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Encyclopedia Britannica



GUITAR FIDDLE (Troubadour Fiddle)

This article appears in Volume V12, Page 705 of the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: GUI-HAN
GUITAR FIDDLE (Troubadour Fiddle) , a modern name bestowed retrospectively upon certain precursors of the violin possessing characteristics of both guitar and fiddle. The name " guitar fiddle " is intended to emphasize the fact that the
instrument
  in the shape of the guitar, which during the middle ages represented the most perfect principle of construction for stringed instruments with necks, adopted at a certain period the use of the bow from instruments of a less perfect type, the rebab and its hybrids. The use of the bow with the guitar entailed certain constructive changes in the
instrument
 : the large central rose sound-hole was replaced by lateral holes of various shapes; the flat bridge, suitable for instruments whose strings were plucked, gave
place to the arched bridge required in order to enable the bow to vibrate each
string
  separately; the arched bridge, by raising the strings higher above the sound-board, made the stopping of strings on the neck extremely
difficult if not impossible; this matter was adjusted by the addition of a
finger
 -board of suitable shape and dimensions (fig. I). At this stage the guitar fiddle possesses the essential features of
Kathleen Schlesinger, The Instruments of the Orchestra, part ii. " The Precursors of the Violin Family," chap. viii. " The Question of the Origin of the Utrecht Psalter," pp. 352-382 (with illustrations), where all the foregoing are summarized.
Reproduced in Hubert Janitschek's Geschichte der deutschen Malerei, Bd. iii. of Gesch. der deutschen Kunst (Berlin, 189o), p. 118. Harmonie universelle (Paris, 1636), livre ii. prop. xiv.
See C. F. Becker, Darstellung der musik. Literatur (
Leipzig
 , 1836) ; and Wilhelm Tappert, " Zur Geschichte der Guitarre," in Monalshefte fur Musikgeschichte (Berlin, 1882), No. 5. pp. 77-85),
From Denon's Voyage
in Egypt.
1700 to I200 B.C.
d
From Ruhlmann's Geschichte der Bogeninstrumente.
century (Pinakothek, Munich).
15th
the violin, and may justly claim to be its immediate predecessor 1 not so much through the viols which were the outcome of the Minnesinger fiddle with sloping shoulders, as through the intermediary of the Italian lyra, a guitar-shaped bowed instrument with from 7 to 12 strings.
From such evidence as we now possess, it would seem that the
evolution of the early guitar with a neck from the Greek cithara took
place under Greek influence in the Christian East. The various
stages of this transition have been definitely established by the re-
markable miniatures of the Utrecht Psalter.' Two kinds of citharas
are shown: the antique rectangular,' and the later design with
rounded
body
  having at the point where the arms are added indica-
tions of the waist or incurvations characteristic of the outline of the
Spanish guitar.' The first stage in the transition is shown by a
cithara or
rotta
  5 in which arms and transverse bar are replaced by a
kind of
frame
  repeating the outline of the
body
  and thus completing
the second lobe of the Spanish guitar. The next stages in the transi-
tion are concerned with the addition of a necks and of frets.' All
these instruments are twanged by the fingers. One may conclude that
the use of the bow was either unknown at this time (c. 6th century
A.D.), or that it was still confined to instruments of the rehab type.
The earliest known representation of a guitar fiddle complete with
bows (fig. 2) occurs in a Greek Psalter written and illuminated in
Caesarea by the archpriest Theodorus in Io66 (British Museum, Add.
MS. 19352). Instances of perfect guitar fiddles
abound in the 13th century MSS. and monu-
ments, as for instance in a picture by Cimabue
(1240-1302), in the Pitti Gallery in Florence.'
An evolution on parallel lines appears also
to have taken place from the antique rectangular
cithara 's of the citharoedes, which was a favourite
in Romano-Christian art." In this case examples
illustrative of the transitions are found repre-
sented in great variety in Europe. The old
German rotta12 of the 6th century preserved in
the Volker Museum, Berlin, and the instru-
ments played by King David in two early
Anglo-Saxon illuminated MSS., one a Psalter
(
Cotton
  MS. Vesp. A. i. British Museum)
finished in A.D. 700, the other " A Commentary
on the Psalms by Cassiodorus manu Bedae" of
the 8th century preserved in the Cathedral
Library at Durham13 form examples of the first
stage of transition. From such types as these
the rectangular crwth or crowd was evolved by
the addition of a
finger
 -board and the reduc-
tion in the number of strings, which follows
as a natural consequence as soon as an extended compass can be
obtained by stopping the strings. By the addition of a neck we
obtain the clue to the origin of rectangular citterns with rounded
corners and of certain instruments played with the bow whose bodies
or sound-chests have an outline based upon the rectangle with
various modifications. We may not look upon this type of guitar
fiddle as due entirely to western or southern European initiative;
its origin like that of the type approximating to the violin is evidently
Byzantine. It is found among the frescoes which cover walls and
barrel vaults in the palace of Kosseir 'Amra,l' believed to be that of
Caliph Walid II. (A.D. 744) of the Omayyad dynasty, or of Prince
' See " The Precursors of the Violin Family," by Kathleen Schlesinger, part ii. of An Illustrated Handbook on the Instruments of the Orchestra (London, 1908), chs. ii. and x.
2 See Kathleen Schlesinger, op. cit. part ii., the " Utrecht Psalter," pp. 127-135, and the " Question of the Origin of the Utrecht Psalter," pp. 136-166, where the subject is discussed and illustrated.
3 Idem, see pl. vi. (2) to the right centre.
Idem, see pl. iii. centre and figs. 118 and 119.
5 Idem, see fig. 117, p. 341, and figs. 172 and 116.
s Idem, see fig. 121, p. 246, figs. 122, 123, 125 and 126 pl. iii. vi. (1) and (2).
' Idem, see fig. 126, p. 350, and pl. iii. right centre.
8 Idem, see fig. 173, p. 448. ' Idem, see fig. 205, p. 480. i See Museo Pio Clemeniino, by Visconti (Milan, 1818).
u See for example Georgics, iv. 471-475 in the Vatican Virgil (Cod. 3225), in facsimile (Rome, 1899) (British Museum press-mark 8, tab. f. vol. ii.).
12 This
rotta
  was found in an Alamannic tomb of the 4th to the 7th centuries at Oberflacht in the Black Forest. A facsimile is preserved in the collection of the Kgl. Hochschule, Berlin, illustrations in " Grabfunde am Berge Lupfen hei Oberflacht, 1846," Jahresberichte d., Wurttemb. Altertums-Vereinr, iii. (Stuttgart, 1846), tab. viii. also Kathleen Schlesinger, op. cit. part ii. fig. 168 (drawing from the facsimile).
13 Reproductions of both miniatures are to be found in Professor J. O. Westwood's Facsimiles of the Miniatures and Ornaments of Anglo-Saxon and Irish MSS. (London, 1868).
14 An
illustration
  occurs in the fine publication of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, Kusejr `Amra (Vienna, 1907, pl. xxxiv.).
veserved in Westminster Abbey (14th century); in the Sforza ook1t (14441476), the Book of Hours executed for Bona of Savoy, wife of Galeazzo Maria Sforza; on one of the carvings of the 13th century in the Cathedral of Amiens. It has also been painted by Italian artists of the 15th and 16th centuries. (K. S.)


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