The first authoritative knowledge of the earliest ballroom dances was
recorded toward the end of the 16th century, when Jehan Tabourot, under
the pen name "
Thoinot-Arbeau", published in 1588 his
Orchésographie, a study of late 16th-century French renaissance social dance. Among the dances described were the solemn
basse danse, the livelier
branle,
pavane, and the
galliarde which
Shakespeare called the "cinq pace" as it was made of five steps.
[3]
Galliard in
Siena, Italy, 15th century
In 1650 the
Minuet, originally a peasant dance of
Poitou, was introduced into Paris and set to music by
Jean-Baptiste Lully and danced by the King
Louis XIV in public, and would continue to dominate ballroom from that time until the close of the 18th century.
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