], [167].
- Generalization, theory of (in ballet), [216f].
- Germany, v;
- (folk-dancing), [128f];
- (the waltz), [131f];
- (social dancing), [150];
- (influence of Duncan), [201].
- Gesture (relation between, and music), [240].
- See also [Pantomime].
- Ghiselle (French ballet), [152], [158].
- Ghost Dance (American Indian dance), [38], [40f].
- Gia (Chinese dance), [32].
- Gilchrist, Connie, [189].
- Glazounoff, Alexander Constantovich, [183], [186], [224].
- Glière, Reinhold, [206], [207], [254], [259].
- Glinka, Mikail Ivanovich, [104], [181], [224], [254].
- Glissade (ballet-step), [97f].
- Gluck, Christoph Willibald, [102f], [121], [148], [152], [200].
- Gogol, [104], [171].
- Golden Calf (in mediæval ballet), [80].
- Goulu [La] (ballet dancer), [192].
- Grahn, Lucile (ballerina), [163f].
- Grand ballets (of French court), [83], [86ff].
- Gratiereness Hulding (Danish ballet), [162].
- Graveyard Dance (Oriental), [21f].
- Gravity (in naturalistic dancing), [196f], [215].
- Greece (philosophers of, quoted on dancing), [iii];
- (religious dancing), [iv], [9], [10], [52ff], [59];
- (writers of, cited on Spanish dancing), [46f];
- (its choreography), 52–71;
- (festival dancing), [54f];
- (folk-dancing), [121].
- Greek dancing (modern ‘revivals’ of), [195f];
- (Jacques-Dalcroze system), [245], [247].
- Greek Church (dancing in), [iii].
- Greek Mysteries, [61].
- Gregory, Johann (ballet master in Russia), [179].
- Gretchaninoff, Alexander, [255].
- Gretna Green (ballet), [152].
- Grétry, André Erneste Modeste, [148].
- Griboyedoff, Teleshova, [178].
- Grieg, Edvard, [104], [133], [201], [205], [206].
- Grisi, Carlotta, [151], [158].
- Grouping (decorative), [235].
- Guerrero, Rosario, [210].
- Guild dances (German), [129].
- Guillaume Tell (French ballet), [92].
- Guimard, Madeleine (French ballet dancer), [91], [94], [99], [100f].
- Guitar (Egyptian), [8];
- (African), [47];
- (in Spanish folk-dance), [107], [110].
- Gustave Vasa (French ballet), [102].
- Gymnastics (rhythmic), [234ff].
- Gymnopædia, [59f].
- H
- Hailii (Finnish folk-dance), [133].
- Handel, George Frederick, [99];
- (bourées), [121];
- (courantes), [145].
- Harlequin, Parisian (Dominique), [100].
- Harp (in Egyptian dance music), [8];
- (in American Indian dance music), [41];
- (in Greek dance music), [53], [56];
- (in Roman dance music), [76];
- (in Esthonian folk-dance music), [127];
- (in Finnish dance music), [133].
- Hartmann, Johann Peter Emil, [133], [151], [152], [163].
- Hatton (English dancer), [150].
- Hawasis, [20f].
- Haydn, Joseph, v.
- Hebrews, [iii], [43ff].
- See also [Jewish Marriage Dances], etc.
- Helen of Sparta, [iv].
- Hellerau (College of Rhythmic Gymnastics), [234ff].
- Hempua (Finnish folk-dance), [133].
- Henri IV, King of France (patron of dancing), [86].
- Henrietta Maria, Queen of England, [84].
- Henry VII, King of England, [84].
- Herculaneum, [57].
- Hercules in Love (French ballet), [87].
- Hermes, Egyptian god (Thoth), [13].
- Héro et Leandre (French ballet), [94].
- Herodotus (cited), [13].
- Hesiod (cited), [52], [65].
- Heteræ (Greek), [69], [70].
- Hieroglyphs, [12ff].
- High Kickers, [189].
- Highland Fling (Scotch folk-dance), [118].
- Hilferding, [180].
- Hincks, Marcella A. (cited on Japanese dancing), [35].
- Historical Ballet (Chinese), [33].
- Homer (cited), [52], [53f], [56f], [57], [65].
- Hoppe, Johann Ferdinand, [164].
- Hora (Roumanian folk-dance), [137f].
- Horace (cited), [72].
- Horatii (French ballet), [90].
- Hormos (Greek dance), [61], [64].
- Horn (in Finnish dance music), [133].
- Horn Dance (English folk-dance), [117f].
- Hornpipe (Scotch folk-dance), [119].
- Hovey, Mrs. Richard, [195f], [212], [214].
- Huang-Ta, [30].
- Humpty-Dumpty (ballet), [190].
- Hungary (folk-dancing), [2], [124ff].
- Hymn to Apollo, [56].
- Hymnea (Greek dance), [61].
- Hyporchema (Greek dance), [55], [59].
- I
- Ibsen, Henrik, [104].
- Idealism (classic), [157].
- Ilia Murometz (Russian folk-dance), [140].
