A devotional Latin strophic song of the first half of the 13th century in five stanzas on the Annunciation of Mary. There is memorable testimony to its widespread popularity and longevity in England in a passage from the Miller\u27s Tale introducing Chaucer’s poor Oxford scholar “hende Nicholas,” who sings Angelus in his lodging to the accompaniment of his psaltery: And al above ther lay a gay sautrie, On which he made a-nyghtes melodie So swetely that all the chambre rong; And Angelas ad virginem he song. (MilT 3213-16) Most sources and references to Angelus ad virginem are insular (complete report in Stevens). One tuneful melody is transmitted in four English sources, twice monophonically and twice in polyphonic settings of the later 13th...
One of the most important contributions to studies of medieval music in recent years was made by Ern...
This thesis is the first in-depth study o f music regularly heard by a community that grew from 0.5 ...
It is often assumed that medieval laypeople did not understand or follow the Latin church services t...
A devotional Latin strophic song of the first half of the 13th century in five stanzas on the Annunc...
Angelas ad virginem A devotional Latin strophic song of the first half of the 13th century in five s...
The paper deals with a popular type of the Annunciation lyric in medieval English poetry. A brief s...
Although medieval English music has been relatively neglected in comparison with repertoire from Fra...
The feast of the Visitation of the Virgin Mary was one of the last medieval Marian feasts to be intr...
This thesis explores the means by which, and the forms in which, the Virgin Mary and her medieval Cu...
The Song of Songs was the most commented upon biblical text in medieval Europe and became the corne...
John Aleyn, a musician and administrator in royal service, was from 1363 to 1373 a canon of St. Geor...
The sixth century liturgical poet Romanos Melodos composed dramatic hymns for the great feasts in Co...
The three volumes under review represent a relatively recent stage in the transmission of medieval a...
This page, left mostly blank at the end of the main text in the book (a collection of Lives of the F...
The first Cistercian monastery in medieval Sweden was Alvastra, founded in 1143. Its library is almo...
One of the most important contributions to studies of medieval music in recent years was made by Ern...
This thesis is the first in-depth study o f music regularly heard by a community that grew from 0.5 ...
It is often assumed that medieval laypeople did not understand or follow the Latin church services t...
A devotional Latin strophic song of the first half of the 13th century in five stanzas on the Annunc...
Angelas ad virginem A devotional Latin strophic song of the first half of the 13th century in five s...
The paper deals with a popular type of the Annunciation lyric in medieval English poetry. A brief s...
Although medieval English music has been relatively neglected in comparison with repertoire from Fra...
The feast of the Visitation of the Virgin Mary was one of the last medieval Marian feasts to be intr...
This thesis explores the means by which, and the forms in which, the Virgin Mary and her medieval Cu...
The Song of Songs was the most commented upon biblical text in medieval Europe and became the corne...
John Aleyn, a musician and administrator in royal service, was from 1363 to 1373 a canon of St. Geor...
The sixth century liturgical poet Romanos Melodos composed dramatic hymns for the great feasts in Co...
The three volumes under review represent a relatively recent stage in the transmission of medieval a...
This page, left mostly blank at the end of the main text in the book (a collection of Lives of the F...
The first Cistercian monastery in medieval Sweden was Alvastra, founded in 1143. Its library is almo...
One of the most important contributions to studies of medieval music in recent years was made by Ern...
This thesis is the first in-depth study o f music regularly heard by a community that grew from 0.5 ...
It is often assumed that medieval laypeople did not understand or follow the Latin church services t...