Now that explains why I've never really been sure which was which! Thanks so much.
Dorcas
-----Original Message-----
From: callers-bounces(a)sharedweight.net [mailto:callers-bounces@sharedweight.net] On Behalf
Of Chris Page
Sent: Tuesday, August 02, 2011 11:54 PM
To: Caller's discussion list
Subject: Re: [Callers] Etymology of "Sicilian Circle"
On Tue, Aug 2, 2011 at 11:15 AM, John Sweeney <info(a)contrafusion.co.uk> wrote:
I have a Sicilian lady at our dances who is demanding
to know why the
formation is known as a "Sicilian Circle". Can anyone help?
Thanks,
John
Alan Winston answered this on trad-dance-callers back in 2004. On the
off-chance you're email subscribed to that list, and have a yahoo
account with that email linked to it, the following url should work:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/trad-dance-callers/message/3039
Short answer is that it's from 1800's, when dance masters were giving
dances foreign names to make them sound trendy. Depending on how you
look back then, it's the Sicilian Circle, the Circassian Circle, or
the same formation as "the Spanish Dance."
-Chris Page
San Diego
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