- Iliad (cited), [53f], [127].
- Impatiencem (17th-cent. ballet), [87].
- Imperial Ballet School (Russian), [90f], [105], [172], [181].
- Imperial Dramatic Dancing School (Russian), [180].
- Improvisation (course in Jacques-Dalcroze school), [240].
- India (relation of dancing and religion), [9];
- (choreographic art), [24ff];
- (effect of music on dancing), [25];
- (dances of, in European imitation), [209].
- Indians. See [American Indian].
- Indulgences (sold by clergy for dancing), [81].
- Ingham, Ethel (quoted), [234f].
- Ingham, Percy B. (quoted), [242].
- Innocence, Dance of (Egyptian), [iv].
- Innsbruck, [129].
- Instruments (in Egyptian dance music), [8], [16].
- Ionic Movements, [56].
- Iphigenia in Aulis (Gluck), [152].
- Ippolitoff-Ivanoff, Mikail Mikailovitch, [256].
- Ireland (folk-dancing), [119f].
- Irvin, Beatrice, [206].
- Isabella of Aragon, [81].
- Isis cult, [15f].
- Istomina (Russian ballerina), [178], [181].
- Italy, v, [102];
- (folk-dances), [2], [122ff];
- (court dancing), [10];
- (mediæval strolling ballets), [80f];
- (influence on Russian ballet), [171].
- ‘Ivan the Terrible’ (Russian folk-dance), [140], [141].
- Ives, Simon (composer of masque music), [83].
- Ivi-Men (Chinese dance), [32].
- J
- Jack Sheppard (ballet), [190].
- Jacques-Dalcroze, Émile, [234ff], [247], [249];
- (eurhythmics of, compared with Greek dancing), [71].
- Jacques-Dalcroze School, [197f], [200].
- Jaernefelt, Armas, [205].
- [El] Jaleo (Spanish folk-dance), [111].
- James I, King of England, [84].
- Japan (pantomimic character of dancing), [3];
- (dance of, adopted in China), [33f];
- (funeral dances), [35ff];
- (European choreographic imitations), [208];
- (folk-dances), [262].
- [de] Jaulnaye (cited on Roman dancers), [73].
- Java (pantomimic choreography), [3].
- Jerusalem, Temple of, [44].
- Jeté, [94], [95];
- (in Egyptian dance), [20];
- (in Bibasis), [62].
- Jewish marriage dances (in Morocco), [44].
- Jewish moralists (antagonism to dancing), [9].
- Jig (Irish folk-dance), [119f].
- Jota (Spanish dance), [50], [105], [107f].
- Jones, Inigo, English architect, [83], [84].
- Jonson, Ben, [83], [84].
- Jörgen-Jensen, Elna (ballet dancer), [165ff].
- Judgment of Paris [The] (ballet by Noverre), [90].
- Jupiter, [54].
- Juvenal, [74].
- K
- Kaakuria (Finnish folk-dance), [133].
- Kaara Jaan (Esthonian folk-dance), [126f].
- Kagura (Japanese dance), [38].
- Kaiterma (Cossack dance), [140].
- Kalevala, [257].
- Kalewipoeg, [121], [127].
- Kalmuk dances (compared to American Indian dances), [39].
- Kamarienskaya (Russian folk-dance), [140], [142].
- Karsavina, Tamara, [171], [176], [183], [188], [220], [221], [222], [226], [227f], [229], [231], [248].
- Kasatchy (Russian folk-dance), [140], [141f].
- Kia-King (ballet by Titus), [34].
- Kinney, Troy and Margaret West (quoted on Arabian dances), [47ff];
- (quoted on Fandango), [107f];
- (quoted on La Farruca), [111];
- (quoted on modern Spanish dances), [210f].
- Kirchoff (cited on Greek dance), [63].
- Kolla (Slavic folk-dance), [137].
- Kolossova, Eugeny, [179].
- Kon-Fu-Tse (Chinese moralist), [30].
- Kosloff (Russian ballet dancer), [221].
- Kostroma (folk-dancing in), [140].
- Kreutzer, Rodolphe, [102].
- Krohn, [Dr.] Ilmari, [132].
- Kshesinskaya, Mathilda, [151], [179], [183], [185], [188].
- Kshesinsky, Felix, [182].
- Kuljak (Esthonian folk-dance), [126f].
- Kuula, Toiwo, [205].
- Kyasht, Lydia, [185], [188].
- L
- Lacedæmonian dance, [59f].
- See also [Spartan dance].
- Lada, [244], [253ff].
- Lancelot (quoted), [137f].
- Lande (ballet director), [180].
- Lange-Müller, Wilhelm, [205].
- Laniere, Nicholas, [84].
- Lanner, Katty, [159].
- Lantern Festival (in China), [35].
- Larcher, Pierre J., [163].
- Laurette (ballet), [152].
- Lawes, William, [83].
- ‘Leap with Torches’ (in Eleusinian mysteries), [67].
- Légende de Joseph (Strauss), [232].
- Leggatt, [182].
- Leicester, Earl of, [150].
- Lesginka (Cossack dance), [140].
