thumb|Procession of the Matachines in Monterrey, [[Mexico]] thumb|Matachines dancers in Ohkay Owingeh, New Mexico, 2012 Matachines (Spanish singular matachín; sword dancers dressed in ritual attire called bouffon) are a carnivalesque dancers performing a dance that emerged in Spain in the early 17th century, inspired by similar European traditions such as the moresca. The term danza de matachines refers to their characteristic dance and music. The dance was documented in the 1642 treatise Discursos sobre el arte del dançado by Juan de Esquivel Navarro. The tradition was imported into Latin Ame
thumb|Procession of the Matachines in Monterrey, [[Mexico]] thumb|Matachines dancers in Ohkay Owingeh, New Mexico, 2012 Matachines (Spanish singular matachín; sword dancers dressed in ritual attire called bouffon) are a carnivalesque dancers performing a dance that emerged in Spain in the early 17th century, inspired by similar European traditions such as the moresca. The term danza de matachines refers to their characteristic dance and music. The dance was documented in the 1642 treatise Discursos sobre el arte del dançado by Juan de Esquivel Navarro. The tradition was imported into Latin American countries such as Mexico and Peru and into the Southwestern United States.
== Name == Matachines is also written as matlachines and matlatzines in central Mexico. The term matachines has been ascribed to Spanish, Italic, or Arabic origins.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).