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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: DRO-ECG |
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DULCIMER (Fr. tympanon; Ger. Hackbrett, Cymbal; Ital. cembalo, timpanon or salterio tedesco) , the prototype of the pianoforte, an instrument consisting of a horizontal
plank
hammer
instrument ; the large cymbalom of the Hungarian gipsies
range of four chromatic octaves, _ to The origin of the dulcimer is remote, and must be sought in the East. In the bas-reliefs from Kuyunjik, now in the British Museum, are to be seen musicians playing on dulcimers of ten strings with long sticks curved at the ends, and damping the strings with their hands. This is the pisantir of the days of Nebuchadrezzar, translated " psaltery " in Dan. iii. 5, &c., and rendered " psalterion " in the Septuagint, a confusion whichhas given rise to many misconceptions). In the Septuagint no less than four different instruments are rendered psalterion (from Gr. >'iAAw, pluck
to= according to Fetis 2 The Persians place its origin in the highest antiquity. Carl Engel 3 gives an illustration
The dulcimer was extensively used during the middle ages in England, France, Italy, Germany, Holland and Spain, and although it had a distinctive name in each country, it was everywhere regarded as a kind of psalterium. The importance of the method of setting the strings in vibration by means of hammers, and its bearing on the acoustics of the instrument, were recognized only when the invention of the pianoforte had become a matter of history. It was then perceived that the psalterium in which the strings were plucked, and the dulcimer in which they were struck, when provided with keyboards, gave rise to two distinct families of instruments, differing essentially in tone quality, in technique and in capabilities: the evolution of the psalterium stopped at the harpsichord, that of the dulcimer gave us the pianoforte. The dulcimer is described and illustrated by Mersenne,5 who calls it psalterion; it has thirteen courses of pairs of unisons or octaves; the first strings were of brass wire, the others of steel. The curved stick was allowed to fall gently on to the strings and to rebound many times, which, Mersenne remarks, produces an effect similar to the trembling or tremolo of other instruments. Praetorius 5 figures a hackbrett having a body
double
monster
it Pantaloon. Quantz8 and Quirin of Blankenburg e both gave descriptions of the instrument. (K. S.) End of Article: DULCIMER (Fr. tympanon; Ger. Hackbrett, Cymbal; Ital. cembalo, timpanon or salterio tedesco) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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