nov10   Between July 4-8 the 45th International Conference on Medieval and Renaissance Music ‘Med-Ren’ will be held in Prague. The main areas to be considered are the musical culture of Central Europe and the Music and Reformation. A special session is devoted to late stylistic developments of Chant in 14-15th century Bohemia, Poland and Hungary. The session, with the participation of Zsuzsa Czagány, senior researcher of the Department of Early Music, is dedicated to the memory of Gábor Kiss, former head of the Department.

 

     The Programme of the Conference

 

nov10  

The University of Würzburg in cooperation with the Abbey Library of St. Gall organised the first music historical summer school Erste musikgeschichtliche St. Galler Summer School. Das mittelalterliche Kloster als musikgeschichtlicher Ort, Die mittelalterliche Handschrift als musikgeschichtliche Quelle that took place in the Abbey Library of St. Gall during the first week in July 2017. The Abbey Library of St. Gall preserves a unique collection of nearly 400 liturgical musical and historical manuscripts, date from the Early Middle Ages and serves as one of the most important basis for the research on early mediaeval liturgical music (cantus planus). Seven participants among them Anna Sanda, student research fellow of the Department for Early Music, took part in the summer school. The participants studied selected manuscripts with a particular focus on their content as well as on codicological and palaeographical features under the guidance of experts in manuscript studies (Prof. Dr. Andreas Haug, University of Würzburg; Prof. Dr. Michael Klaper, University of Jena; Prof. Dr. Lori Kruckenberg, University of Oregon, Eugene; Dr. Hanna Zühlke, University of Würzburg). The rich programme included guided visits by Dr. Cornel Dora to the Abbey and by Dr. Peter Erhart to the Archive (Stiftsarchiv) as well as a public lecture by Michael Klaper about Ekkehard IV. as “notator at compositor”.

 

nov10   The Czech Academy of Science’s music history working group and the Musicology Faculty of the Charles University in Prague held a conference on 10‒12 November 2016, as part of the Carolus Quartus celebrations for the 700th anniversary of Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and King of Bohemia. The lectures, appropriately, covered aspects of 14th-century Bohemian music and art history. Three Department of Early Music researchers were invited. Zsuzsa Czagány traced the path taken by the 14th-century Nagyvárad Sequence, which survive in fragmentary form. Gábor Kiss analysed marginal notes in the Ulászló Gradual. Ágnes Papp placed in a broader context the psalter differences in the antiphoner of Arnestus de Pardubicz, first Archbishop of Prague, a contemporary of Charles IV. The conference, of a regional nature, was especially rewarding for its discussion of several common problems and of source materials touched upon at several points.

     Conference programme                   Photos from the event

 

Dolgozatok 2013 2014 borito  

The periodical appeared first in 1978, responding to the lack of a journal of a “workshop” nature at the Institute of Musicology. It graduated from an occasional publication into a yearbook, with 27 volumes appearing over 38 years. The editor of this double number is Gábor Kiss, assisted by Gabriella Gilányi, Gergely Loch, Zsuzsa Czagány and Ágnes Papp. See the Contents and Abstracts of the volume.

 
maj19   Two lectures on the findings of the project “The cantus planus of Hungary within the general history of music. Aims, methods and prospects at the beginning of the 21st century”
Introduced by Zsuzsa Czagány
Bartók Hall, Thursday 19 May 2016, 10 a.m.

Krisztina Rudolf: Tract compositions with Tropes in the 15th century. The forms of the Tract Laus tibi Christe ‒ Filio Mariae in Bohemian, Polish and Hungarian sources

Anna Sanda: The transitional form of the office for Corpus Christi. Stages in the codification and office variations of a late medieval feast

 

Hungarian Academy of Sciences’ Research Centre for the Humanities, Institute of Musicology

Department of Early Music History

 

Address: 1014 Budapest, Táncsics Mihály utca 7
Postal address: Budapest I., H‒1250, Pf. 28
Telephone:
Fax:
+36 1 214-6770/202, 210
+36 1 372-9282
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The Department’s collections and databases may be viewed by outside researchers and those interested in them under previously arranged times and conditions.

 

Associated internet pages


 

Department of Early Music History

 

The Department’s main field is the study of Hungarian and Central European music history before 1700 (or exceptionally 1800), notably the plainchant practice  and theoretical background to this. The difficulty of access to the sources in the field enhances the value of collections, transcriptions and accounts of secondary materials, and databases compiled from these. The Department has been adding for decades to its microfilm and chant archives and store of digital source materials, while expanding systematically its auxiliary specialist library for research.

Department staff regularly publish research findings in domestic and foreign journals and other publications. Their specific research projects and collections also involve extensive publication plans. Foremost are publications of the full repertory of antiphons, responsories and chants for the ordinary of the Mass, and liturgical manuscripts in Musicalia Danubiana series of Central European source materials. Tied in with research into the Office of the Dead are the traditional and internet editions of the CAO‒ECE (Corpus Antiphonalium Officii‒Ecclesiarum Centralis Europae) series, while online publications of the Gradualia project relate to research into the Mass.

Intensive international cooperation is involved in the Department’s research projects, in line with the field’s  international character. The Department contributes to the conferences and publications of the International Musicological Society (IMS) Cantus Planus Study Group , whose sessions have often been held in Hungary. Department staff cooperate with German, Austrian, Polish, Slovak and Slovene researchers and take part in several large international projects (Cantus, Antiphonaria, Historiae, Corpus Hollandrinum).

 

Istanbul 094va

The Istanbul Antiphoner, Folio 94v, Easter Sunday

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