-
William Daunce (also Dauntesey) (c. 1500 – 28 May 1548) was an
English Member of
Parliament during the
Tudor period. He was the son of Sir John
Daunce, General...
-
recorded in
English in the mid-15th
century as
Morisk dance,
moreys daunce,
morisse daunce, i.e. 'Moorish dance'. The term
entered English via
Flemish mooriske...
- told her the
Chaunce [chance, here
meaning "account"] Of the
Maids in the
Daunce, 'Peace thy prateing', say'd shee, 'for dee [thy] Leef!' ["Keep quiet, for...
-
Humble Heart",
featuring singing and
dancing by "The New
English Song and
Daunce Companie".
Shaker lifestyle and
tradition is
celebrated in
Arlene Hutton's...
- the
South of England,
where the poet
invites his
listeners to "come ant
daunce wyt me in Irlaunde". The
first native Irish do****entary
evidence of dancing...
-
brennynge hert / she the fyre dyde make //
These daunces truely /
musyke hath me
tought // To lute or
daunce / but it
auayled nought" and so on, where, so...
-
reference was in a
trial of 1590,
where the
accused was
reported to have "
daunced this
reill or
short dance." However, the form may go back to the Middle...
- (23 km) of Hereford. The
account claimed, "Hereford-shire for a morris-
daunce puts downe, not
onely all Kent, but
verie neare (if one had line enough...
- Fortesku, Sir Edw. Chamberlayn, Sir Wm. Rede,
Walter Bulstrode, Sir John
Daunce. Shropshire:—The Earl of Shrewsbury, Sir Ric. Laykyn, Sir Thos. Blount,...
- ISBN 0-7509-2150-1. Kemp, William. "Kemps Nine
Daies Wonder:
Performed in a
Daunce from
London to Norwich". www.gutenberg.org. 52°05′54″N 0°37′00″E / 52...