- Lessing, [161].
- Lessogoroff, [180].
- Lettish folk-dances, [121].
- Levinsohn, A. (quoted on Duncan School), [198];
- (quoted on the old ballet), [215].
- Liadova (ballerina), [151].
- Ligne, Princess de, [100].
- Li-Kaong-Ti (Chinese monarch), [31].
- Lily (ballet by San-Leon), [34f].
- Lind, Letti, [189].
- Liszt, Franz, [125].
- Lithuania (folk-dancing), [121], [135f].
- Little Mermaid [The] (ballet), [167].
- Littré (cited), [88].
- Livingston (cited), [iii].
- Livry, Emma, [159].
- Livy (cited), [74].
- Locatelli, Pietro, [180].
- Lopokova, Lydia, [183], [185], [188].
- Loti, Pierre (cited on Indian dancing), [28].
- Lou Gue (mediæval ballet), [80f].
- Louis XIV, [86f], [145].
- Louis XV, [86f], [88], [145], [147], [148].
- Louis, Pierre, [207].
- Love’s Triumph Callipolis (masque by Ben Jonson), [84].
- Lubke (cited on ballet dancing), [173].
- Lucas et Laurette (French ballet), [94].
- Lucceia (Roman dancer), [77].
- Lucian (quoted), [iii];
- (cited), [14], [52], [54], [63], [64], [65].
- Ludiones (Roman bards), [74].
- Lully, Jean-Baptiste, [86], [87];
- (sarabandes), [147];
- (gavottes), [148].
- Lupercalia (Roman festival), [75].
- Lutes (in 15th cent. Italian ballet), [82]
- Lyre, [iv];
- (Egyptian), [8], [13];
- (Hebrew), [44];
- (in Greek dance music), [57], [58];
- (in 15th cent. Italian ballet), [82].
- ‘Lysistrata’ (comedy by Aristophanes), [61].
- Lysistrata (Greek dance), [61].
- M
- MacDowell, Edward, [254], [256].
- MacDowell Festival (Peterboro, N. H.), [117].
- Mænad Dance (Greek), [69].
- Maeterlinck, Maurice, [257f].
- Mahabharata (Indian epic), [127].
- Maillard, Mlle. (ballet dancer), [92].
- Malakavel (French ballet), [102].
- [La] Mancha (its folk-dances), [109].
- Mandarin dances (Chinese), [34].
- Maneros (dancing Pharaoh), [13].
- Marathon games, [54].
- Marie Antoinette, [148].
- Marriage ceremonies, masques performed at, [83].
- See also [Jewish marriage dances].
- Mars, [74].
- Mars et Venus (French ballet), [153].
- Marseillaise (ballet), [92f].
- Martial (cited), [77].
- Masai (war dancing), [5].
- Masque of Beauty (Ben Jonson), [83].
- Masque of Blackness (Ben Jonson), [83].
- Masque of Cassandra, [86].
- Masque of Castillo (John Crowne). [83]
- Masque of Owles, [84].
- Masques (English), [83].
- Mathematics (relation of, to dancing and architecture), [vi].
- Mauri, Rosetta (ballerina), [159].
- Mazurka, [136].
- Mediævalism (relation to dancing), v.
- See also [Middle Ages].
- Medici, Catherine de’, [10], [86], [121].
- Mek na snut (Egyptian pirouette), [20].
- Melartin, Erik, [205].
- Melkatusta (Finnish folk-dance), [132].
- Memphis (temple dances to Osiris), [15f].
- Merchant Taylor’s Hall (masques performed at), [83].
- Merikanto, [205].
- Messertanz (of Nuremberg), [129].
- Mexicans, [iii].
- Meyerbeer, Giacomo, [103], [151].
- Miassine, Leonide, [232].
- Middle Ages (choreography of), [78ff], [247].
- Milan School, [151].
- Military dance. See [War dance].
- Milon (French composer and ballet master), [91], [94], [101].
- Mimii (Roman dancers), [74].
- Minerva, [54].
- Minuet (comparison of, to Greek dances), [70];
- (in Lou Gue), [80];
- (in 17th-cent. French court), [86], [147f].
- Miriam (Biblical character), [19].
- Mirror Dance, [192].
- Mohammedans, [21].
- Molière, [86].
- Mongolian tribes (dancing of, compared with Indians), [28];
- (use of Pyrrhic dance by), [60].
- Monteverdi, [82].
- Moors, [46];
- (influence of, on Spanish dances), [50f], [105], [106], [112].
- Mordkin, Mikail, [185], [187], [220], [221], [222], [248].
- Moreau (painting of Salome dance), [45].
- Morocco (Almeiis dancing), [21].
- Morris Dances, [113ff].
- Moscow (Imperial Ballet School), [172];
- (opera house), [175].
- Moses, [43], [44].
- Moujiks, [172], [178].
- Mount Ida, [54].
- Moussorgsky, Modest, [104], [171], [181], [224].
- Movement (rel. to sound), [238].
- Mozart, v, [101], [102f], [206].
