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- Branle | French, Renaissance, Courtly | Britannica
branle, 12th-century French chain dance adopted (c 1450–c 1650) by European aristocrats, especially in France and in England, where the word branle was anglicized as “brawl ”
- The Society of Folk Dance Historians (SFDH) - Branle
In 16th and 17th century France, a branle (pronounced like English "brawl") was a type of group dance, done in a circle if there were a sufficient number of dancers, or otherwise as an "open circle" with the leader on the left (consistent with Arbeau's teaching that the net movement of the dance was to the left)
- BRANLE Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of BRANLE is one of several couple dances of French origin that were popular in the 16th and 17th centuries, usually in duple measure, mimetic, accompanied by singing, and danced in groups typically in a circle
- Branle De La Fosse Aux Loups (France) - Folk Dance
The name translates as “Branle from the wolf pit” Branles are circle dances from the Alsace region of Eastern France and the name refers to the side to side swaying motions typical of this style of dance
- Branle - Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Branle (XVII) The branle is an old French dance of the 16th century Though French in origin, it spread to most of western Europe Spelling varies greatly: bransle, brangle, brawl, brawle, brall(e), braul(e), or (Scot ) brantle
- The Branle: A Dance In a Line or a Circle - Interlude
The Branle was a group dance, performed by couples in a line or in a circle The name of the dance comes from the French verb ‘branler’, meaning to shake, sway, or wobble because of the sideways steps
- The Branle – Trinity Sacred Dance
The Branle (pronounced Bron’l, though some say Bran-lay, wrongly I think) is a medieval dance from the west and north of Europe Bransle is an older spelling It is also the name of the step which identifies it as either simple (samp-le as in the French), or double (doob-le)
- Branle - Cunnan - Society for Creative Anachronism
The Branle seems to have travelled to Scotland and survived for some time as the brail, but in England it was rarely danced, and of over 2,000 lute pieces from England only ten were called Branle The only extant source for the dance steps to the French branles is Orchesography by Thoinot Arbeau , although Antonius de Arena also makes brief
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