Human pyramid explained

A human pyramid is an acrobatic formation of three or more people in which two or more people support a tier of higher people, who in turn may support other, higher tiers of people. People above the bottom tier may kneel or stand on the shoulders, backs or thighs of the people below them. Typically, the number of people in each tier is one greater than the tier immediately above it, resulting in a triangular structure reminiscent of the formation's namesake.

For practical reasons, lighter people are often positioned higher in the formation and stronger, heavier people are located closer to the base. Human pyramids are performed in various activities, including cheerleading and in circus acrobatics.

Traditions involving human pyramids

China

Czech Republic

India

See main article: Dahi Handi.

Spain

See main article: Castell.

The "castellers" of Catalonia form human pyramids, named castells ("castles"), up to ten men high. In Catalonia, severals statues commemorate this old tradition. In Tarragona the castellers form human towers during the Santa Tecla Festival in September and during the Sant Magi festival, held annually in mid-August.[2]

The Falcons are traditional teams in Catalonia who build human pyramids and towers. They follow different rules from the ones of the castells.

United States

Veneto

Cheerleading

Cheerleaders may perform human pyramids with more difficult stunt sequences and gymnastics incorporated into routines. In cheerleading, pyramids are multiple groups of stunts connected aerially by the flyers. This connection may be made by simple linking of hands or having a multi-level pyramid. The flyers already in the air act as primary bases for another flyer or flyers on top of them.

Safety

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: La Muixeranga | Algemesí, Spain | Whatsonwhen . 2008-03-30 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110718040323/http://www.whatsonwhen.com/sisp/?event_id=13492&fx=event . 2011-07-18 .
  2. Web site: Tarragona Pictures - Human Pyramid Statue - Tarragona Spain Photo Gallery. 7 December 2016.
  3. Web site: Human Pyramid Activity. 7 December 2016.
  4. Web site: Archivio on line - BSA Digital Library. 7 December 2016.