Medieval Cantors and their Craft: Music, Liturgy and the Shaping of History, 800-1500
First full-length study of the role and duties of the medieval cantor.

Cantors made unparalleled contributions to the way time was understood and history was remembered in the medieval Latin West. The men and women who held this office in cathedrals and monasteries were responsible for calculating the date of Easter and the feasts dependent on it, for formulating liturgical celebrations season by season, managing the library and preparing manuscripts and other sources necessary to sustain the liturgical framework of time, andpromoting the cults of saints. Crucially, their duties also often included committing the past to writing, from simple annals and chronicles to more fulsome histories, necrologies, and cartularies, thereby ensuring that towns, churches, families, and individuals could be commemorated for generations to come.
This volume seeks to address the fundamental question of how the range of cantors' activities can help us to understand the many different waysin which the past was written and, in the liturgy, celebrated across the Middle Ages. Its essays are studies of constructions, both of the building blocks of time and of the people who made and performed them, in acts of ritual remembrance and in written records; cantors, as this book makes clear, shaped the communal experience of the past in the Middle Ages.

Katie Ann-Marie Bugyis is Assistant Professor of Religious Studies at St. Martin's University; Margot Fassler is Kenough-Hesburgh Professor of Music History and Liturgy at the University of Notre Dame and Robert Tangeman Professor Emerita of Music History at Yale University; A.B. Kraebel is Assistant Professor of English at Trinity University.

Contributors: Cara Aspesi, Anna de Bakker, Alison I. Beach, Katie Ann-Marie Bugyis, Margot E. Fassler, David Ganz, James Grier, Paul Antony Hayward, Peter Jeffery, Claire Taylor Jones, A.B.Kraebel, Lori Kruckenberg, Rosamond McKitterick, Henry Parkes, Susan Rankin, C.C. Rozier, Sigbjorn Olsen Sonnesyn, Teresa Webber, Lauren Whitnah
1125737752
Medieval Cantors and their Craft: Music, Liturgy and the Shaping of History, 800-1500
First full-length study of the role and duties of the medieval cantor.

Cantors made unparalleled contributions to the way time was understood and history was remembered in the medieval Latin West. The men and women who held this office in cathedrals and monasteries were responsible for calculating the date of Easter and the feasts dependent on it, for formulating liturgical celebrations season by season, managing the library and preparing manuscripts and other sources necessary to sustain the liturgical framework of time, andpromoting the cults of saints. Crucially, their duties also often included committing the past to writing, from simple annals and chronicles to more fulsome histories, necrologies, and cartularies, thereby ensuring that towns, churches, families, and individuals could be commemorated for generations to come.
This volume seeks to address the fundamental question of how the range of cantors' activities can help us to understand the many different waysin which the past was written and, in the liturgy, celebrated across the Middle Ages. Its essays are studies of constructions, both of the building blocks of time and of the people who made and performed them, in acts of ritual remembrance and in written records; cantors, as this book makes clear, shaped the communal experience of the past in the Middle Ages.

Katie Ann-Marie Bugyis is Assistant Professor of Religious Studies at St. Martin's University; Margot Fassler is Kenough-Hesburgh Professor of Music History and Liturgy at the University of Notre Dame and Robert Tangeman Professor Emerita of Music History at Yale University; A.B. Kraebel is Assistant Professor of English at Trinity University.

Contributors: Cara Aspesi, Anna de Bakker, Alison I. Beach, Katie Ann-Marie Bugyis, Margot E. Fassler, David Ganz, James Grier, Paul Antony Hayward, Peter Jeffery, Claire Taylor Jones, A.B.Kraebel, Lori Kruckenberg, Rosamond McKitterick, Henry Parkes, Susan Rankin, C.C. Rozier, Sigbjorn Olsen Sonnesyn, Teresa Webber, Lauren Whitnah
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Medieval Cantors and their Craft: Music, Liturgy and the Shaping of History, 800-1500

Medieval Cantors and their Craft: Music, Liturgy and the Shaping of History, 800-1500

Medieval Cantors and their Craft: Music, Liturgy and the Shaping of History, 800-1500

Medieval Cantors and their Craft: Music, Liturgy and the Shaping of History, 800-1500

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Overview

First full-length study of the role and duties of the medieval cantor.

