Home1815 Edition

BALLISTEUM

Volume 3 · 159 words · 1815 Edition

or BALLISTREA, in antiquity, a military song or dance used on occasions of victory. Vopiscus has preserved the ballisteum sung in honour of Aurelian, who, in the Sarmatian war, was said to Ballisteum have killed 48 of the enemy in one day with his own hand. Mille, mille, mille, mille, mille, mille decollavit; Unus homo mille, mille, mille, mille decollavit; mille, mille, mille vivat, qui mille, mille occidit. Tantum vini habet nemo, quantum fudit sanguinis. The same writer subjoins another popular song of the same kind: Mille Francos, mille Sarmatas, femel occidimus; mille, mille, mille, mille, mille, Perfar, quae rimus. It took the denomination ballistaeum from the Greek βαλλειον, jacio, or jacto, to cast or toss, on account of the motions used in this dance, which was attended with great elevations and swingings of the hands. The ballistae were a kind of popular ballads, composed by poets of the lower class, without much regard to the laws of metre.