She collapsed in a field in the midday heat, her body trembling and writhing. The village doctor was called. He took one look and ordered the musicians to play. For three days and three nights, the woman danced without stopping. When she finally fell still, she was cured. This was not a legend. This was medicine.
At least, that is what people in southern Italy genuinely believed for centuries — and it gave rise to one of the country’s most joyful and enduring traditions.

The Spider at the Centre of It All
In the sun-scorched villages of Salento — the “heel” of Italy’s boot — people genuinely believed that a local wolf spider was deadly. Its bite, they said, caused violent convulsions, fever, hysteria, and uncontrolled movement.
The condition was called tarantism, named after the city of Taranto. And there was only one antidote: music.
Physicians would arrive with their fiddles, tambourines, and bagpipes. The victim — sometimes in the middle of a village square — would begin to dance. Salento’s rugged coastline and whitewashed villages became the stage for these extraordinary scenes, season after season, for hundreds of years.
What Tarantism Actually Looked Like
At its peak — roughly the 15th to 17th centuries — tarantism swept through southern Italy like a strange seasonal illness. The sufferers were mostly women. The crises mostly struck in summer, often during the harvest.
They would suddenly collapse, claim they had been bitten, and enter a kind of frenzied trance. The musicians had to keep playing. If the music stopped, the poison was said to surge again. The dancing could last hours. Sometimes days.
When the dancer finally fell exhausted, the community declared her healed. Across Puglia, Campania, and Calabria, this became part of the fabric of summer life — feared, respected, and central to the culture of the south.
What Was Really Going On
The 17th-century physician Giorgio Baglivi spent years studying tarantism and found something striking: most of the women he observed had not actually been bitten by anything. His conclusion was quietly radical.
What he was witnessing was not a medical crisis. It was a psychological and social one. Tarantism, he believed, gave women a sanctioned way to express what ordinary life forbade: grief, longing, exhaustion, rage.
In communities where women had almost no public voice, the “spider bite” gave permission — to cry out, to move violently, to be seen, and to be held through music by the whole village. Modern anthropologists largely agree: tarantism was a ritual. The spider was never really the culprit.
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The Dance That Survived
By the 18th and 19th centuries, tarantism had largely faded. The frenzied crisis-dances gave way to something brighter: the tarantella. Fast, energetic, performed in pairs, with a pulsing tambourine keeping the beat, it became the folk dance of the south.
Every region developed its own version. Salento has the Pizzica — raw, hypnotic, almost magnetic in its energy. Campania has the Tammurriata, tied to devotional festivals. Calabria has the Tarantella Calabrese, with its sharp footwork and spinning skirts.
These dances are not museum pieces. They are performed at local village festivals across the south every summer, drawing enormous crowds. The southern tip of Puglia hosts some of the country’s most spectacular Pizzica events — outdoor stages in ancient squares, dancers spinning until dawn.
Why It Still Matters
Every traditional wedding in southern Italy ends with the tarantella. Grandmothers who can barely walk still tap their feet when the tambourine begins. Children who have never heard the story of tarantism somehow know the steps.
The dramatic traditions of Naples and the surrounding south share this same quality — a sense that collective feeling, expressed together in public, changes something real.
Italians have understood for centuries what science is only beginning to confirm: movement heals, music heals, and being witnessed by your community heals. The tarantella was never just a dance. It was a prescription — and it still works.
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