Cantors made unparalleled contributions to the way time was understood and history was remembered in the medieval Latin West. The men and women who held this office in cathedrals and monasteries were responsible for calculating the date of Easter and the feasts dependent on it, for formulating liturgical celebrations season by season, managing the library and preparing manuscripts and other sources necessary to sustain the liturgical framework of time, andpromoting the cults of saints. Crucially, their duties also often included committing the past to writing, from simple annals and chronicles to more fulsome histories, necrologies, and cartularies, thereby ensuring that towns, churches, families, and individuals could be commemorated for generations to come.
This volume seeks to address the fundamental question of how the range of cantors' activities can help us to understand the many different waysin which the past was written and, in the liturgy, celebrated across the Middle Ages. Its essays are studies of constructions, both of the building blocks of time and of the people who made and performed them, in acts of ritual remembrance and in written records; cantors, as this book makes clear, shaped the communal experience of the past in the Middle Ages.

Katie Ann-Marie Bugyis is Assistant Professor of Religious Studies at St. Martin's University; Margot Fassler is Kenough-Hesburgh Professor of Music History and Liturgy at the University of Notre Dame and Robert Tangeman Professor Emerita of Music History at Yale University; A.B. Kraebel is Assistant Professor of English at Trinity University.

Contributors: Cara Aspesi, Anna de Bakker, Alison I. Beach, Katie Ann-Marie Bugyis, Margot E. Fassler, David Ganz, James Grier, Paul Antony Hayward, Peter Jeffery, Claire Taylor Jones, A.B.Kraebel, Lori Kruckenberg, Rosamond McKitterick, Henry Parkes, Susan Rankin, C.C. Rozier, Sigbjorn Olsen Sonnesyn, Teresa Webber, Lauren Whitnah

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781903153673
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer, Limited
Publication date: 03/17/2017
Series: ISSN , #3
Pages: 391
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x (d)

About the Author

KATIEANN-MARIE BUGYIS is Associate Professor, University of Notre Dame.

CHARLES C. ROZIER is Lecturer in Medieval Studies at the University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations viii

Contributors x

Acknowledgments xiv

Abbreviations xvi

Introduction 1

Part I The Carolingian Period

1 Historia: Some Lexicographical Considerations David Ganz 8

2 Liturgy and History in the Early Middle Ages Rosamond McKitterick 23

3 Notker Bibliothecarius Susan Rankin 41

4 Singing History: Chant in Ekkehard IV's Casus sancti Galli Lori Kruckenberg 59

Part II The Eleventh Century

5 Adémar de Chabannes (989-1034) as Musicologist James Grier 90

6 Cantor or Canonicus? In Search of Musicians and Liturgists in Eleventh-Century Constance Henry Parkes 103

7 Shaping the Historical Dunstan: Many Lives and a Musical Office Margot E. Fassler 125

8 Female Monastic Cantors and Sacristans in Central Medieval England: Four Sketches Katie Ann-Marie Bugyis 151

Part III England in the Twelfth Century

9 Cantor, Sacrist or Prior? The Provision of Books in Anglo-Norman England Teresa Webber 172

10 Symeon of Durham as Cantor and Historian at Durham Cathedral Priory, c. 1090-1129 Charles C. Rozier 190

11 Reshaping History in the Cult of æbbe of Coldingham Lauren L. Whitnah 207

12 William of Malmesbury as a Cantor-Historian Paul Antony Hayward 222

13 Lex orandi, lex scribendi? The Role of Historiography in the Liturgical Life of William of Malmesbury Sigbjørn Olsen Sønnesyn 240

14 Of the Making of Little Books: The Minor Works of William of Newburgh A. B. Kraebel 255

Part IV On the Continent - Five Case Studies

15 The Cantors of the Holy Sepulchre and their Contribution to Crusade History and Frankish Identity Cara Aspesi 278

16 Shaping Liturgy, Shaping History: A Cantor-Historian from Twelfth-Century Peterhausen Alison I. Beach 297

17 The Roman Liturgical Tradition According to a Twelfth-Century Roman Cantor Peter Jeffery 310

18 A Life in Hours: Goswin of Bossut's Office for Arnulf of Villers Anna de Bakker 326

19 Writing History to Make History: Johannes Meyer's Chronicles of Reform Claire Taylor Jones 340

Index of Manuscripts 357

General Index 361

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