The name "kujawiak", as a reference to the dance, first appeared in 1827, in T.F. Jaskólski's composition
Pasterze na Bachorzy. Sielanki Kujawskie. It is argued that the dance was developed from the mazur between 1750 and 1830. In 1841, Leon Zienkowicz described the kujawiak as a "regional variety of the mazurka relying on the domination of the minor key". The majority of the composers in the years following, including
Ignacy Dobrzyński,
Edward Łodwigowski, Kazimierz Łada, Ignacy Komorowski, Wojciech Osmański, and
Henryk Wieniawski, agreed with this interpretation, and treated the musical features like the rhythms and tempos of the kujawiak and the oberek as a "single entity". The
kujawiak involved much collaboration between dancers and musicians in olden times. The dancer would request a specific tune by singing it to the band, often filling lyrical lines with "
dana, dana" as an imitation of the sound of an instrument. The first fiddler would then guess how to play the tune from the gestures and movements of the dancer, and the dancer would give the musicians some money. Throughout the dance, the first fiddler would need to watch the dancer's movements closely in order to follow their desired changes in music and tempo – if the musicians were able to follow the dancers well, they were considered a good band, and were paid well and invited back for more dances. Through this back-and-forth of the nobility learning and improvising upon the traditional steps and the peasants adopting the improvisations, the
kujawiak was thus incorporated into the elegant parties and fancy balls of the upper class towards the end of the 1860s. In 1990, Czesław Sroka published
Polskie tańce narodowe – systematyka (Polish National Dances: A Typology). This publication included a standardized set of kujawiak components, in which the Council of Experts of Folklore determined the precise number of ten positions for pairs, fifteen types of steps, eleven ornaments, and eleven figures for the
kujawiak. == Description ==