- Müller, Max (cited), [60], [62].
- Munich (guild dance), [129].
- Muravieva (ballerina), [151].
- Murcia (folk-dances of), [106].
- Muses (Egyptian), [13];
- (Greek), [10], [54], [57].
- Museums. See [British Museum], [Petrograd Museum], [Naples Museum].
- Music (of Japanese), [38];
- (in Greek dances), [58];
- (influenced by Russian ballet), [176];
- (as underlying principle of dancing), [198];
- (in relation to eurhythmics), [235], [236f], [242];
- (relation to gesture), [240], [248];
- (in rel. to modern ballet), [249ff];
- (syncopated, of America), [265].
- Musical notation (Arabic), [17], [47];
- (Egyptian), [17];
- (Spanish), [17];
- (Chinese), [33].
- Muyniera (Galician folk-dance), [106].
- Mysteries. See [Eleusinian Mysteries], [Dionysian Mysteries].
- Mysteries of Demetrius, [69].
- N
- Naples Museum, [69].
- Napoleon, [102], [148].
- Nationalism (expressed in folk-dancing), [3], [113];
- (rel. to arts), [104ff];
- (in Scandinavia), [104];
- (in Russia), [104f];
- (in Irish folk-dance), [119f];
- (in Finnish folk-dances), [132f].
- Naturalistic School, [195ff], [232f].
- Nature (expression of, in dancing), [196].
- Nausicaa, [52].
- Nautch Dance, [209].
- Nautch girls, [26].
- Naxos, [54].
- Neo-Hellenism, [245].
- Neoptolemus, [60].
- Nero, [74], [75].
- Nicomedes of Pithynia, [55].
- Nielsen, Augusta, [164].
- Nijinsky, Waslaw, [220], [221], [222], [224], [226], [229], [248].
- Nijny Novgorod, [140].
- Nile (centre of ancient dancing), [10].
- Nina (French ballet), [94].
- Notation. See [Musical notation].
- Noverre, Jean Georges, [vi], [10], [87], [89], [91], [99], [151], [152], [180], [196].
- Novikoff (Russian ballet dancer), [185].
- Novitzkaya (ballerina), [151], [181].
- Nude Bayaderes, [189].
- Nudity (in Egyptian dances), [18];
- (in Greek dances), [54f];
- (in modern degenerate dances), [193].
- Nuitter, Charles Louis Étienne (as ballet composer), [151], [152].
- Numa (mythical founder of Roman sacred dance), [10], [73].
- Nuremberg (its guild dance), [129].
- Nut Cracker Suite (Tschaikowsky), [185].
- Nymphs, dances of (in Dionysian Mysteries), [68f].
- O
- Oberammergau Passion Play (comparison with Chinese ‘Historical Ballet’), [33].
- Obertass (Polish dance), [136].
- Oboe (in Indian dance), [27].
- Odyssey (cited), [52].
- [L’]Oiseau de Feu (ballet), [231].
- Ojibways, [39].
- Olaf den Hellige (Danish ballet), [163].
- Olympic games, [54].
- Opera (influenced by Russian ballet), [176];
- (in rel. to modern ballet), [265].
- Opera houses, [175].
- See also [Paris Opéra]; [Moscow (opera house)].
- [L’]Oracle (ballet), [92].
- ‘Oranges and Lemons’ (British folk-dance), [120].
- ‘Orchestra’ (in Greek dance), [63].
- Orchestration (in 15th-cent. ballets), [82].
- Orient, dancing in, [3].
- See also [China], [India], [Japan], etc.
- Oriental dances (European imitations), [208f].
- Orpheus’ Descent into Hell (ballet by Noverre), [90].
- Orpheus and Euridice (17th-cent. ballet), [179].
- Osiris cult, [15f].
- Ostrovsky, [104f], [171], [177].
- [La] Otero (Spanish dancer), [210], [211].
- Owl Dance (Greek), [69].
- P
- Paësiello, Giovanni, v.
- Paimensoitaja (Finnish folk-dance), [133].
- Painting, [235];
- (influenced by Russian ballet), [176];
- (in relation to eurhythmics), [239].
- Pallas, [74], [75].
- Pan (Greek and Egyptian deity), [57];
- (Roman), [74].
- Pantin (amateur stage at), [101].
- Pantomime (in Chinese dancing), [31ff];
- (in Japanese dancing), [36ff];
- (in American Indian dances), [41f];
- (Arabian), [47f];
- (Roman), [74], [76f];
- (mediæval sacred), [81];
- (in Spanish folk-dance), [111];
- (in Roumanian folk-dance), [138];
- (in Salome dance), [191];
- (used by Duncan), [199];
- (in rel. to music), [249].
- [Le] Papillon (ballet), [159], [186].
- Paris (Italian court pantomime introduced), [10];
- (‘Fatima’ sensation), [22];
- (ecclesiastical attitude toward dancing), [81];
- (18th-cent. ballet), [91];
- (popularity of the Psyche ballet), [92];
- (Camargo), [100];
- (Taglioni), [153].
- Paris Opéra, [91], [100].
