Troika (dance)

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Template:Short description Troika is a Russian performance dance based on Russian folk dances. The Russian word troika means three-horse team/gear, and the dancers imitate the prancing of horses pulling a sled or a carriage.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The first version was created by choreographer Nadezhda Nadezhdina for her folklore dance troupe Beroyzka in 1948.<ref>Кузнецов, Е. А., Влияние творческого наследия мастеров народного танца на формирование эстетического вкуса у студентов хореографических специализаций</ref> Since then this dance is included into repertoires of virtually all Russian ethnographic dance ensembles. Initially, it was a dance for a man and two women,<ref>тройка, Ozhegov's Explanatory Dictionary</ref> but later choreographies with other combinations were created, such as one woman and two men or three women.<ref>Русский народный танец "Тройка" ] [4dancing.ru/blogs/200914/1883/]Template:Better source</ref> Template:Tocright

Other cultures

Similar folk dances are known among other Slavic peoples, e.g., the Polish Trojak.

A Cajun dance of the same name, Troika, exists, similar to the Russian dance.<ref>Cajun Dancing, 1993, Template:ISBN, p. 139</ref> It has been suggestedTemplate:Citation needed that the Cajun version of the dance originated at the times when Cossacks of the Russian tsar army were stationed in Paris.

There was a German contra dance triolet recorded in 1829 for groups of one man and two women.<ref>Контрдансы ХІХв./Контрдансы ХІХв. : Triolet, modern reconstruction based on the book, Eduard Helmke, Neue Tanz- und Bildungsschule, 1829 </ref>

See also

References

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