To understand stringed instruments of the European Middle Ages, it helps
to understand medieval music itself.
The Medieval
Era, roughly 500 CE to 1400 CE, was the time when the Church of Rome was the
dominant ruling body and religion. Musically, the Catholic churches engaged
people in the great cathedrals and humbler provincial churches with sacred
music that was at times drawn from secular, folk melodies. It was characterized
by chants, primarily in the monophonic (one voice, no melody) form; polyphonic
music came later.
Of
note, while sacred music was by far the dominant form, it was secular music
that might have driven greater creative range, free of the strictures of church
liturgy. Secular music allowed for love songs, songs about wine, political
satire, drama, and dancing. It also gave rise to new musical instruments.
Percussion
was part of medieval music (cymbals, frame drums, timbrels), as were wind
instruments (recorders, tabor pipes, organs, bladder pipe, bellows pipe,
bagpipes). And vocals were the center of the sound. But the variety of stringed
instruments of the medieval era – most of which would not be found in a modern
catalog of fine
stringed instruments for sale – speak to a time of nuanced expression:
Citole:
Also known by several other names (cetera, chytara, sitole, zitol) it was
picked or strummed with an ivory or wood plectrum (pick). The only surviving
example is in the British Museum and was made around 1300, however it seems to
have been converted into a more violin-like instrument in the 16th
century.
Dulcimer: A version of a zither, it involved striking its many strings with
“hammers,” with the fretted version (used in later times in Appalachian music)
having only three or four strings. A banjo dulcimer has a resonating membrane,
as with the banjo.
Fiddle-vielle: Played with a bow, this has a longer and deeper oval body
than a violin, with three to five gut strings. As its earliest name was the “fidel,”
making it easy to see how the more modern word “fiddle” came into being. The
instrument was quite popular among troubadours and jongleurs in the medieval
era, although it might be derived from the Arabic rebab of an earlier time.
Gittern:
Also called the guiterre in French, this small gut-stringed and round-backed
instrument is considered by scholars to be an ancestor of the modern guitar;
along the way the guitarra latina and guitarra morisca were Spanish and Moorish
versions thereof. Seen in 13th century art, it seems to have evolved to a flat
back by the 16th century. The gittern (giterne) is referenced in medieval
literature, including Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales.
Harp:
With roots in antiquity (the Judeo-Christian bible has 66 verses that mention
harps or lyres), and variations of harps were known in Africa and Asia as well
as Europe, it was particularly popular in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance.
By definition, the harp has multiple strings affixed at an angle to a
soundboard. The Celtic harp, commonly seen in Irish iconography, is strongly
associated with medieval Gaelic music.
Hurdy-gurdy: It might be acceptable to refer to this as the platypus
of stringed instruments as it incorporates several disparate pieces. It has a
thick body with almost no neck and multiple strings (the number and presence of
sympathetic drone strings have changed over time); in place of a bow the
strings are stroked with a rosined, rotating wheel operated by a crank, while
the player’s fingers from the second hand work a keyboard. And like the
duckbilled, semi-aquatic, beaver-tailed, egg-laying mammal, it has survived
remarkably into the 21st century, often played as a substitute for bagpipes for
its similar sound. Earlier versions were called organistrums.
Lute:
Defined by its mid-length neck, a deep round back, and a sound hole. Strings
are plucked and given pitch via a fingerboard, and as a smaller instrument it
has a quiet sound. The progenitor instrument to lutes is the oud, which has a
teardrop-shaped body and is derived from the Middle Eastern Islamic and
pre-Islamic cultures. The oud made its way to Europe by way of the Iberian Peninsula
(Moorish Spain), Provence and French troubadours.
Psaltery (Psalterium): Better recognized as a modern zither, it is harp-like in
appearance and function, plucked with fingers or a plectrum. Its popularity in
the 12th through 15th centuries is evident in its depictions in European
manuscripts and paintings as well as sculpture. The psalterium is a cousin with
a boxier shape, large, primarily used for drone chords and even considered a
“string drum” because its role is primarily to provide rhythm accompaniment.
Many of these instruments are still collected and played. Some have evolved into other, more modern versions, and, of course, many are extinct, with the last few behind glass in museums. The good news about those instruments that still do exist? While the modern violin maker focuses primarily on fine violins, violas and cellos, most are willing and able to perform maintenance and restoration work on these old medieval instruments.
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