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HUCBALD

  • Hucbald
  • Benedictine monk and music theorist (c. 850 – 930)

    Hucbald (c. 840 or 850 – 20 June 930; also Hucbaldus or Hubaldus) was a Benedictine monk active as a music theorist, poet, composer, teacher, and hagiographer

    Hucbald

    Hucbald

    Hucbald

  • Gregorian chant
  • Form of song

    diatonic scale with a chromatically alterable b/b-flat was first described by Hucbald, who adopted the tetrachord of the finals (D, E, F, G) and constructed

    Gregorian chant

    Gregorian chant

    Gregorian_chant

  • Medieval music
  • Western music created during the Middle Ages

    medieval period, see Pope Gregory I, St. Godric, Hildegard of Bingen, Hucbald, Notker Balbulus, Odo of Arezzo, Odo of Cluny, and Tutilo. Another musical

    Medieval music

    Medieval music

    Medieval_music

  • Consonance and dissonance
  • Categorizations of simultaneous or successive sounds

    could refer to simultaneous sounds. The case becomes clear, however, with Hucbald of Saint Amand (c. 900 ce), who writes: "Consonance (consonantia) is the

    Consonance and dissonance

    Consonance and dissonance

    Consonance_and_dissonance

  • Ralph I of the Vexin
  • French count

    was the son of Heilwise, daughter of Eberhard, Margrave of Friuli and Hucbald de Gouy, Count of Ostrevent. Rudolf is first mentioned in 915 in a royal

    Ralph I of the Vexin

    Ralph_I_of_the_Vexin

  • List of medieval music theorists
  • medieval music saw the presence of various music theorists, such as Boethius, Hucbald, Guido of Arezzo, Johannes Cotto, Franco of Cologne and Philippe de Vitry

    List of medieval music theorists

    List_of_medieval_music_theorists

  • Music theory
  • Study of the practices and possibilities of music

    of music in the plainchant tradition. At the end of the ninth century, Hucbald worked towards more precise pitch notation for the neumes used to record

    Music theory

    Music theory

    Music_theory

  • Aldegund
  • Frankish saint and abbess (c.639-684)

    contemporaries. Several of these, including the tenth-century biography by Hucbald, are printed by the Bollandists (Acta SS., January 11, 1034–35).  This

    Aldegund

    Aldegund

    Aldegund

  • Mode (music)
  • Type of musical scale and characteristic behaviors

    church modes. The treatise De Musica (or De harmonica institutione) of Hucbald synthesized the three previously disparate strands of modal theory: chant

    Mode (music)

    Mode_(music)

  • Second Bible of Charles the Bald
  • 9th-century illuminated manuscript

    Testament, with a small dedication poem from Hucbald at the beginning about Charles the Bald. de Saint-Amand, Hucbald; d'Orléans Auteur, Théodulfe (871–877)

    Second Bible of Charles the Bald

    Second Bible of Charles the Bald

    Second_Bible_of_Charles_the_Bald

  • Aeolian mode
  • Musical mode

    as well as on B♮, had been recognized in chant theory at least since Hucbald in the early tenth century, but they were regarded as merely transpositions

    Aeolian mode

    Aeolian_mode

  • 1st millennium in music
  • ca. 767/772 – Ishaq al-Mawsili ca. 840 – Notker the Stammerer ca. 850 – Hucbald ca. 850 – Tuotilo 161 – Claudius Ptolemaeus ca. 524 – Anicius Manlius Severinus

    1st millennium in music

    1st_millennium_in_music

  • Rictrude
  • is the Vita Rictrudis, commissioned by the abbey, and written in 907 by Hucbald. She was from a noble family in Gascony, the daughter of Ernoldo, lord

    Rictrude

    Rictrude

    Rictrude

  • Accidental (music)
  • Musical note not in the current key signature

    See also Clause V. Palisca, "Introduction" to Guido's Micrologus, in Hucbald, Guido, and John on Music: Three Medieval Treatises, translated by Warren

    Accidental (music)

    Accidental_(music)

  • Recitative
  • Ordinary speech-like singing in opera, cantata, mass or oratorio

    writings of the ancient Greeks and with Erycius Puteanus on the writings of Hucbald and wishing to recreate the old manner of storytelling and drama, pioneered

