Bourrée

Also known as: Bourée

OriginFrance
Era16701750
Rhythm2/2 time
Tempo140-160 BPM
CharacterBrisk, bouncy, lively, forward

History & Cultural Context

The Bourrée emerged in France during the late 17th century as a lively Baroque dance. The dance featured rapid, bouncy steps and a forward motion that distinguished it from the more refined minuet and gavotte. The bourrée had a slightly rustic character compared to court dances while maintaining Baroque elegance. Famous composers including Bach and Handel included bourrées in their instrumental suites. The dance remained popular through the 18th century before declining with changing musical tastes.

Cultural Significance

The Bourrée represented Baroque embrace of moderate liveliness within court dancing. Its popularity in instrumental suites made it one of the most enduring Baroque dance forms in classical music.

Peak Popularity

1700s
85% estimated global awareness

Signature Figures

  • Quick Steps
  • Hop

Notable Codifiers

  • Jean-Philippe Rameau

Dance Lineage

Evolved from:Branle

Track Your Bourrée Progress

Practice Bourrée figures between lessons with Figure Focus — step-by-step breakdowns, floor diagrams, and progress tracking. Free to use.

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What to Wear

Attire guidance for Bourrée and other Historic Baroque Court dances. Each card below is sized to the moment — class, practice, social, or competition — because the wardrobe shifts as the stakes do.

Reading the cards

Class — group instruction; comfort first.
Practice — rehearsal; dress like the dance.
Social — public dance floor; smart casual to formal.
Competition — judged events; rule-bound costume.

In Class

Comfortable clothing with period-appropriate character shoes if available. Many historical dance classes welcome modern practice wear.

Social Dancing

Period recreation events call for Baroque-era costumes: women in corsets and full skirts, men in breeches and frock coats. Social historical dance events range from costumed to smart casual.

Competition

Rarely competed; performance events typically expect full period costume authentic to the 17th–18th century.

Shoes

Character shoes with a low (1–1.5") shaped heel. Historically accurate shoes have buckles and a Louis heel. For class: any low-heeled shoe with a smooth sole.

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In Practice

Modern practice wear is welcome in most academic Baroque classes; serious reconstruction groups practice in period-appropriate footwear so the body learns the geometry the dances were designed for.

Price Range

  • Budget: Modern character shoes $40–80; loose historically-styled clothing from costume retailers.
  • Mid: Replica Louis-heel shoes $150–300; commissioned period-styled garments $200–800.
  • Premium: Hand-stitched 18th-century reproduction costume $1,500–5,000+; bespoke buckle shoes $400–900.

Quick Tips

  • Suede-soled shoes allow controlled sliding and pivoting — essential for most partner dances.
  • Avoid rubber soles on dance floors; they grip too much and can cause knee injuries.
  • Bring a separate pair of clean shoes for the dance floor to keep it in good condition.

Sources & Further Reading

Official References & Syllabi

For competitive dances, official technique and choreographic standards are maintained by:

  • • ISTD (Imperial Society of Teachers of Dancing) and WDSF (World DanceSport Federation) official syllabi and technique manuals
  • • DVIDA (Dance Vision International Dance Association) materials for American dance variants
  • • USA Dance and other national governing body resources
  • • WDC (World Dance Council) competition rules and adjudication standards

Cultural & Historical Context

Bourrée emerged from France during the 1670s—1750s. Understanding the cultural roots, musical traditions, and social circumstances of this era enriches appreciation for the dance's characteristics and significance.

Formative Influences

Codifiers & Standardizers:

Jean-Philippe Rameau

Signature Movement Vocabulary:

Quick Steps, Hop

Primary Source Documents

The LODance Library contains original syllabi, instructional materials, and published references for dance technique and history. Search by dance name or codifier to discover primary source documents.

Last reviewed: May 2026 — This dance profile synthesizes historical research, cultural documentation, and contemporary practice knowledge to provide authoritative context.