How old is cane dance and how did it come about? I've heard two different accounts.
+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 20 of 20
Thread: History of Cane?
-
04-28-2007 06:46 PM #1I could get used to this!
- Join Date
- Feb 2005
- Posts
- 61
History of Cane?
04-29-2007 11:09 AM #2A journey of ten thousand miles begins with a single post.







- Join Date
- Apr 2007
- Location
- St. Louis, MO, USA
- Posts
- 14,181
There was a thread on Old Bhuz with a lot of new (to me) info...
I don't remember how to get into Old Bhuz to post a link to that thread, though. Anyone?Last edited by Lauren_; 04-29-2007 at 11:52 AM. Reason: to remove info that was just flat wrong.
04-29-2007 11:22 AM #3Mega BHUZzer




- Join Date
- May 2004
- Posts
- 2,812
Here's a thread I started on the subject:
http://bellydancing.bhuz.com/forum/topic.asp?...ms=Stick+dance
Lauren, I get into Classic Bhuz by going into the Announcement forums and finding the link in the Classic Bhuz is back thread.
I should figure out a way to make a shortcut for myself--I go there a lot.
04-29-2007 11:51 AM #4A journey of ten thousand miles begins with a single post.







- Join Date
- Apr 2007
- Location
- St. Louis, MO, USA
- Posts
- 14,181
Thanks, Taj! That was the thread I meant, but I had the details wrong. In fact, I should go edit my previous post before it gets lodged wrong in someone else's memory.
I'm still a little confused about exactly WHEN the women's Saidi cane dance originated, and where/when/how/why/whether it's 'really' done in by Saiidi women in an 'offstage' environment.
04-29-2007 03:43 PM #5I could get used to this!
- Join Date
- Feb 2005
- Posts
- 61
danged old Bhuz
Darn it! ,m:: I searched the archives for "assaya" and "cane", but didn't think to look for stick. Sorry for re-hashing another old thread. I did read all the entries under the old thread and there is still no defitive answer on the first documented date of stick dance and who did it.
04-29-2007 06:03 PM #6Mega BHUZzer




- Join Date
- May 2004
- Posts
- 2,812
There's no such thing as "re-hashing" on Bhuz!
Btw, why don't you share with us the two accounts you've heard?Last edited by Taj; 04-29-2007 at 06:08 PM. Reason: Extreme glass of wine
04-29-2007 08:36 PM #7A journey of ten thousand miles begins with a single post.







- Join Date
- Jul 2001
- Posts
- 12,250
Welcome to the wonderful world of folk tradition.I did read all the entries under the old thread and there is still no defitive answer on the first documented date of stick dance and who did it.
04-29-2007 10:40 PM #8I could get used to this!
- Join Date
- Feb 2005
- Posts
- 61
04-30-2007 02:01 AM #9Established BHUZzer


- Join Date
- Oct 2002
- Posts
- 603
Arwen, I know I have read in several places that Tatib dance existed in Ancient Egypt and is depicted on Ancient Egyptian Templets or Temple carvings. I recently read an article that this dance was carried to Somolia in 2000 b.c. on the Frankenscence route. The article did not give references.
But maybe this is enough info to help you get started on some research on the net. Let us know what you find out.
It would be cool to find out the first documented date. Hopefully you will find an Egyptologist site that has this info, otherwise it sounds like alot of research.
Also, I have read that this dance is the only surviving dance from Ancient Egypt and appears to performed in the same way as depicted. The article I read about the Somolians performing this dance appears to be the same as performed in upper Egypt. One more point, after seeing a video clip of this same dance in Dubai, I read that this dance is thought to of been brought by Egyptian Trade routes to Dubai, but no dates on that.
Book I read about Dubai Tahtib dance in - World Dance Series "Middle Eastern Dance".
My favorite clip of Dubai Tahtib dance -
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KnMEmuFgyms
05-02-2007 10:54 AM #10Master BHUZzer





- Join Date
- Oct 2003
- Posts
- 4,132
to some , the cane is the dance partner...some feel, it is the "male" image .we were taught it came from saidi horse men, who use the stick dance, and actually do it standing on horse back.one of our members saw all this in egypt.
05-03-2007 03:47 PM #11Established BHUZzer