    Recitative

    Recitative

    Recitative

  • Stephen of Liège
  • Frankish churchman (c. 850–920)

    Stephen and the Office of St Lambert. Like the Offices of his contemporary Hucbald, Stephen's compositions follow the eight modes, though the musicologist

    Stephen of Liège

    Stephen_of_Liège

  • Chanson
  • Lyric-driven French song

    1150) Abbey of Saint Gall Notker the Stammerer Tuotilo Stephen of Liège Hucbald* Odo of Cluny* Fulbert of Chartres Heriger of Lobbes Saint Martial school

    Chanson

    Chanson

  • Guido of Arezzo
  • Italian music theorist and pedagogue (c. 991/2–1033)

    OCLC 251805291. —— (1978). "Micrologus". In Palisca, Claude V. (ed.). Hucbald, Guido, and John on music: Three Medieval Treatises. Translated by Babb

    Guido of Arezzo

    Guido of Arezzo

    Guido_of_Arezzo

  • Hypolydian mode
  • Church mode of medieval music theory

    pentachord of tone-tone-tone-semitone. However, from as early as the time of Hucbald the Hypolydian mode—even more than the corresponding authentic mode, the

    Hypolydian mode

    Hypolydian_mode

  • Scolica enchiriadis
  • Anonymous 9th-century treatise on music

    work, the Musica enchiriadis. These treatises were once attributed to Hucbald, but this is no longer accepted. The Scolica enchiriadis is written as

    Scolica enchiriadis

    Scolica enchiriadis

    Scolica_enchiriadis

  • Musica enchiriadis
  • Anonymous 9th-century treatise on music

    for polyphony in western art music. The treatise was once attributed to Hucbald, but this is no longer accepted. Some historians once attributed it to

    Musica enchiriadis

    Musica enchiriadis

    Musica_enchiriadis

  • Troubadour
  • Composer and performer of lyric poetry during the High Middle Ages

    1150) Abbey of Saint Gall Notker the Stammerer Tuotilo Stephen of Liège Hucbald* Odo of Cluny* Fulbert of Chartres Heriger of Lobbes Saint Martial school

    Troubadour

    Troubadour

    Troubadour

  • List of music theorists
  • writings had been preserved. Important medieval European theorists include Hucbald, Guido of Arezzo, Johannes Cotto, Franco of Cologne, Philippe de Vitry

    List of music theorists

    List of music theorists

    List_of_music_theorists

  • Madrigal
  • Secular vocal music composition of the Renaissance and early Baroque eras

    1150) Abbey of Saint Gall Notker the Stammerer Tuotilo Stephen of Liège Hucbald* Odo of Cluny* Fulbert of Chartres Heriger of Lobbes Saint Martial school

    Madrigal

    Madrigal

    Madrigal

  • Ubaldo
  • Name list

    Ubaldo (born 1979), boxer from the Dominican Republic Marie-Claire D'Ubaldo Hucbald Saint Ubaldo Day, Jessup, Pennsylvania's observance of Gubbio, Italy's

    Ubaldo

    Ubaldo

  • Palindrome
  • Sequence that reads the same forwards and backwards

    (active 1964–present) Pasi Heikura (b. 1963) Peter Hilton (1923–2010) Hucbald (850-930) Su Hui (poet) (fourth century CE) Velimir Khlebnikov (1885–1922)

    Palindrome

    Palindrome

    Palindrome

  • Heiric of Auxerre
  • French Benedictine theologian

    and Haimo of Auxerre. His own students included Remigius of Auxerre and Hucbald. His Miracula sancti Germani was a verse life of St. Germanus. Other works

    Heiric of Auxerre

    Heiric_of_Auxerre

  • Minnesang
  • Middle High German love song tradition

    1150) Abbey of Saint Gall Notker the Stammerer Tuotilo Stephen of Liège Hucbald* Odo of Cluny* Fulbert of Chartres Heriger of Lobbes Saint Martial school

    Minnesang

    Minnesang

    Minnesang

  • June 20
  • Day of the year

    (born 440) 840 – Louis the Pious, Carolingian emperor (born 778) 930 – Hucbald, Frankish monk and music theorist 981 – Adalbert, archbishop of Magdeburg

    June 20

    June_20

  • List of composers by name
  • Jean Hubeau (1917–1992) Hans Huber (1852–1921) Thaddäus Huber (1742–1798) Hucbald (c. 850–930) Jiří Hudec (1923–1996) Herbert Hughes (1882–1937) Robert Hughes

