• 2 days ago
💀 L'Ă©pidĂ©mie qui a fait danser les gens jour et nuit

En 1518, la ville de Strasbourg a Ă©tĂ© tĂ©moin d’un phĂ©nomĂšne inexplicable : une "peste dansante". 🎭

Tout a commencĂ© avec une femme, Frau Troffea, qui s’est mise Ă  danser sans relĂąche dans les rues. đŸŽ¶

⏳ En quelques jours, des dizaines de personnes l’ont imitĂ©e, et en un mois, elles Ă©taient des centaines. Incapables de s’arrĂȘter, beaucoup ont succombĂ© Ă  l’épuisement, des crises cardiaques ou des AVC. 📈

đŸŽ» Les autoritĂ©s, pensant rĂ©soudre le problĂšme, ont engagĂ© des musiciens et amĂ©nagĂ© des espaces publics pour encourager la danse. Mais cette approche a empirĂ© la situation.

📜 Ce n’était pas un cas isolĂ© : entre 1200 et 1600, d’autres Ă©pidĂ©mies similaires ont frappĂ© l’Europe. 🌍

🍄 Les causes restent un mystĂšre, avec des hypothĂšses allant de l’empoisonnement par un champignon hallucinogĂšne Ă  un trouble psychologique collectif, peut-ĂȘtre dĂ©clenchĂ© par les conditions de vie difficiles de l’époque. 🧠

Source : Le monde 📰

Pour plus de vidĂ©os sur les mystĂšres historiques, abonnez-vous Ă  Omniscience. đŸ“Č


#Omniscience #history #dance #story #ÉpidĂ©mie #Histoire #Strasbourg #france #virus #epidemy #mystery #psychology #occult #society #Danse #MystĂšre #Psychologie #CuriositĂ© #PhĂ©nomĂšneInexpliquĂ© #Sciences #SociĂ©tĂ© #Croyances #Culture

Transcript
00:00This virus pushed the people of Strasbourg to dance until their death.
00:02In July 1518, a dancing plague struck the city of Strasbourg, also known as the Dancing Epidemic.
00:07This inexplicable phenomenon pushed hundreds of people to dance relentlessly day and night for more than a month.
00:12Some succumbed to heart attacks, brain vascular accidents, or simply to exhaustion.
00:16It all started with a woman named Fro Troféa, who started dancing in a street in Strasbourg for several days in a row.
00:21In a week, 34 other people started dancing, and in a month, there were around 400.
00:26Desperate by the situation, the authorities of the time thought that the solution was to encourage dancing.
00:30They hired musicians and set up public spaces, but this approach aggravated the exhaustion of the victims and amplified the crisis.
00:36It was not an isolated case. Between 1200 and 1600, around twenty similar episodes were reported in Europe, although less spectacular.
00:42The last reported case would have taken place in Madagascar in 1863.
00:45To this day, scientists still fail to explain with certainty the causes of this strange epidemic.
00:50Hypotheses go from poisoning by a hallucinogenic mushroom like the Ergo de Seigle to a collective psychogenic disorder,
00:55which can be triggered by difficult living conditions and religious beliefs of the time.
00:58For more videos on the subject, subscribe to Amine Science.

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