- Join Date
- Dec 2003
- Posts
- 857
There are also cane dances in the Gulf as well as the Levant. Let's not forget that!
05-03-2007 04:14 PM #12Ultimate BHUZzer






- Join Date
- Feb 2006
- Location
- Iowa City, Iowa
- Posts
- 7,668
Arwen, both accounts you heard are correct. Here's what Mahmoud Reda said...
The Saidi men's stick dance as we know it today did originate as the men carrying sticks to fight off predators, either 4-legged or human, who might try to attack them or their livestock in the fields. It evolved into a martial art known as tahtib, done to help men keep their skills fresh. Even today there are periodic tahtib competitions. The martial art in turn evolved into a dance that men performed.
The women's cane dance arose as a means of lightly teasing one's brothers, husbands, and fathers about their manly sticks. Because the woman is essentially saying, "That stick doesn't make you such a manly man, see, I can play with a stick too!" the Saidi women's stick dance is done with a girly-girl attitude.
Regarding the assertion that tahtib drawings have been found in ancient tombs, I'm not famliar with that one. I wonder which tombs, and what the drawings looked like! I know I didn't see anything like that in the tombs of Saqqara, but then Saqqara isn't in the Said, so maybe it was found somewhere around Luxor? I'd love to know!
05-04-2007 03:44 AM #13I could get used to this!
- Join Date
- Feb 2005
- Posts
- 61
05-04-2007 08:30 AM #14Just Starting!
- Join Date
- May 2006
- Posts
- 45
My officemate is an Egyptologist so I've asked her about this. She herself doesn't know of any offhand (her reply was,"errr, I've seen pictures of people being beaten with sticks while tied to posts with skulls on them?") but has a vague memory of seeing pictures of children playing with sticks. She's going to ask some of her Egyptology colleagues though to see if anybody has come across anything in their research. Interpretation of tomb paintings can be quite controvercial however (and indeed any ancient images, I focussed quite a lot of Upper Palaeolithic rock art as an undergraduate and the problems are even more pronounced there because of their age and how little we have left) what may look like dancing to one person could actually be depicting something else.
05-04-2007 11:16 AM #15Mega BHUZzer




- Join Date
- May 2004
05-04-2007 06:38 PM #16Official BHUZzer

- Join Date
- Nov 2004
- Location
- Salt Lake City Utah USA
- Posts
- 273
Wow..once about 11 years ago Bert Balladine had a great video in one of his workshops B/W of course featuring a few rural Saudi tribesmen. Who would drink Datura liquor and dance on the backs of stallions with the Tahtib staff...quite awesome...
05-04-2007 06:40 PM #17Official BHUZzer

- Join Date
- Nov 2004
- Location
- Salt Lake City Utah USA
05-06-2007 12:04 AM #18Advanced BHUZzer



- Join Date
- Apr 2006
- Posts
- 1,382
Shira recently-ish interviewed Reda and asked him All the questions we were all Dying to find out. This ins and outs of the dances he created, his influences, his research even the truth about the melaya leff (yes there are still people out there that believe it is a genuine folk dance)
These interviews are being published in the Zagareet magazine. Not sure how many articles in the series but we are about 3 issues into it by now.
05-06-2007 12:39 AM #19Ultimate BHUZzer






