Classical Ballet
Also known as: Imperial ballet, Petipa ballet
History & Cultural Context
Classical ballet crystallized in late-19th-century Imperial Russia, where French-born ballet master Marius Petipa combined the Romantic inheritance with rigorous Russian training to create the grand, full-evening story ballets: The Sleeping Beauty (1890), The Nutcracker (1892), and the definitive 1895 revival of Swan Lake (with Lev Ivanov), to Tchaikovsky's scores. The era fixed conventions still central today—the multi-act narrative, the grand pas de deux, virtuoso variations, and the codified academic vocabulary later systematized by Agrippina Vaganova and Enrico Cecchetti.
Cultural Significance
The Petipa classics remain the backbone of company repertory worldwide and the benchmark of classical technique.
Characteristic Movement & Technique
Codified academic vocabulary, pointe virtuosity, grand pas de deux structure, and large symmetrical corps de ballet patterns.
Signature Figures
- Marius Petipa
- Lev Ivanov
- Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
- Agrippina Vaganova
- Enrico Cecchetti
Notable Codifiers
- Agrippina Vaganova
- Enrico Cecchetti
Track Your Classical Ballet Progress
Practice Classical Ballet figures between lessons with Figure Focus — step-by-step breakdowns, floor diagrams, and progress tracking. Free to use.
Sources & Further Reading
Cultural & Historical Context
Classical Ballet emerged from Imperial Russia during the 1850s—1910s. 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:
Agrippina Vaganova, Enrico Cecchetti
Signature Movement Vocabulary:
Marius Petipa, Lev Ivanov, Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Agrippina Vaganova, Enrico Cecchetti
Primary Source Documents
The Library of Dance contains public-domain primary sources for dance history. Copyrighted modern syllabi are indexed with purchase links to their respective copyright owners. Search by dance name or codifier to discover primary source documents.
Last reviewed: June 2026 — This dance profile synthesizes historical research, cultural documentation, and contemporary practice knowledge to provide authoritative context.
More in Ballet
Ballet de Cour (Court Ballet)
The aristocratic court spectacle from which ballet grew, danced by nobles (including Louis XIV) and codified into the five positions and turnout under Beauchamp at the Académie Royale de Danse (1661).
Romantic Ballet
The early-19th-century era that introduced pointe work, the ethereal 'white ballet,' and the ballerina as central figure, exemplified by La Sylphide (1832) and Giselle (1841).
Neoclassical Ballet
The 20th-century style—pioneered by George Balanchine with Apollo (1928)—that retained classical technique while stripping narrative and scenery for speed, line, extension, and pure response to music.
Contemporary Ballet
The late-20th-century-onward fusion of classical ballet technique with modern and contemporary dance, associated with choreographers such as William Forsythe and Jiří Kylián.