Italian music in the 17th century in the regions of Spiš and Šariš in the Evangelical Churches of the Augsburg Confession

Title: Italian music in the 17th century in the regions of Spiš and Šariš in the Evangelical Churches of the Augsburg Confession
Author: Hulková, Marta
Source document: Musicologica Brunensia. 2018, vol. 53, iss. 2, pp. 41-60
Extent
41-60
  • ISSN
    1212-0391 (print)
    2336-436X (online)
Type: Article
Language
License: Not specified license
 

Notice: These citations are automatically created and might not follow citation rules properly.

Abstract(s)
In the 17th century, the regions of Spiš and Šariš (Zips, Scharosch in German, Szepes, Sáros in Hungarian), which formed part of Upper Hungary, represented an intersection of diverse European cultural influences. In the economic and cultural sphere, the population maintained intense contacts with German-speaking regions in Central Europe: besides Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt, Thuringia and Prussia, primarily with Silesia and Transylvania. In the field of religion, they joined Luther's Reformation of the Augsburg Confession. From German printing houses, not only German Baroque music made its way to the region of Spiš and Šariš but also Italian music, primarily as part of the repertoire of musical anthologies. Ongoing research, which focuses not only on the compositions that were available in a printed form but also on pieces that were circulated in the form of manuscripts, brings a new look at the question of the distribution of the Italian musical repertoire in Central Europe during the 17th century. It enables us to get a more reliable picture about the ways in which contemporaneous musical repertoire was spread and, at the same time, reveals information about the migration of musicians in Central Europe.
References
[1] BOHN, Emil. Bibliographie der Musik-Druckwerke bis 1700 welche in der Stadtbibliothek, der Bibliothek des Academischen Instituts für Kirchenmusik und der Königlichen und Universitäts-Bibliothek zu Breslau aufbewahrt werden. Berlin: Commissions-Verlag von Albert Cohn, 1883.

[2] BOHN, Emil. Die musikalischen Handschriften des XVI. und XVII. Jahrhunderts in der Stadtbibliothek zu Breslau. Breslau: Commissions-Verlag von Julius Hainauer, 1890

[3] CANTUS CATHOLICI. Benedikt Szőllősy (ed.), Levoča: Vavrinec Brewer, 1655.

[4] CHALUPECKÝ, Ivan. Snahy Uhorska o vykúpenie spišských miest z poľského zálohu v 15–17. storočí [Hungary's Efforts to Redeem the Spiš Towns from Polish Forfeiture in the 15th to 17th Centuries]. Historické štúdie, 2000, vol. 41, pp. 115–120.

[5] DANĚK, Petr. Nototiskařská činnost Jiřího Nigrina [The Printing Activities of Jiří Nigrin]. Hudební věda, 1987, vol. 24, pp. 121–136.

[6] DANĚK, Petr. Historické tisky vokální polyfonie, rané monodie, hudební teorie a instrumentální hudby v českých zemích do roku 1630. [Historical Prints of Vocal Polyphony, Early Monody, Music Theory, and Instrumental Music in the Bohemian Lands before 1630]. Praha: KLP, 2015.

[7] GRADUALE ECCLESIAE HUNGARICAE EPPERIENSIS 1635. Ilona Ferenczi (ed.), (= Musicalia Danubiana 9), Budapest: MTA Zenetudományi intézet 1988, 2. vols.

[8] HUDEC, Konštantín. Vývin hudobnej kultúry na Slovensku [The Development of Musical Culture in Slovakia]. Bratislava: Slovenská akadémia vied a umení, 1949.

[9] HULKOVÁ, Marta. Levočská zbierka hudobnín [The Levoča Music Collection]. [Diss.], 2 vols., Bratislava: Univerzita Komenského, Filozofická fakulta, 1985.

[10] HULKOVÁ, Marta. Ľubický spevník [Ľubica/Leibitz Hymnal]. Musicologica Slovaca, 1988, vol. 12, pp. 11–134.

[11] HULKOVÁ, Marta. Beitrag zur Problematik der Musikerziehung in der Stadtschulen auf dem Gebiet der Slowakei im 16. Jahrhundert. Musicologica Istropolitana, 2005, vol. 4, pp. 41–59.

[12] HULKOVÁ, Marta. The Reception of the Oeuvre of Composers Active at the Court of Rudolf II in Prague in the Contemporaneous Musical Repertoire of Historical Upper Hungary. Hudební věda, 2015, vol. 52, no. 2, pp. 3–37.

