[Preserving life and limb on the stage of death: the Dance of Death by Dr Salomon van Rusting]

Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd. 2012;156(10):A4079.
[Article in Dutch]

Abstract

Salomon van Rusting was a medical doctor from Amsterdam who lived and worked around the early 1700 s. He wrote one of the few Dutch Death Dances, naming it 'Het Schouw-Tooneel des Doods'. A Death Dance was an artistic expression of human death popular in the Late Middle Ages. The traditional Death Dance invited acknowledgement of the vanity of worldly existence ('memento mori') by portraying human subjects' encounters with 'Death'. This paper describes the context in which Van Rusting's work arose and briefly characterizes its highly original and, for the most part, rather burlesque nature. In contrast to other Death Dances, Van Rusting's work does not represent medicine as being powerless in the face of death. His work strikes us as having almost modern confidence in our own ability to avoid an untimely death by living sensibly.

Publication types

  • Biography
  • Historical Article
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Death*
  • Folklore
  • History, 18th Century
  • Humans
  • Medicine in the Arts*
  • Netherlands

Personal name as subject

  • Salomon van Rusting