Examples of using Totentanz in English and their translations into Danish
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Official
-
Medicine
-
Financial
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Official/political
-
Computer
The text in Kleinbasel turns out to be a variant of the so-called Oberdeutscher vierzeiliger Totentanz- as we for instance know it from Heidelberg.
who traditionally appear in Oberdeutscher vierzeiliger Totentanz, and the 15 new ones.
Hellmut Rosenfeld produced the drawing to the left for his book from 1968(Der mittelalterliche Totentanz, picture 21), where Death also plays the bagpipe.
Im Jahre 1529 wird der Totentanz zerstört« 7.
consisted only of the 24 staple participants from Oberdeutscher vierzeiliger Totentanz.
is taken from the book Der Totentanz der Marienkirche in Lübeck by Prof. Hartmut Freytag et al.
I have moved the preacher in the pulpit to the beginning of the dance- because this is where he's placed in other versions of the Oberdeutscher vierzeiliger Totentanz.
On this site I will not use the Augsburger Totentanz, but rather Heidelberg's block book for illustrating the text of the world's oldest dance of death.
I have moved the preacher in the pulpit to the beginning of the dance- because this is where he's placed in other version of the Oberdeutscher vierzeiliger Totentanz.
On this site I will not use the Augsburger Totentanz, but rather Heidelberg's dance of death for illustrating the text of the world's oldest dance of death.
I would rather suggest Heidelberger Totentanz- also known as Doten dantz mit figuren picture to the left.
The text in Kleinbasel reveals that Basel's dance originally has been a variant of Oberdeutscher vierzeiliger Totentanz, as we for instance know it from Heidelberg's dance of death.
It's the so-called Oberdeutscher vierzeiliger Totentanz, as we find in a manuscript from 1443-1447,
Two of the lithographs can be seen at The Virtual Copperplate-Cabinet search for"totentanz.
Berner Totentanz. Death breaks the physician's urine glass with a bone.
One of our sources to the High German 4-lined Dance of Death(Oberdeutscher vierzeiliger Totentanz) is the manuscript Cgm 270.
I'm just quoting Gisela Jaacks in the book Der Totentanz der Marienkirche in Lübeck by Prof. Hartmut Freytag et al.
A third name is» Mittelrheinischer Totentanz«, because of the language,
Bingen is a city along the River Rhine, and this is one of the reasons why this dance of death is also called"Mittelrheinischer Totentanz.
The text in Kleinbasel turns out to be a variant of the so-called Oberdeutscher vierzeiliger Totentanz- as we for instance know it from Heidelberg's block book.