Adam of Saint Victor (Latin: Adamus Sancti Victoris; c. 1068 – 1146) was a prolific composer and poet of Latin hymns. A central figure of the sequences...
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Hugh of Saint Victor (c. 1096 – 11 February 1141) was a Saxon canon regular and a leading theologian and writer on mystical theology. As with many medieval...
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Richard of Saint Victor (died 10 March 1173) was a Medieval Scottish philosopher and theologian and one of the most influential religious thinkers of his...
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peak with Adam of Saint Victor. By the late 11th century, the poet-composer troubadours of southern France became the first proponents of secular music...
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Medieval poetry (section Examples of medieval poetry)
Lingua Adam of Saint Victor St Ambrose St Thomas Aquinas The Archpoet St Bernard of Cluny St Bonaventure St Columba Dante Alighieri St Hildegard of Bingen...
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Godric of Finchale (or St Goderic) (c. 1065-1070 – 21 May 1170) was an English hermit, merchant and popular medieval saint, although he was never formally...
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rhyme began as an imitation of the so-called "Victorine sequence" associated with the twelfth-century poet Adam of Saint Victor and used in a great many...
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adapted from Adam of Saint Victor's sequence for Pentecost. The hymn's Latin incipit literally translates to "Therefore so great". The singing of the Tantum...
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developing under Bernard of Clairvaux into a sequence of rhymed stanzas. In the 12th century the Parisian monk Adam of Saint Victor began to derive music...
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Tetramorph (category Book of Ezekiel)
patron saint. 12th-century apse mosaic from Basilica di San Clemente in Rome. Detail of the rooftop of San Marco cathedral in Venice. Central portal of Chartres...
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Madrigal (section Turn of the century)
A madrigal is a form of secular vocal music most typical of the Renaissance (15th–16th centuries) and early Baroque (1600–1750)[citation needed] periods...
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Trouvère (redirect from List of trouvères)
only a partial list. There are 256 named male trouvères known. Adam de Givenchi Adam de la Halle (c. 1240–88) Adenet Le Roi (c. 1240–c. 1300) Andrieu...
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was prior at Saint-Barbe-en-Auge, and later entered St. Victor's Abbey, Paris, an Augustinian establishment of canons regular. A product of the secular...
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Minnesang (redirect from List of Minnesänger)
Minnesang (German: [ˈmɪnəzaŋ] ; "love song") was a tradition of German lyric- and song-writing that flourished in the Middle High German period (12th to...
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principles of staff notation (music being written and read from an organized visual system). Likely drawing from the writings of Odo of Saint-Maur-des-Fossés [sv]...
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Black), 1st Earl of Richmond Adam of Saint Victor, French Latin poet and composer Izz al-Din Husayn, Persian ruler of the Ghurid Dynasty Robert Pullen, English...
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Troubadour (category Music of Galicia)
vidas in terms of reliability. Many are likewise the work of Uc de Saint Circ. A phenomenon arose in Italy, recognised around the turn of the 20th century...
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Notker the Stammerer (redirect from The Monk of Saint Gall)
Notker Balbulus, or simply Notker, was a Benedictine monk at the Abbey of Saint Gall active as a composer, poet and scholar. Described as "a significant...
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Chanson (category Music of France)
origins in the monophonic songs of troubadours and trouvères, though the only polyphonic precedents were 16 works by Adam de la Halle and one by Jehan de...
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Victor Wembanyama (/ˌwɛmbənˈjɑːmə/ WEM-bən-YAH-mə; French: [viktɔʁ wɛmbanjama]; born 4 January 2004), nicknamed "Wemby" or "the Alien", is a French professional...
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Adam of Saint Victor. Adam of Saint Victor (died 1146) was a French poet and composer of Latin hymns and sequences. The liturgical poetry of Adam of St...
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Trobairitz (section Sources of information)
trobairitz (Occitan pronunciation: [tɾuβajˈɾits]) were Occitan female troubadours of the 12th and 13th centuries, active from around 1170 to approximately 1260...
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Léon Gautier (historian) (category Academic staff of the École Nationale des Chartes)
chansons de geste). Œuvres poétiques d'Adam de Saint-Victor (1858/59) – Poetic works of Adam de Saint-Victor. Les Épopées françaises (1865/68) – The French...
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"Inventing the Gothic portal: Suger, Hugh of Saint Victor, and the construction of a new public art at Saint-Denis". Art History. 33 (4): 568–595. doi:10...
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composers Notker the Stammerer • Adémar de Chabannes • Adam of Saint Victor • Hildegard of Bingen • Léonin • Pérotin • Philippe de Vitry • Guillaume de...
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Achard of Saint Victor (c. 1100 – 29 March 1171) was a canon regular and abbot of the Abbey of St. Victor, Paris, and later Bishop of Avranches. By tradition...
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melody of the Lauda Sion is borrowed from the eleventh-century sequence Laetabundi iubilemus attributed to Adam of Saint Victor. The hymn tells of the institution...
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"Grand Master L'Isle Adam's room open for viewing". Times of Malta. 20 November 2011. Retrieved 21 September 2014. Mallia-Milanes, Victor (2008). The Military...
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(1996) SATB, oboe, viola, and harp; text from 12th century poetry by Adam of Saint Victor I Find My Feet Have Further Goals (1997) SATB a cappella; text by...
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include Notker the Stammerer, Fulbert of Chartres, Hermann of Reichenau, and Adam of Saint Victor. The first evidence of vernacular hymns from the Middle Ages...
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