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Vienna, Austrian National Library, Manuscript 18810: A Repertory Study and Manuscript Inventory With Concordances

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2020

Extract

Ms 18810 of the austrian national library has long been known to scholars as an important source of the secular works of Ludwig Senfl, Heinrich Isaac, and Paul Hofhaimer. Most of the remaining compositions in the manuscript, however, have been overlooked because they are either anonymous or by lesser-known composers. The purposes of this paper will be to discuss the manuscript and its contents, examine the musical styles found within it, and present an inventory more complete than that made more than eighty years ago by Josef Mantuani (1899, vol. 10, 219–24)’.

Type
Research Reports and Documents
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Musical Association, 1985

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References

Bibliography

Augsburg, Staats- und Stadtbibliothek, Mus. 142a [choirbook containing both sacred and secular pieces]Google Scholar
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Basle, University Library, Mus. F.X. 1–4 [four part-books]Google Scholar
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Copenhagen, Royal Library, Gl. kgl. samling, Mus. 1872/4° [seven part-books, containing 165 sacred and secular pieces; some have instrumentation indicated]Google Scholar
Copenhagen, Royal Library, Gl. kgl. samling, Mus. 1873/4° [five part-books, containing both sacred and secular pieces]Google Scholar
Florence, Conservatorio di Musica, Basevi 2439 [chansonnier dating from around 1500]Google Scholar
Greifswald, University Library, BW 640–41 (Eb 133) [discant and bass part-books, containing both sacred and secular pieces]Google Scholar
Heidelberg, University Library, Codex Palatini Germanici 318 [inventory, dated 1544, listing text incipits and composers of pieces performed by Heidelberg Hofkapelle]Google Scholar
Heilbronn, Gymnasialbibliothek, X. 2 [bass part-book, containing 31 sacred and secular pieces]Google Scholar
London, British Library, Add. 35087 [late fifteenth or early sixteenth-century chansonnier]Google Scholar
Munich, Bavarian State Library, Mus. 1516 [four part-books containing 161 Lieder, dances and motets]Google Scholar
Munich, University Library, Mus. 328–31 [four part-books containing 145 secular pieces]Google Scholar
Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale, fonds fr. 1597 [contains chansons and a few short pieces with Latin text]Google Scholar
Regensburg, Proske'sche Bibliothek des bischöflichen Ordinariats, C. 120, ‘e’ Codex Peter Prenner [contains masses, motets, chansons and Lieder]Google Scholar
Regensburg, Proske'sche Bibliothek des bischöflichen Ordinariats, Mus. A.R. 940/41 [five part-books, dated 1557, containing both sacred and secular pieces]Google Scholar
St Gall, Stiftsbibliothek, 461 [contains 49 pieces by early sixteenth-century German and Flemish composers]Google Scholar
St Gall, Stiftsbibliothek, 463–4 [four part-books containing secular pieces by German and Flemish composers]Google Scholar
Ulm, Bibliothek der von Schermar'schen Familienstiftung, Mus. 235a-d [four part-books containing 76 sacred and secular pieces, with German and Latin texts]Google Scholar
Ulm, Bibliothek der von Schermar'schen Familienstiftung, Mus. 236a-d [four part-books containing 142 sacred and secular pieces, including some dances]Google Scholar
Ulm, Bibliothek der von Schermar'schen Familienstiftung, Mus. 237a-d [four part-books, dated 1557, containing 140 sacred and secular pieces]Google Scholar
Vienna, Austrian National Library, 18746 [five part-books, dated 1523]Google Scholar
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Primary printed sources examined for concordances

Bergkreyen 1551. Nürnberg: Berg & NeuberGoogle Scholar
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Der erst Teil. Hundert und ainundzweintzig newe Lieder 1534. Nürnberg: Hieronymus FormschneiderGoogle Scholar
Der fünfte Theil schoner frölicher frischer alter und newer teutscher Liedlein 1556. Nürnberg: Berg & NeuberGoogle Scholar
Der vierdt Theyl schoner frölicher frischer alter und newer teutscher Liedlein 1556. Nürnberg: Berg & NeuberGoogle Scholar
Des andern Theyls viler kurtzweyliger frischer teutscher Liedlein 1549. Nürnberg: Berg & NeuberGoogle Scholar
Des andern Theyls viler kurtzweyliger frischer teutscher Liedlein 1553. Nürnberg: Berg & NeuberGoogle Scholar
Diphona amoena et florida, selectore Erasmo Rotenbuchero, boiaro 1549. Nürnberg: Montanus & NeuberGoogle Scholar
Gassenhawerlin 1535. Frankfurt: Christian EgenolffGoogle Scholar
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Graszliedlin c1535. Frankfurt: Christian Egenolff?Google Scholar
Guter, seltzamer, und kunstreicher teutscher Gesang 1544. Nürnberg: Johann PetreiusGoogle Scholar
Harmoniae poeticae Pauli Hofheimeri 1539. Nürnberg: Johann PetreiusGoogle Scholar
[Lieder in 3 and 4 voices] c1535. Frankfurt: Christian EgenolffGoogle Scholar
[Lieder] c1535. Frankfurt: Christian EgenolffGoogle Scholar
[Lieder] 1513. Mainz: Peter Schöffer; facsimile edition, Munich: Gesellschaft Münchener Bibliophilen, 1909Google Scholar
Reutterliedlin 1535. Frankfurt: Christian EgenolffGoogle Scholar
Schöne auszerlesne Lieder 1536. Nürnberg: Hieronymus FormschneiderGoogle Scholar
[68 German, French and Latin polyphonic songs] 1550. Nürnberg: Berg & NeuberGoogle Scholar
[68 Lieder] c1513. E. Öglin?Google Scholar
[36 Lieder] c1515. Mainz: Peter Schöffer der JungereGoogle Scholar
Secundus tomus biciniorum 1545. Wittenberg: Georg RhawGoogle Scholar
Selectissimae necnon familiarissimae cantiones 1540. Augsburg: Melchior KriessteinGoogle Scholar
Tricinia 1542. Wittenberg: Georg RhawGoogle Scholar
Trium vocum cantiones centum 1541. Nürnberg: Johann PetreiusGoogle Scholar
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