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At a time when Norwich was the second city in the country
it may have attracted a smarter and larger than usual number of
dancing masters to set up practice. Between 1690 and 1815 there
were 21 of them, between one and three being in practice at any one time. Still
more practised in Norfolk, based in Great Yarmouth and King’s Lynn.
A few worked from a single site; most worked a circuit, twenty
miles in radius, of small
towns and villages. They often taught in schools on their circuit,
and some masters, assisted by their wives, also ran boarding schools.
In spite of their claims to gentility, the masters were a piratical set, apt
to raid each others’ territories for the Most Commodious Room and
to advertise their opportunism as being in the best interest of
their pupils. As well as fashionable social dance, the masters taught fencing (having
an excellent understanding of self-preservation) French (the language
of fashionable society) and etiquette – which is ironic.
Francis Noverre’s establishment of his Academy in Norwich in 1793 was less piracy
and more a coup d’ état. There was already a dominant practice
in the city, with a hundred-year history under John Boseley followed
by the Christian dynasty. Noverre, whose family history was also dance history,
secured the smartest location, the Assembly House, secured the
smartest location, the
Assembly House, and out-manoeuvred the competition, who were justifiable indignant.
As a result of this study of dancing masters, Noverre
was extracted from the heap and given his own publication, Mr Noverre’s
Academy (Marsh, 2005)1.
I had intended to summarise The Rest in a companion volume,
but it has become clear that the Boseley/Christian practice was
as important as Noverre’s, and it forms the centre-piece of this account.
There is often little information about other practices. In the
case of Boseley and Christian there is plenty of information about their personal
lives in legal documents and parish registers but not enough information about
their profession.
As a general rule what we know about the masters
as a profession comes from their advertisements in the local press: the Norwich
Post from 1711, Norwich Gazette from 1756, followed by the Norwich
Mercury and Norfolk Chronicle. Occasionally a master advertises
the publication of his collection of dances in the style of the
London masters such as John Weaver, but none of the Norfolk publications are extant except
for a Treatise on dancing, published in 1815 by Noverre’s assistant
Francis Lambert. 1 Recently revised and enlarged with new material,
which will be available in due course, on the Norwich Early Dance Group
website (www.norwichearlydance.org/uk).
1 Recently revised and enlarged with new material, which will
be available in due course, on the Norwich Early Dance Group website (www.norwichearlydance.org.uk).
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