Bibasis (dance)

The Bibasis (Greek: βίβασις) was a common dance at ancient Sparta, which was much practised both by men and women.[1]

History

The Bibasis, a dance of men and women, was of the gymnastic kind.[2] The dance consisted in springing rapidly from the ground, and striking the feet behind; a feat of which the Spartan woman Lampito, in the Lysistrata of Aristophanes,[3] prides herself.[1] She derives her strength and her beauty essentially from this exercise.[4]

γυμνάδδομαι γὰρ[lower-alpha 1] καὶ ποτὶ πυγὰν ἅλλομαι.
Αn' I can loup an' fling an' kick my hurdies.[5]

The dance consisted in kicking one's own buttocks, to music, as rapidly as possible.[6] The number of successful strokes was counted, and the most skilful received prizes in competitions. We are told by a verse from an epigram, which has been preserved by Pollux,[7] that a Laconian girl had won by dancing the Bibasis a thousand times, which was more than had ever been done before.[2][1]

Χήλι' ἅδε ποκὰ βίβαντι, πλεῖστα δὴ τᾶν πήποκα.[lower-alpha 2]
jumping a thousand times, the most ever.[8]

References

  1. Smith 1890, p. 594.
  2. Müller 1830, iv. 6, § 8.
  3. Ar. Lys. 82.
  4. Reisch 1896, p. 391.
  5. Rogers 1946, p. 13.
  6. Lawler 1964, p. 121.
  7. Poll. iv. 102.
  8. Sider Dec. 2021, p. 124.).

Notes

  1. or: γε.
  2. or: Χείλια ποκὰ βίβαντι, πλεῖϲτα δὴ τῶν πήποκα.

Sources

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