(Music) Secular Music in the Middle Ages Flashcards
a medieval dance that exemplifies the genre of estampie.
“La Quarte Estampie Royal”
those not religious in nature
secular music
a fast dance in triple meter and one of the few surviving instrumental music of the period
estampie
nobles and poet musicians
troubadours (of southern France) and trouveres (of northern France)
wandering students and clerics satirizing the church
goliards
nomadic entertainers
jongleurs
German musicians of the nobility
minnesingers
a bowed instrument with five strings and considered to be the ancestor of the violin
vielle
a side-blown wood instrument similar to the modern flute but without keys
flute
which was often installed in churches as the main instrument for sacred music.
organ
a German Benedictine nun, poet, and visionary, canonized as a saint in 2012.
Hildegard of Bingen
two choirmasters in the Cathedral of Notre Dame known for their overelaborate style of organum.
Leonin and Perotin
a French priest and poet. His well-known composition is the “Messe de Nostre Dame” or “Notre Dame Mass,” considered as the earliest polyphonic setting of the Mass.
Guillame De Machaut
He was known to write both monophonic and polyphonic music. His famous work is the Jeu de Robin et Marion or The Play of Robin and Marion.
Adam de la Halle
a pastoral play about a knight’s courting of a shepherdess.
Jeu de Robin et Marion or The Play of Robin and Marion.