- Join Date
- Feb 2006
- Location
- Iowa City, Iowa
- Posts
- 7,668
Arwen, I interviewed Reda for 3 hours last July, which generated a series of 9 articles. The first 3 articles in the series have been published in Zaghareet Magazine, starting with the November/December 2006 issue which had Reda on the cover. The first article in the series was an introductory overview talking about how Reda did his research, how he created his dances based on his research, etc. The second article in the January/February 2007 issue was devoted to melaya leff, the third in the March/April 2007 issue to the men's Saidi stick dance. I expect the fourth to come out any day now - it will be about hagalla. In each article, I've included a map of Egypt which shows the part of Egypt associated with that particular dance.
You should be able to purchase the back issues from Sharina (the owner of Zaghareet) - her web site is http://www.zaghareet.freeservers.com/ and I'm sure you can find contact info on there.
Which reminds me, I need to email my drafts of articles 5 through 9 to Reda for his review/approval....
05-08-2007 06:57 AM #20Just Starting!
- Join Date
- May 2006
- Posts
- 45
Ok, my officemate has emailed a few people in the Egyptology world and the replies she has had are as follows:
However this is a PhD thesis and seems to be unpublished. You could probably get an interlibrary loan for a copy of it from a university library. I'd really like to see this so I might do it myself as I work at a university.Dr Lesley Kinney discusses the depiction of the stick dance in her PhD dissertation, "Dance, dancers and the performance cohort in the Old Kingdom" (Macquarie University, 2004).
Which is a good point, a further poster has pointed out that in the final link they are wearing a mask which may indicate fencing.I was interested in this as I've had a go at the bellydance version of the stick dance myself! The women's canes are more like walking sticks with a rounded end than a straight stick.
You didn't mention whether the so-called 'dancers' in the tomb paintings were male or female.
Could the dancing scenes you mentioned actually be scenes of fencing? I did a quick search and found these:
Meriroke tomb, 5th Dynasty, 2300 B.C. Saqqara
Petah Hotep tomb, 6th Dynasty, 2250 B.C. Saqqara
Kheroef tomb, 18th Dynasty, 1500 B.C. Luxor
Ramses tomb, 19th Dynasty, 1300 B.C. Luxor
Ramses III temple, 20th Dynasty, 1100 B.C.
Medenithabu
Source http://www.ioa.leeds.ac.uk/1980s/84085.htm
Or even something like this?
http://www.civilization.ca/civil/egy...es/arch61b.jpg
Just a thought ...
And some suggestions for texts on dance in Egypt
Though again one is a PhD thesis.Try these:
Cummings, Janice M. 2000. Temple Dance in Ancient Egypt. Doctoral dissertation; New York: New York University, Department of Music and Performing Arts Professions.
Spencer, Patricia A. 2003. "Dance in Ancient Egypt." Near Eastern Archaeology 66:111-121.
Similar Threads
-
Music for cane (assaya) dance
By carolabrie in forum Belly Dance Traditions & StylesReplies: 45Last Post: 05-28-2012, 07:21 PM -
Raks Assaya/ Saidi Cane Dance
By Mellilahbellydance in forum Belly Dance Traditions & StylesReplies: 31Last Post: 06-13-2007, 11:28 AM
Upcoming Belly Dance Events- May 21:Sillk Road Melody Festival - Kuala Lumpur station
- May 30:WAMED Festival, Perth May 30-Jun 3 2013
- May 31:Austin Belly Dance Convention (ABDC)
- Jun 01:Soraya Zayed Dinner & Dance Show
- Jun 01:Soraya Zayed (aka Soraia Zaied) Teaches & Performs in CA
- Jun 06:The New York Theatrical Bellydance Conference 2013
- Jun 06:Shimmy 2B Free - featuring Princess Farhana
- Jun 07:Shimmy 2B Free - featuring Princess Farhana
- Jun 08:"Cairo By Night" June 8th at Arabesque
- Jun 08:Shimmy 2B Free - featuring Princess Farhana
- Jun 08:Detroit Art of Belly Dance
- Jun 09:Shimmy 2B Free - featuring Princess Farhana
- Jun 13:A-Z Biennial Event, USA 2013
- Jun 13:Keti Sharif - A-Z Teacher Training & Community Dance Workshops
- Jun 14:HOSSAM RAMZY AND SERENA. Workshop and show in Mexico City
Hot Topics- Soheir Zaki and Zizi Mustafa
- Jewel-tone Purple Egyptian Dress
- Pink with purple & gold bedlah-$165
- Seashells!! Red & Blue Egyptian Cabaret
- Tomato Red Costume
- Turkish Lime Green
- Tiger print costume
- Black/Silver/Gold Bedlah
- Short dresses for Palestinian dabke?
- Royal Blue Mumtaz - No Longer Available
- Belly Dance, Poi, Pilates DVDs
- FLIRTY SKIRTY Professional Tribal Fusion Vintage Lace Slit Skirt Belly Dance Costume
- $25 + shipping - Black Velvet Tribal Coin Bra - SOLD
- Yellow Bedlah
- Blue & White Belly Dance Skirt (Joharah)
Statistics- Threads 43,335
- Posts 632,815
- Members 36,100
- Welcome to our newest member, leda


LinkBack URL
About LinkBacks


Reply With Quote
How the heck do you manage to know everything Shira?



Bookmarks