    List of composers by name

    List_of_composers_by_name

  • Musical improvisation
  • Spontaneous musical composition or performance

    d'Arezzo. 1978. "Micrologus" [ca. 1027], translated by Warren Babb. In Hucbald, Guido, and John on Music: Three Medieval Treatises, edited, with introductions

    Musical improvisation

    Musical_improvisation

  • Gregorian mode
  • System of pitch organization in Gregorian chant

    and Hypomixolydian. The earliest definition of plagal mode is found in Hucbald's treatise De harmonica (c. 880), who specifies the range as running from

    Gregorian mode

    Gregorian_mode

  • Notker the Stammerer
  • Composer, poet and scholar (c. 840–912)

    1150) Abbey of Saint Gall Notker the Stammerer Tuotilo Stephen of Liège Hucbald* Odo of Cluny* Fulbert of Chartres Heriger of Lobbes Saint Martial school

    Notker the Stammerer

    Notker the Stammerer

    Notker_the_Stammerer

  • Ludwigslied
  • Old High German poem

    and the library's holdings were rebuilt from 886 onwards under Abbot Hucbald. Hucbald himself provided 18 volumes, and further volumes seem to have been

    Ludwigslied

    Ludwigslied

    Ludwigslied

  • 850
  • Calendar year

    (approximate date) Hermenegildo Gutiérrez, Galician nobleman (d. 912) Hucbald, Frankish music theorist (or 840) Ki no Tomonori, Japanese poet (approximate

    850

    850

    850

  • Rotte (lyre)
  • Medieval string instrument originating from Anglo-Saxon England

    contemporary account of lyres comes from the Frankish monk and music theorist Hucbald in his book De Harmonica Institutione, written around 880 AD. In it he

    Rotte (lyre)

    Rotte (lyre)

    Rotte_(lyre)

  • Organistrum
  • Musical instrument

    consisting of octaves accompanied by fourths or fifths, first practised by Hucbald in the 10th century. This explanation allows tolerable certainty about

    Organistrum

    Organistrum

    Organistrum

  • Saint-Amand-les-Eaux
  • Commune in Hauts-de-France, France

    can see the Saint Juliette and Saint Cyr's statues. On fifth level, the Hucbald 's statue which was a poet and musician, and we can see dragons symbolizing

    Saint-Amand-les-Eaux

    Saint-Amand-les-Eaux

    Saint-Amand-les-Eaux

  • O Maria, Deu maire
  • 11th-century Marian hymn in Old Occitan

    scholars, and his focus was less hymnography but troubadours poetry itself. Hucbald numbered the eight tones through (see the synthesis explained in the article

    O Maria, Deu maire

    O_Maria,_Deu_maire

  • Jonatus
  • Christian monk

    times on 8 April. The earliest source for Jonatus' life is the work of Hucbald. In the 12th century, Galbert of Marchiennes wrote an account of his posthumous

    Jonatus

    Jonatus

  • Organum
  • Type of plainchant melody

    are taken. Various articles, including "Organum", "Musica enchiriadis", "Hucbald", "St Martial" in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed.

    Organum

    Organum

  • List of medieval composers
  • access, or UK public library membership required) Chartier, Yves (2001). "Hucbald of St Amand". Grove Music Online. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10

    List of medieval composers

    List_of_medieval_composers

  • Trouvère
  • Term for a medieval French poet-composer

    1150) Abbey of Saint Gall Notker the Stammerer Tuotilo Stephen of Liège Hucbald* Odo of Cluny* Fulbert of Chartres Heriger of Lobbes Saint Martial school

    Trouvère

    Trouvère

    Trouvère

  • List of editiones principes in Latin
  • First printed editions of a manuscript

    princeps when a copy of the manuscript was discovered in 1950. c. 1496 Hucbald, Ecloga de Calvis Peter von Friedberg Mainz Edited by Johannes Trithemius

    List of editiones principes in Latin

    List_of_editiones_principes_in_Latin

  • Lebuinus
  • 8th-century Christian saint

     789–95. tr. C.H. Talbot (1954). Anglo-Saxon Missionaries in Germany. [1] Hucbald of Saint-Amand, Vita Lebuini (between 918 and 930). ed. Laurentius Surius

