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This is a translation of Raoul-Auger Feuillet's treatise Recueil de contredances mises ... (Paris, 1706), by English dance, dancing master, and writer John Essex. Through the use of diagrams, the manual gives descriptions of floor patterns and motions for the feet and arms, indicates how the dance corresponds to the music, and provides rules for performance of English country dances, known in France as the contredanse (also spelled contredance). Diagrams and music for ten dances are given. Performed as a series of figures by a column of men facing a column of women, the English country dance was one of the most popular ballroom dances during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
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For the furthur improvement of dancing, A treatis of chorography or ye art of dancing country dances after a new character: in which the figures, steps & manner of performing are describ'd, & ye rules demonstrated in an easie method adapted to the meanest capacity
1710, Sold by I. Walsh & P. Randall ... I. Hare ... I. Culen ... & by ye author ...
in English
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Engraved throughout.
Translation of: Recueil de contredances mises en chorégraphie.
Dances written in notation: p. 25-88. Those by John Essex are listed in: Forrester, F.S. Ballet in England, 554.
Available also through the Library of Congress Web site as facsimile page images.
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- Created April 1, 2008
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October 21, 2020 | Edited by MARC Bot | import existing book |
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October 29, 2008 | Edited by ImportBot | add URIs from original MARC record |
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