- Paris School, [151].
- Pas bourrée, [97].
- Pas coupé, [95].
- Pas d’allemande, [20].
- Pas de basque, [97];
- (in Passepied), [149].
- Pas de bourrée emboîté, [97].
- Pas de cheval (in Egyptian dances), [18].
- Pas marché, [95].
- Pas sauté, [98].
- Passepied, [149].
- Paul, Adolf, [257].
- Paul, Czar, [178f], [181].
- Paul et Virginie (French ballet), [92].
- Paulli, Simon Holger, [152].
- Pavana (Murcian folk-dance), [106].
- Pavane, [70];
- (characteristics), [87];
- (in 17th-cent. French court), [86], [144].
- Pavilion d’Armide (ballet), [226], [229].
- Pavlowa, Anna, [vi], [171], [175f], [183], [185], [186f], [187], [215], [220], [222], [247].
- Pecour (ballet dancer), [87], [88].
- Peer Gynt Suite (as ballet), [201].
- [La] Peri (ballet), [158].
- Pericles, [70].
- Perrot (ballet dancer and composer), [152], [154], [158].
- Persian Graveyard Dance, [21].
- Peter the Great, [179].
- Petipa, Marius, [vi], [21], [151], [159], [182f], [196], [219];
- (quoted on Petrograd Imperial Ballet School), [173f].
- Petipa school, [185].
- Petit battements, [95].
- [Les] Petits Riens (Noverre and Mozart), [91].
- Petrograd (Museum), [13];
- (Imperial Ballet School), [172];
- (opera house), [175].
- Petrouchka (Stravinsky), [229ff].
- Pharaohs (dancing in the court of), [17].
- Philip of Macedonia, [55].
- Philippus (Roman consul), [76].
- Philosophic symbolism (in Indian dance), [29].
- Phœnicians, [57].
- Physical exercises, [239].
- Pipe (Egyptian), [8], [18].
- Pipes (in Graveyard Dance), [22];
- (in 15th-cent. Italian ballet), [82].
- Pirouette, [94], [97], [150], [163];
- (in Egyptian dancing), [18], [20].
- Plaasovaya (Russian folk-dance), [140].
- Plastomimic choreography, [247ff].
- Plato (quoted), [iv];
- (cited), [52], [58], [67], [69].
- Plots (for ballets), [250].
- Plutarch (cited), [iv], [14], [45], [67].
- Poetry, [235].
- Pointes, [163], [215].
- Poland (folk-dancing), [136].
- Pollux, [54].
- Polo (Moorish dance), [106].
- Polonaise (Polish folk-dance), [136].
- Polowetsi dance (Cossack), [140].
- Portugal (mediæval strolling ballets), [80f].
- Positions. See [Steps].
- Poushkin, [178].
- Prévost, Mme., [100].
- Priapus, [54].
- Price, Waldemar (Danish ballet dancer), [164].
- Primitive dances (rel. to sexual selection), [6].
- Primitive peoples, [3ff].
- Prince Igor, [228].
- Professional dancing, [7];
- (Egyptian), [18].
- Provence, [80f], [122], [131].
- Prussia (Fackeltanz), [128].
- Pskoff, [140].
- Psyche (French ballet), [92].
- Psychology, [1ff], [24], [45], [136], [139].
- Pugni, Cesare (ballet composer), [152].
- Pygmalion and Galatea (ballet), [99].
- Pylades (Roman dancer), [73], [74f].
- Pyrrhic dance, [60f].
- Pythian games, [54].
- Q
- Quadrille (French social dance), [122].
- Quintilian (quoted), [72].
- R
- Rabinoff, Max, [188].
- Racial characteristics, [11].
- ‘Ragtime,’ [263].
- Rainbow Dance, [192].
- Ramble (Indian goddess of dancing), [24f].
- Realism, [157], [249f].
- Réception d’une jeune Nymphe à la Court de Terpsichore, [152].
- Reed pipes. See [Pipes].
- Reger, Max, [205].
- Regnard (quoted), [88].
- Reinach, Théodore (cited on Greek arts), [69].
- René of Provence (author of mediæval ballet), [80].
- Reno (painter of Salome dance), [45].
- Rheinländer (German dance), [131].
- Rhythm, [1], [2];
- (in naturalistic dancing), [196], [198];
- (as basis of all arts), [235];
- (in Jacques-Dalcroze system), [239], [244];
- (in ballet), [250].
- Rhythmic gymnastics, [234ff], [240], [249].
- Richelieu, [86], [100].
- Rigaudon, [148f].
- Rimsky-Korsakoff, Nicolai, [151], [152], [171], [183], [224], [226], [254].
- Rinaldo and Armida (ballet by Noverre), [90], [99].
- Risti Tants (Esthonian folk-dance), [126ff].
- Robert of Normandie (ballet), [164].
- Robespierre, [93].
- Robinson, Louis (cited on dance instinct), [3].
- Rodin (quoted), [196].
- Romaika (Slavic folk-dance), [137].