[13] HULKOVÁ, Marta. Central European Connections of Six Manuscript Organ Tablature Books of the Reformation Era from the Region of Zips (Spiš, Szepes). Studia Musicologica, 2015, vol. 56, no. 1, pp. 3–37. | DOI 10.1556/6.2015.56.1.1

[14] JOHNSON, Cleveland. In the Trenches with Johann and Caspar Plotz: a rediscovered Gebrauchstabulatur from the Scheidt circle. DePauw University 2001. [= online, cit. 2017-10-15] http://acad.depauw.edu/~cjohnson/PLOTZ/INDEX.HTML

[15] KALINAYOVÁ, Jana und Autorenkollektiv. Musikinventare und das Repertoire der mehrstimmigen Musik in der Slowakei im 16. und 17. Jahrhundert. Bratislava: SNM-Hudobné múzeum, 1995.

[16] KATECHYSMUS D. M. LUTHERA. Levoča: Vavrinec Brewer, 1634.

[17] KÓNYA, Peter et al. Dejiny Uhorska [History of Hungary]. Bratislava: Citadella, 2014.

[18] KORBAČKOVÁ, Ivana. Inventarverzeichnis der Musikalien und der Musikinstrumente der Evangelischen Kirche in Bratislava aus dem Jahre 1657. In KALINAYOVÁ, op. cit., pp. 57–71.

[19] KUHN, Friedrich. Beschreibendes Verzeichnis der alten Musikalien – Handschriften und Druckwerke – des Königlichen Gymnasiums zu Brieg. Leipzig: Breitkopf et Härtel, 1897.

[20] LINDELL, Robert – MANN, Brian R. Monte, Philippe de [Entry]. In The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Stanley Sadie (ed.), London: Oxford University Press, 2 2001, vol. 17, p. 20.

[21] MATÚŠ, František. Samuel Marckfelner – príspevok k poznaniu života a diela levočského organistu, skladateľa a senátora [Samuel Marckfelner. A Contribution to the Knowledge on the Life and Oeuvre of the Organist, Composer and Senator in Levoča]. In Z minulosti Spiša, 2002, vols. 9–10, pp. 137–152.

[22] MATÚŠ, František. Zachariáš Zarevúcky – životné osudy [Zachariáš Zarevúcky: His Life]. In Zborník z muzikologickej konferencie Zachariáš Zarevúcky (Zarewutius). František Matúš, Janka Petőczová (eds.), Prešov: Súzvuk, 2005, pp. 67–84.

[23] Magyarország zenetörténete I. Középkor [The Music History of Hungary I. The Middle Ages]. Benjamin Rajeczky (ed.), Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1988.

[24] Magyarország zenetörténete II. 1541–1686 [The Music History of Hungary II. 1541–1686]. Kornél Bárdos (ed.), Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1990.

[25] MIČKIOVÁ, Erika. Zacharias Zarewutius a Bardejovská zbierka hudobnín [Z. Zarewutius and the Bardejov Music Collection]. [Thesis], Bratislava: Univerzita Komenského, Filozofická fakulta, 2003.

[26] MURÁNYI, Róbert Árpád. Thematisches Verzeichnis der Musiksammlung von Bartfeld (Bártfa). (= Deutsche Musik im Osten 2), Bonn: Gudrun Schröder Verlag, 1991.

[27] PATALAS, Aleksandra. W kościele, w komnacie i w teatrze. Marco Scacchi. Życie, muzyka, teoria. Kraków: Musica Iagiellonica, 2010.

[28] PAŽITNÁ, Kristína. Hlasové zošity sign. 5161 (26 A) Levočskej zbierky hudobnín [Part Books in Levoča Music Collection – Shelfmark 5161 /26 A/]. Bratislava: Univerzita Komenského, Filozofická fakulta, 2002.

[29] PETŐCZOVÁ, Janka. Katalog der Musikalien der Pfarrkirche in Prešov aus dem Jahre 1661. In KALINAYOVÁ, op. cit., pp. 74–78.

[30] RÉPERTOIRE International des Sources Musicales. B/I/1: François Lesure. Recueils imprimés, XVIeXVIIe siècles. München – Duisburg: G. Henle Verlag, 1960.

[31] RÉPERTOIRE International des Sources Musicales. A/I/1–15: Einzeldrucke vor 1800. Karlheinz Schlager, Otto E. Albrecht (eds.), Kassel: Bärenreiter , 1971–2003.

[32] RYBARIČ, Richard. Ján Šimbracký – spišský polyfonik 17. storočia [Ján Šimbracký, a Seventeenth-Century Polyphonist from Spiš]. Musicologica Slovaca (1973), vol. 4, pp. 7–83.

[33] RYBARIČ, Richard. Dejiny hudobnej kultúry na Slovensku [The History of Music Culture in Slovakia]. Bratislava: OPUS, 1984.