Online Encyclopedia

MACABRE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 190 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MACABRE  , a

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term applied to a certain type of
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artistic or
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literary composition, characterized by a grim and ghastly humour, with an insistence on the details and trappings of
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death . Such a quality, deliberately adopted, is hardly to be found in ancient Greek and Latin writers, though there are traces of it in Apuleius and the author of the Satyricon . The outstanding instances in
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English literature are John Webster and Cyril Tourneur, with E . A . Poe and' R . L . Stevenson . The word has gained its significance from its use in French, la danse macabre, for that allegorical representation, in
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painting, sculpture and
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tapestry, of the ever-
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present and universal power of death, known in English as the " Dance of Death," and in German as Totentanz . The typical form which the allegory takes is that of a series of pictures, sculptured or painted, in which Death appears, either as a dancing
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skeleton or as a shrunken corpse wrapped in
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grave-clothes to persons representing every age and condition of
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life, and leads them all in a dance to the grave . Of the numerous examples painted or sculptured on the walls of cloisters or church-yards through
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medieval
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Europe few remain except in woodcuts and engravings . Thus the famous series at Basel, originally at the Klingenthal, a nunnery in Little Basel, dated from the beginning of the 14th century . In the
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middle of the 15th century this was moved to the churchyard of the Predigerkloster at Basel, and was restored, probably by Hans Kluber, in 1568; the fall of the wall in 1805 reduced it to fragments, and only drawings of it remain .

A Dance of Death in its simplest form still survives in the Marienkirche at

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Lubeck in. a 15th-century painting on the walls of a
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chapel . Here there are twenty-four figures in couples, between each is a dancing Death linking the groups by outstretched hands, the whole ring being led by a Death playing on a
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pipe . At
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Dresden there is a sculptured life-
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size series in the old Neustadter Kirchhoff, removed here from the palace of Duke George in 1701 after a fire . At
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Rouen in the aitre (atrium) or cloister of St Maclou there also remains a sculptured danse macabre . There was a celebrated fresco of the subject in the cloister of Old St Paul's in
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London, and another in the now destroyed Hungerford Chapel at Salisbury, of which a single woodcut, " Death and the Gallant," alone remains . Of the many engraved reproductions, the most celebrated is the series
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drawn by
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Holbein . Here the long ring of connected dancing couples is necessarily abandoned, and the Dance of Death becomes rather a series of imagines mortis . Concerning the origin of this allegory in painting and sculpture there has been much dispute . It certainly seems to be as early as the 14th century, and has often been attributed to the over-powering consciousness of the presence of death due to the Black Death and the miseries of the
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Hundred Years' War . It has also been attributed to a-form of the Morality, a dramatic
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dialogue between Death and his victims in every station of life, ending in a dance off the stage (see Du Cange, Gloss., s.v . " Machabaeorum chore.") . The origin of the
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peculiar form the allegory has taken has also been found, somewhat needlessly and remotely, in the dancing skeletons on
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late
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Roman sarcophagi and mural paintings at Cumae or
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Pompeii, and a false connexion has been traced with the " Triumph of Death," attributed to Orcagna, in the Campo Santo at Pisa .

The

etymology of the word macabre is itself most obscure . According to Gaston Paris (Romania,
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xxiv., 131; 1895) it first occurs in tee form macabre in
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Jean le Fevre's Res pit de la mart (1376), " Je lis de Macabre la danse," and he takes this accented form to be the true one, and traces it in the name of the first painter of the subject . The more usual explanation is based on the Latin name, Machabaeorum chora . The seven tortured brothers, with their
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mother andEleazar (2 Macc. vi., vii.), wereprominent figures on this hypothesis in the supposed dramatic dialogues . Other connexions have been suggested, as for example with St Macarius, or
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Macaire, the
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hermit, who, according to Vasari, is to be identified with the figure pointing to the decaying corpses in the Pisan " Triumph of Death," or with an Arabic word magbarah, " cemetery." See Peignot, Recherches sur
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les dames
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des marts (1826) ; Douce, Dissertation on the Dance of Death (1833); Massmann, Litteratur der Totentanze (1840) ; J . Charlier de Gerson, La Dance macabre des Stes Innocents de Paris (1874) ; , Seelmann, Die Totentanze des Mittelalters (1893) .

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