- Rome (dancing in), [3], [72ff], [247];
- (sacred dancing), [9];
- (imitation of Greek dances), [10];
- (Pyrrhic dance), [60].
- Roman Church. See [Church].
- Romulus, [73].
- Rondes (similarity to Eleusinian Mysteries), [67];
- (French folk-dance), [121].
- Roses of Love (ballet by Noverre), [90].
- Rossini, [101], [103], [151].
- Rouen, [100].
- Roumania (folk-dance), [137f].
- Round. See [Ronde].
- Royal Academy of Dancing (French), [86].
- Rubinstein, Anton, [183], [256];
- (composed ‘Tarantella’), [124].
- Rubinstein, Ida, [45].
- Ruggera (Italian folk-dancing), [124].
- Rune tunes (Finnish), [63].
- Russia (Imperial Ballet), [92];
- (influence of, on choreography), [102];
- (nationalistic tendencies), [104f];
- (folk-dancing), [139ff], [262];
- (influences on ballet), [169];
- (ballets of opera house), [175];
- (influence of Duncan school), [200], [206], [218f].
- Russian Imperial Ballet School, [90f], [105], [172].
- Russian Imperial Dramatic Dancing School, [180].
- Ruthenia (folk-dancing). See [Slavic folk-dances].
- S
- Sacchetto, Rita, [203], [212].
- Sacre du Printemps (Stravinsky), [231].
- Sacred dancing (in rel. to folk-lore), [9];
- (Egyptian), [15];
- (Indian), [26];
- (Japanese), [38];
- (American Indian), [39], [41f];
- (Greek), [59], [67ff];
- (Roman), [73f].
- Sadler, Michael T. H. (quoted on Jacques-Dalcroze School), [235f].
- Sahara Graveyard Dance, [21].
- Sailor’s Dance (Dutch), [135].
- St. Basil (cited), [iii].
- St. Carlos (celebrated by strolling ballet), [80].
- St. Denis, Ruth, [208], [212].
- Saint-Léon, [159].
- St. Matthew (quoted), [44].
- St. Petersburg (court ballet), [90], [161].
- See also [Petrograd].
- Saint-Saëns, Camille, [186].
- St. Vitus’ Dance, [129].
- Sakuntala (French ballet), [152].
- Sallé, Mlle., [94], [99], [100].
- Salmacida Spolia (Sir William Davenant), [84].
- Salome dances, [44f], [191].
- Salome (Richard Strauss), [45].
- Saltarello (Italian folk-dance), [124].
- Sangalli, Rita, [159].
- Sappho, [70], [94].
- Sarabande, [146].
- Sarasate, Pablo, [108].
- Satyr Dance (in Dionysian Mysteries), [68], [69].
- Sauvages de la Mer du Sud, [Les] (French ballet), [94].
- Savage peoples. See [Primitive peoples].
- Savinskaya, [206].
- Saxony (folk-dancing), [130].
- Scaliger, Joseph Justa (cited), [54].
- Scandinavia (folk-dances), [2], [133];
- (nationalistic tendencies), [104f];
- (waltz), [131];
- (naturalistic school), [205].
- Schafftertanz (of Munich), [129].
- Scheherezade (Rimsky-Korsakoff), [152], [226].
- Schiller, [166], [250].
- Schirjajeff, [182].
- Schliemann (Egyptologist), cited, [17].
- Schmoller (Saxonian folk-dance), [130].
- Schnitzler, Arthur, [166].
- Schönberg, Arnold, [205].
- Schools of dancing, (Petipa), [185];
- (Duncan), [197];
- (Jacques-Dalcroze), [197f].
- See [Academies].
- Schopenhauer (cited), [250];
- (quoted), [64].
- Schleiftänze, [129].
- Schreittänze. [129].
- Schubert, Franz, [103f], [254].
- Scotch Reel, [118f].
- Scotland (folk-dancing), [118f].
- Scribe, Eugène. [103].
- Schuhplatteltanz (Bavarian folk-dance), [129f].
- Schumann, Robert, [206].
- Sculpture (in rel. to dancing), [173], [196], [235].
- Seguidilla (Spanish dance), [50].
- Sensationalism, [190].
- Seroff, Alexander Nikolayevitch, [104], [171], [181].
- Serpentine Dance, [189], [190f].
- Servia (folk-dancing).
- See [Slavic folk-dances].
- Setche, Egyptologist (cited), [14].
- Seville (church dancing), [iv], [78];
- (court dancing), [47].
- Sex instinct (in rel. to folk-dancing), v, [11], [134], [139].
- Shakespeare (cited on the jig), [119].
- Sharp, Cecil (quoted on Morris dances), [113f].
- Shean Treuse (Scotch folk-dance), [118].
- Shintoism (Japanese religion), [36].
- Shirley, James, [83].
- Sibelius, Jean, [205], [254], [256], [257f].
- Siberia (folk-dancing), [140].
- Siciliana (Italian folk-dance), [124].
- [Le] Sicilien (ballet), [153].
- Sieba (ballet), [152].
- Siebensprung (Swabian folk-dance), [130].
- Singing (in Finnish dances), [133].
