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Hyporchema

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(Redirected fromGeranos)
Historical Greek dance

Thehyporchema (Greek:ὑπόρχημα) was a lively kind of mimic dance which accompanied the songs used in the worship ofApollo, especially among theDorians. It was performed by men and women.[1] It is comparable to thegeranos (γερανός), the ritual "crane dance" associated withTheseus.

A chorus of singers at the festivals of Apollo usually danced around the altar, while several other persons were appointed to accompany the action of the song with an appropriate mimic performance. Hyporchema was thus a lyric dance, and often passed into the playful and comic, whenceAthenaeus[2] compares it with thecordax of comedy. It had, according to the supposition of Müller, like all the music and poetry of the Dorians, originated inCrete, but was at an early period introduced in the island ofDelos, where it seems to have continued to be performed down to the time ofLucian.[3]

A similar kind of dance was thegeranos (crane dance), whichTheseus on his return from Crete was said to have performed in Delos, and which was customary in this island as late as the time ofPlutarch.[4] The leader of this dance was calledgeranoulkos.[5] It was performed with blows, and with various turnings and windings, and was said to be an imitation of the windings of the Cretanlabyrinth. When the chorus was at rest, it formed a semicircle, with leaders at the two wings.[6]

The poems or songs which were accompanied by the hyporchema were likewise called hyporchemata. The first poet to whom such poems are ascribed wasThaletas of Crete: their character must have been in accordance with the playfulness of the dance which bore the same name, and by which they were accompanied. The fragments of the hyporchemata ofPindar confirm this supposition, for their rhythms are peculiarly light, and have a very imitative and graphic character.[7] These characteristics must have existed in a much higher degree in the hyporchematic songs of Thaletas.

Notes

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  1. ^Athenaeus,Deipnosophistae xiv:30. p. 631.
  2. ^Athenaeus, xiv:30. p. 630, &c.
  3. ^Athen. i. p. 15; Lucian, de Saltat. 16; compareMuller, Dor. ii. 8. § 14.[full citation needed]
  4. ^Plutarch,Life of Theseus 21.
  5. ^Hesychius of Alexandria, entry ongeranoulkos.
  6. ^Pollux, iv. 101.[full citation needed]
  7. ^Bockh, de Meir. Find. p. 201, &c., and p. 270.[full citation needed]

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