    Lebuinus

    Lebuinus

    Lebuinus

  • Fulk (archbishop of Reims)
  • Roman Catholic archbishop

    schools of Reims, bringing in the renowned teachers Remigius of Auxerre and Hucbald of Saint-Amand. Political tensions continued to simmer, however, and in

    Fulk (archbishop of Reims)

    Fulk (archbishop of Reims)

    Fulk_(archbishop_of_Reims)

  • Heriveus (archbishop of Reims)
  • West Frankish churchman and political advisor

    historian Flodoard, who knew Heriveus well, states that he was the nephew of Hucbald, count of Ostrevent and Senlis, who was a son-in-law of Eberhard of Friuli

    Heriveus (archbishop of Reims)

    Heriveus_(archbishop_of_Reims)

  • Antiphonary of St. Benigne
  • Manuscript of Gregorian musical notation

    the tonal classification is a Latin ordinal according to the system of Hucbald (tonus I-VIII). William of Volpiano followed also here the shape of another

    Antiphonary of St. Benigne

    Antiphonary of St. Benigne

    Antiphonary_of_St._Benigne

  • 930
  • Calendar year

    896) June 19 – Xiao Qing, chancellor of Later Liang (b. 862) June 20 – Hucbald, Frankish monk and music theorist October 26 – Li Qi, chancellor of Later

    930

    930

    930

  • Maurontius of Douai
  • Vita Rictrudis, commissioned by Marchiennes Abbey, and written in 907 by Hucbald. Karine Ugé suggests that the identification of Maurontius as a son of

    Maurontius of Douai

    Maurontius of Douai

    Maurontius_of_Douai

  • Godric of Finchale
  • English hermit (c. 1065–1170)

    1150) Abbey of Saint Gall Notker the Stammerer Tuotilo Stephen of Liège Hucbald* Odo of Cluny* Fulbert of Chartres Heriger of Lobbes Saint Martial school

    Godric of Finchale

    Godric of Finchale

    Godric_of_Finchale

  • Trobairitz
  • Occitan female troubadours of the 12th and 13th centuries

    1150) Abbey of Saint Gall Notker the Stammerer Tuotilo Stephen of Liège Hucbald* Odo of Cluny* Fulbert of Chartres Heriger of Lobbes Saint Martial school

    Trobairitz

    Trobairitz

    Trobairitz

  • Sub Arturo plebs
  • 1150) Abbey of Saint Gall Notker the Stammerer Tuotilo Stephen of Liège Hucbald* Odo of Cluny* Fulbert of Chartres Heriger of Lobbes Saint Martial school

    Sub Arturo plebs

    Sub_Arturo_plebs

  • Saint-Amand Abbey
  • Former abbey in Nord, France

    and short syllables as well as a Life of Saint Amand, and his nephew, Hucbald of Saint-Amand, a noted music theorist and composer. The abbey was totally

    Saint-Amand Abbey

    Saint-Amand Abbey

    Saint-Amand_Abbey

  • Aurelian of Réôme
  • Frankish writer and music theorist (fl. c. 840 – 850)

    other more famous contemporary treatises (Musica and Scolica enchiriadis, Hucbald of Saint-Amand, Regino of Prüm etc.) one of the earliest Carolingian chant

    Aurelian of Réôme

    Aurelian_of_Réôme

  • List of Catholic musicians
  • Bingen, Benedictine abbess and one of the earliest known female composers. Hucbald, ninth century Benedictine composer and music theorist. Luca Marenzio,

    List of Catholic musicians

    List_of_Catholic_musicians

  • 840
  • Calendar year

    (approximate date) Eudokia Ingerina, Byzantine empress (approximate date) Hucbald, Frankish music theorist (or 850) Lothar I, Count of Stade, Frankish nobleman

    840

    840

    840

  • Rhythmical office
  • Section of Catholic liturgy

    antiphons are borrowed from that saint's Vitœ metricœ, presumably the work of Hucbald of St. Amand; the office itself was composed by Bishop Stephen of Liège

    Rhythmical office

    Rhythmical_office

  • Hagiopolitan Octoechos
  • System of chanting in medieval Christian churches

    treatise De harmonica institutione ("On the foundation of harmonics") by Hucbald of Saint-Amand Abbey, written by the end of the 9th century, when the author