- Singing ballet, [177f].
- Singing Sirens, [57].
- Skirt Dance, [189], [212].
- Skoliasmos (in Dionysian mysteries), [68f].
- Skralat (Swedish folk-dance), [133].
- Slavic folk-dances, [136ff].
- Sleeping Beauty (Tschaikowsky), [152], [185].
- Snake dances (Lithuanian), [135];
- (American Indian), [38], [41], [135].
- Snegourotchka (Rimsky-Korsakoff). See [Snow Maiden].
- Snow Maiden (Rimsky-Korsakoff), [152], [177], [183f].
- Social dancing (Greek), [54f];
- (Polish), [136];
- (in 17th cent.), [144ff].
- See also [Court dancing].
- Socrates, [54], [56].
- Sokolova (ballerina), [151], [183].
- Solomon, Hebrew king, [43], [44].
- Sophocles, [62].
- Sound (in relation to movement), [238]
- [La] Source (Delibes), [152].
- Spain (religious dancing), [iv];
- (folk-dancing), [2], [105ff], [210ff];
- (choreographic art of Moors), [46], [50f];
- (mediæval strolling ballets), [80f].
- Spartan dance, [54f], [60].
- Spectre de la Rose (ballet), [221], [223], [229].
- Spendiaroff, [256].
- Spinning top principle, [216].
- Stage dancing (in Middle Ages), [81], [148].
- See also [Professional dancing].
- Steps, [2];
- (in American Indian dances), [42];
- (in courante), [88];
- (in classic French ballet), [95f];
- (Bolero), [109];
- (Seguidilla), [110];
- (Hungarian folk-dances), [125f];
- (Rigaudon), [149];
- (Bournoville’s reform), [163].
- Stephania (Roman dancer), [77].
- Stewart-Richardson, Lady Constance, [206].
- Stockholm (ballet dancing), [161].
- Stockholm school, [151].
- Stomach Dance (Arabian dance), [3], [21], [22].
- Stone Age, [5].
- Stramboe, Adolph F., [164].
- Strassburg, [129].
- Strauss, Johann, [132].
- Strauss, Richard, [204f], [232].
- Stravinsky, Igor, [185], [229ff].
- Strindberg, August, [165].
- String instruments (Indian), [27].
- Strolling ballets (mediæval), [80f];
- (in French Revolution), [93f].
- Strophic principle, [63].
- Stuck (painter of Salome dance), [45].
- Stuttgart (court), [90], [153].
- Subra, Mlle. (ballerina), [159].
- Su-Chu-Fu (dancing academy), [34].
- Suetonius (cited), [76].
- Sun’s Darling (English masque), [84].
- Svendsen, Johann, [133], [205].
- Svetloff (cited), [218].
- Swan, The (Saint-Saëns), [186].
- Swanhilde (ballet), [167].
- Swan Lake (Russian ballet), [152], [184f].
- Swabia (folk-dancing), [130].
- Sweden (influence on Russian ballet), [169].
- See also [Scandinavia].
- Sword Dance (English), [21], [33], [113], [115ff].
- La Sylphide (Delibes), [152], [153], [154], [156], [163].
- [Les] Sylphides, [175], [221].
- Sylvia (Delibes), [152].
- Symbolism (in Indian dancing), [29], [263f];
- (in Hungarian folk-dancing), [126];
- (in Lada’s dances), [254f];
- (in modern ballet), [258], [265].
- Symons, Arthur (quoted), [264f].
- Symphonic music (as basis for dancing), [200], [206].
- Syrinx (Egyptian instrument), [iv].
- Szolo (Hungarian folk-dance), [126].
- T
- Tabor (in Morris dance), [115].
- Tacitus (cited), [76].
- Taglioni, Maria, [11], [151], [152ff], [156], [157], [193].
- Taglioni, Salvatore, [151], [152], [161].
- Ta-gien (Chinese dance), [32].
- Ta-gu (Chinese dance), [32].
- Ta-knen (Chinese dance), [32].
- Talmud, [43].
- Ta-mao (Chinese dance), [32].
- Tambourine (in Hebrew dance), [19];
- (in Indian dance), [27];
- (with bells, Chinese), [32];
- (in Greek dances), [71];
- (in Spanish dance), [79f], [106];
- (in Tarantella), [122].
- Taneieff, Sergei Ivanovich, [224].
- Tarantella (Italian folk-dance), [122ff].
- Tartar tribes, [140].
- Tascara (Spanish folk-dance), [111f].
- Taubentanz (Black Forest), [130].
- Ta-u (Chinese dance), [32].
- Tcherepnin, [185], [226], [229].
- Technique (Duncan), [199];
- (instrumental), [237];
- (eurhythmic), [239].
- Telemachus, [53].
- Telemaque (French ballet), [92].
- Teleshova (ballerina), [151], [181].
- Telethusa (Roman dancer), [77].
- Tempe Restored (Aurelian Townsend), [84f].
- Temple dancing (Hebraic), [43], [44];
- (Greek), [54f];
- (Esthonian), [127].
