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Title: | The Harmonious Blacksmith, Lady Music and Minerva: The Iconography of Secular Song in the Late Middle Ages | Contributor(s): | Stoessel, Jason (author) | Publication Date: | 2019-03 | Handle Link: | https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/26831 | Abstract: | Towards the end of Imperial Rome’s dominion of North Africa, Martianus Capella penned his encyclopedic De nuptiis Philologiae et Mercurii (‘On the Marriage of Philology and Mercury’). The spectacle of Harmony’s entrance in the last book surpasses that of all other Liberal Arts. A train of minor deities, three musically inclined demigods (Pan, Silvanus and Faunus) and three legendary musicians (Orpheus, Amphion and Arion) precede her. Harmony enters, clad in gold, flanked by Phoebus Apollo and Minerva, and trailed by her mother Venus. She carries a shield decorated with concentric circles, attuned to one another and pouring forth a concord of all the modes. Her shield symbolises celestial harmony or the harmony of the spheres. Finishing a paean to the gods, Harmony complains that she has been forbidden to give an exposition of her art even among the stars when the heavens produce a harmony concordant with ‘the gamut of all proportions’. Yet, she goes on, she is the twin sister of the heavens, the shaper of human intelligence and character, and used by the Pythagoreans to assuage men’s ferocity. She invented musical instruments for humanity, was responsible for the song by which men praised the gods, and placated the underworld deities through ‘mournful song’. Her songs were used for military purposes, in times of peace, and – in a reference to Orphic lore – even to bend animals to human will. All mundane natural and manufactured things mirror the same celestial order that is Harmony, and Harmony is responsible for placating the gods and moving both humans and animals. | Publication Type: | Book Chapter | Grant Details: | ARC/DP150102135 | Source of Publication: | Music, Myth and Story in Medieval and Early Modern Culture, p. 63-86 | Publisher: | Boydell Press | Place of Publication: | Suffolk, United Kingdom | ISBN: | 9781783273713 1783273712 9781787444409 1787444406 |
Fields of Research (FoR) 2008: | 190409 Musicology and Ethnomusicology 190102 Art History |
Fields of Research (FoR) 2020: | 360306 Musicology and ethnomusicology 360102 Art history |
Socio-Economic Objective (SEO) 2008: | 950101 Music 950205 Visual Communication |
Socio-Economic Objective (SEO) 2020: | 130102 Music 130205 Visual communication |
HERDC Category Description: | B1 Chapter in a Scholarly Book | WorldCat record: | http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1085942317 http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1099268512 |
Series Name: | Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Music | Series Number : | 19 | Editor: | Editor(s): Katherine Butler and Samantha Bassler |
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Appears in Collections: | Book Chapter School of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences |
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