    Hagiopolitan Octoechos

    Hagiopolitan_Octoechos

  • Perdigon
  • Early 13th-century French troubadour

    1150) Abbey of Saint Gall Notker the Stammerer Tuotilo Stephen of Liège Hucbald* Odo of Cluny* Fulbert of Chartres Heriger of Lobbes Saint Martial school

    Perdigon

    Perdigon

    Perdigon

  • Tonary
  • Liturgical book in Western Christianity

    these pairs: "Autentus protus, Plagi Proti, Autentus Deuterus" etc. Since Hucbald of Saint-Amand the eight tones were simply numbered according to this order:

    Tonary

    Tonary

  • 930s
  • Decade

    896) June 19 – Xiao Qing, chancellor of Later Liang (b. 862) June 20 – Hucbald, Frankish monk and music theorist October 26 – Li Qi, chancellor of Later

    930s

    930s

  • Johannes Cotto
  • Music theorist (fl. 1100)

    Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-09090-1. Palisca, Claude V., ed. (1978). Hucbald, Guido, and John on music: Three Medieval Treatises. Translated by Babb

    Johannes Cotto

    Johannes_Cotto

  • Edmond de Coussemaker
  • French musicologist and ethnologist (1805–1876)

    liturgical dramas from the Middle Ages and works by Adam de la Halle. Hucbald moine de St.-Amand et ses traités de musique (1839–1841) Histoire de l'harmonie

    Edmond de Coussemaker

    Edmond de Coussemaker

    Edmond_de_Coussemaker

  • Casella (Divine Comedy)
  • 13th-century Italian composer

    1150) Abbey of Saint Gall Notker the Stammerer Tuotilo Stephen of Liège Hucbald* Odo of Cluny* Fulbert of Chartres Heriger of Lobbes Saint Martial school

    Casella (Divine Comedy)

    Casella (Divine Comedy)

    Casella_(Divine_Comedy)

  • Odo of Arezzo
  • Italian composer and theorist (fl. 10th century)

    1150) Abbey of Saint Gall Notker the Stammerer Tuotilo Stephen of Liège Hucbald* Odo of Cluny* Fulbert of Chartres Heriger of Lobbes Saint Martial school

    Odo of Arezzo

    Odo_of_Arezzo

  • 840s
  • Decade

    (approximate date) Eudokia Ingerina, Byzantine empress (approximate date) Hucbald, Frankish music theorist (or 850) Lothar I, Count of Stade, Frankish nobleman

    840s

    840s

  • 850s
  • Decade

    (approximate date) Hermenegildo Gutiérrez, Galician nobleman (d. 912) Hucbald, Frankish music theorist (or 840) Ki no Tomonori, Japanese poet (approximate

    850s

    850s

  • List of music biographies in Rees's Cyclopaedia
  • writer on music 0.7 Burney. See Burney's History, Mercer's ed., under Hucbald. HUMPHREY, PELHAM 17th England Composer 0.6 Burney. See Burney's History

    List of music biographies in Rees's Cyclopaedia

    List_of_music_biographies_in_Rees's_Cyclopaedia

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Online names & meanings

  • Ewart
  • Boy/Male

    Christian, English, Jamaican

    Ewart

    Wealthy Defender; Boar Hardness; Wealthy Guard; Strong as a Boar; Guardian of Prosperity

  • Talicia
  • Girl/Female

    Australian, Jamaican

    Talicia

    Of a Noble Kind

  • Marvell
  • Girl/Female

    Australian, French, Latin

    Marvell

    Wonderful; Extraordinary

  • Sumana
  • Girl/Female

    Hindu

    Sumana

    Flower

  • Zach
  • Boy/Male

    English

    Zach

    and Zachary.

  • Suloina | ஸுலோஈநா
  • Girl/Female

    Tamil

    Suloina | ஸுலோஈநா

    A tree

  • Saubhgya
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu

    Saubhgya

    Loveliness

  • Zuhoor
  • Boy/Male

    Muslim/Islamic

    Zuhoor

    Appearance Manifestation

  • Laramie
  • Boy/Male

    French

    Laramie

    Surname with American connotations due to Laramie; a town in Wyoming USA on the Overland Trail of...

  • Natesha
  • Boy/Male

    Hindi

    Natesha

    Lord of dance.

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