- See also [Sacred dancing].
- Terpsichore, [10], [57].
- Terpsichore (ballet by Handel), [99].
- Teu-Kung (Chinese dancing teacher), [31].
- Thackeray (quoted on Taglioni), [154].
- Thales, [59].
- Théatre des Arts, [92].
- Theatre of Dionysius, [64f].
- Thebes, [19].
- Theseus, [iv], [54], [69].
- They (Chinese monarch), [30].
- Tiberius (Roman emperor), [76].
- Tichomiroff, [221].
- Time, [240f].
- Time-marker (in Greek dancing), [70f].
- Time-values, [241].
- Titans, [59].
- Titus (Roman emperor), [34].
- Toe-dance, [215].
- Toledo (church dancing), [iv], [78].
- Toreadoren (ballet), [164].
- Torra (Murcian folk-dance), [106].
- Tourdion (social dance), [150].
- Townsend, Aurelian, [84f].
- Trepak (Russian folk-dance), [140].
- Trescona (Florentine folk-dance), [124].
- Triangle (in English Horn dance), [117].
- Tripoli (Almeiis dancers in), [21].
- Triumph of Love, [87].
- Triumph of Peace (James Shirley), [83].
- Trouhanova, Natasha, [45], [244], [256f].
- Trumpets (in 15th-cent. Italian ballet), [82].
- Tschaikowsky, Peter Ilyitch, [104], [151], [152], [171], [177], [183], [184], [185].
- Tshamuda (Indian goddess), [26].
- Tuileries, [87].
- Tunic, ballerina’s, [215].
- Tunis (Almeiis dancers in), [21].
- Turgenieff, [104], [171];
- (quoted on Elssler), [155f].
- Tuta, [215].
- U
- Uchtomsky, Prince (cited), [28].
- U-gientze (Chinese dance), [32].
- Ulysses, [52].
- Urbino, Duke of, [80].
- V
- Vafva Vadna (Swedish folk-dance), [133f].
- Valdemar (Danish ballet), [163], [164].
- Valencia, [iv], [78], [107f].
- Valencian Bishop (advocate of dancing), [78].
- Valentine, Gwendoline (ballet dancer), [206].
- Vanka (Cossak dance), [140].
- Van Staden (Colonel), [179].
- Vaudoyer, J. L., [229].
- Vaughan, Kate (ballet dancer), [193].
- Veie de Noue (in Lou Gue), [80].
- Veils (used in Greek dancing), [66], [70].
- Venera (Indian goddess), [24].
- [La] Ventana (ballet), [166].
- Venus of Cailipyge, [76f].
- Verbunkes (Hungarian folk-dance), [126].
- [La] Vestale (ballet), [153].
- Vestris brothers, [91], [101], [148], [151], [162].
- Viennese court, [90].
- Viennese School, [151].
- Villiani, Mme. (ballet dancer), [22], [193].
- Vingakersdans (Swedish folk-dance), [134].
- Violin (in 15th-cent. Italian ballet), [82];
- (in Spanish folk-dance), [107].
- Vision of Salome (ballet), [201].
- Vocal ballets, [177f].
- Vocal music (dependence of dancing upon), [8];
- (in Greek dances), [58].
- Voisins, Comte Gilbert des, [154].
- Volga, [140].
- Volinin (Russian ballet dancer), [185], [187], [248].
- Volkhonsky, Prince Serge (quoted), [197f], [212f], [215ff], [232], [249].
- Voltaire (cited), [99].
- Volte (French folk-dance), [131].
- Vuillier (quoted on Spanish temple dancing), [79f].
- Vulcan, [53].
- Vulture Dance (Greek), [69].
- W
- Wagnerian operas, [63].
- Waldteufel, [132].
- Waltz, [131f].
- Walzer, [131].
- War-dances (primitive), [5f];
- (Pyrrhic), [60];
- (Roman), [73];
- (Hungarian), [126].
- Warsaw (opera house), [175].
- Weber, Carl Maria von, [91], [103], [229].
- Weber, Louise, [192].
- Weiss, Mme., [159].
- Wellman, Christian, [180].
- Whistles (in American Indian dances), [41];
- (in Morris dance), [115].
- Whitehall (masques performed at), [83].
- Wiesenthal, Elsa and Grete, [202f], [212].
- Wilhelm II, [130].
- Wilkinson, Sir Gardner, on Egypt (cited), [18f];
- (quoted), [20f].
- Women (earliest appearance of, in ballet), [87].
- Wood-wind instruments (Indian), [27].
- Wsevoloshky, [183].
- Würtemberg (folk-dancing), [130].
- X
- Xenophon (quoted), [55f].
- Xeres, [iv].
- Y
- Yorkshire (English sword dance of), [116].
- Yu-Wang (Chinese emperor), [33].
- Z
- Zarzuela (Spanish comic opera), [63f], [106].
- Zeus, [59].
- Zorongo (Spanish folk-dance), [111].
- Zulus (war dances of), [5].
- Zunfttänze, [129].
- Zwölfmonatstanz (Würtemberg), [130].