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Holy Treasure and Sacred Song
Benjamin David Brand
其他書名
Relic Cults and Their Liturgies in Medieval Tuscany
出版
Oxford University Press
, 2014
主題
History / Europe / Medieval
Music / General
Music / Ethnic
Music / History & Criticism
Music / Religious / General
Music / Religious / Christian
Religion / History
Religion / Christian Rituals & Practice / Worship & Liturgy
Religion / Christian Church / History
Religion / Christianity / Saints & Sainthood
ISBN
019935135X
9780199351350
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=kPo_BAAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
In the Middle Ages, relic cults provoked rich expressions of devotion not only in hagiographic literature and visual art but also in liturgical music and ritual. Despite the long-recognized inter-play between these diverse media, historians of the period rarely integrate analysis of sacred music into their research on other modes of worship espoused by relic cults. Holy Treasure and Sacred Song situates this oft-neglected yet critical domain of religious life at the center of an examination of relic cults in medieval Tuscany. Long recognized as a center of artistic innovation during the Renaissance, this region also boasted the rich and well documented veneration of holy bishops and martyrs buried in the cathedrals and suburban shrines of its principal cities. Author Benjamin Brand reveals that the music composed to honor these local saints - no fewer than ninety chants for the Mass and Divine Office - were essential components of larger devotional campaigns that included the recording of their life stories and the building and decoration of their shrines. Furthermore, the local Tuscan clerics who assumed control of these campaigns with the intent of gaining both temporal and spiritual power drew on influential global models - literary, architectural, musical, and ritual - from preeminent European powers, Rome and the Carolingian Empire. By integrating detailed analyses of plainsong and sacred ritual into this rich panorama, Brand traces the dialectic between local, regional, and pan-European trends, revealing the centrality of the liturgy in the development of medieval relic cults and, in a broader sense, medieval European culture and politics. Offering a rich topography of music, liturgy, and devotion through an interdisciplinary approach ideal for the multifaceted nature of medieval relic cults, Holy Treasure and Sacred Song will find a broad audience amongst musicologists and medievalists alike.