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Frank A. D'Accone, The Civic Muse: Music and Musicians in Siena during the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Chicago and London, University of Chicago Press, 1997. xxiii + 862 pp. ISBN 0 226 13366 4.
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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2020
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References
1 Répertoire international de la littérature musicale (New York, 1967–).Google Scholar
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3 Consolidated Bibliography of Urban History, ed. Richard Rodger (Aldershot, 1996). Current work on urban history continues to be listed in the volumes of Urban History, 22– (1995–).Google Scholar
4 Consolidated Bibliography, xiv, Table 1.Google Scholar
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11 In an attempt to fill the present musical lacunae in the Consolidated Bibliography, a bibliography is currently being prepared by the present author for publication: ‘Music and Musicians in Pre-Industrial Urban Societies to c.1600: A Preliminary Bibliography'.Google Scholar
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13 It is the purpose of a forthcoming book of essays, edited by the present author, to demonstrate how musical questions are of relevance to urban history: Music and Musicians in Urban Societies: Culture, Community and Change in Renaissance Europe (Cambridge).Google Scholar
14 D'Accone, The Civic Muse, 164-6, 243, 573. Further references to this work will be by page number only.Google Scholar
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17 For more details of the historical events leading up to Siena's loss of independence see Hook, Judith, ‘The Fall of Siena’, History Today, 23 (1973), 105–15.Google Scholar
18 The author is at pains to point out, though, that individual administrators such as Alberto Aringhieri in the late fifteenth century were in a position to formulate policies intended to counter this instability of the cathedral personnel (pp. 224ff.).Google Scholar
19 For more on this topic, see Reynolds, Christopher, ‘Southern Pull or Northern Push? Motives for Migration in the Renaissance’, Trasmissione e recezione delle forme di cultura musicale: Atti del XIV Congresso della Società Intemazionale di Musicologia (Bologna 1987), ed. Lorenzo Bianconi et al. (Turin, 1990), 155–61; Barbara Haggh, ‘Itinerancy to Residency: Professional Careers and Performance Practices in 15th-Century Sacred Music’, Early Music, 17 (1989), 358-66.Google Scholar
20 See also Frank D'Accone, ‘The Sienese Rhymed Office for the Feast of Sant’ Ansano’, L'Ars nova italiana del trecento, 6 (1992), 21–40.Google Scholar
21 Useful historical maps of Renaissance Italy occur in Geoffrey Barraclough, The Times Concise Atlas of World History (5th edn, London, 1994), 73; Herman Kinder and Werner Hilgemann, The Penguin Atlas of World History, i: From the Beginning to the Eve of the French Revolution, trans. Ernest August Menze (repr. Harmondsworth, 1985). A contemporary view taken from Orlando Malavolti's Dell'historia de Siena (Venice, 1599) is reproduced in Judith Hook, Siena: A City and its History (London, 1979), between pp. 4 and 5.Google Scholar
22 Fiona Kisby, ‘The Music and Musicians of Early-Tudor Westminster’, Early Music, 23 (1995), 223–41; eadem, ‘Royal Minstrels in the City and Suburbs of Early-Tudor London: Professional Activities and Private Interests’, Early Music, 25 (1997), 199-221; David Skinner, ‘At the Mynde of Nicholas Ludford’, Early Music, 22 (1994), 393-413; Andrew Wathey, ‘Editorial’, Early Music, 25 (1997), 180-5.Google Scholar
23 Hook, , Siena, 10-11.Google Scholar