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Music was, in some form or another, a pastime enjoyed by all in sixteenth-century society, and a fundamental part of their lives. It was both through the use of music and partly as a result of its existence that many religious changes occurred during the Reformation. This book explores the part played by music, especially group singing, in the unfolding of the Protestant reforms in Strasbourg. It considers both ecclesiastical and ’popular’ songs in the city, examining how both genres fitted into people’s lives during this time of strife, and how the provision and dissemination of music as a whole affected, and in turn was affected by, the new ecclesiastical arrangement. Whilst it would be naive to assume that the congregations were transformed from impious to pious overnight as the result of the introduction of German hymns, it is clear that there were real and concerted efforts on the part of reformers to get people to embrace the new faith, and writing hymns for them to sing was central to the process. Drawing upon a range of sources - including liturgical orders and hymnals, polemical songs, chronicles of the Reformation and text manuscripts - the book explores the methods by which new songs were introduced in Strasbourg churches, and suggests how congregations might have learnt them. In so doing it provides an account of the process by which reformers found music a place in the new Church, and used it to promote their wider reform agenda.
List of Figures
vii
List of Tables and Music Examples
ix
Notes on Style and Language xi
List of Abbreviations
xiii
Acknowledgements xvii
Introduction 1(14)
1 The Church and the `Wonderful Art' of Music
15(28)
2 Abolishing the Mass
43(72)
3 The Move Towards Conformity
115(42)
4 Song Texts and their Messages
157(44)
5 The 1541 Gesangbuch and Strasbourg's External Influence
201(40)
Conclusions 241(14)
Appendix A List of Liturgical Orders (in German) and Books of Sacred Music (in German and Latin), Strasbourg, 1524--1541 255(12)
Appendix B Wolfgang Kopfel's First Preface to the Strasbourg Liturgical Orders 267(2)
Appendix C Joannes Dulcis's `Strasbourg cite dempire' (c. 1526) in French and German, from manuscript 1 AST 166, 5.2, fols 85v--87r 269(4)
Appendix D A Selection of German Church Songs in Strasbourg not directly from the Bible, 1524--1540 273(14)
Appendix E Polemical Songs about Religion, Strasbourg, 1520--1540 287(6)
Appendix F A Selection of Polemical Song Texts from Strasbourg Relating to the Reformation 293(38)
Appendix G Excerpt from Wolfgang Capito's Von drey Straßbuger Pfaffen (Strasbourg: Kopfel, 1525) 331(10)
Appendix H Martin Bucer's Preface to the Gesangbuch (Strasbourg: Kopfel and Messerschmidt, 1541) 341(10)
Bibliography 351(28)
Index 379
Dr Daniel Trocmé-Latter is Fellow and Director of Studies in Music, Homerton College, Cambridge, UK.