Rudolf of St Trond
Rudolf of St Trond (also Rodulf, Rodolfus, Rodolphe, Radulphus, Rudolph, or Raoul, c. 1070–1138) was a Benedictine abbot of St Trond Abbey, chronicler and composer.[1]
A musical treatise Quaestiones in musica was attributed to him by Rudolf Steglich;[2] another suggestion is Franco of Liège.[3]
He wrote a chronicle Gesta Abbatum Trudonensium, on the abbots of his abbey, beginning in 999;[4] it is included in the Paleographie musicale and the Monumenta Germaniae Historica. His description of monastic life includes details of musical practice and training methods of Guido of Arezzo.[5] Historian Henri de Lubac wrote that he showed "a very exacting and almost combative idea of historical truth."[6]
Notes
- Radulphus of St. Trond
- Rudolf Steglich, Die Quaestiones in musica: ein Choraltraktat des zentralen Mittelalters und ihr mutmasslicher Verfasser, Rudolf von St Trond (1070–1138) (Leipzig, 1911/R)
- Dolores Pesce, The Affinities and Medieval Transposition (1987), pp. 39-40.
- Sources
- Anderson, Gordon A. & Balensuela, C. Matthew (2001). "Rodolfus of St Truiden". In Root, Deane L. (ed.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Oxford University Press.
- Medieval Exegesis (1988 translation), p. 73.
gollark: I could add that to `WHY`, if I knew how to parse CLI args in python.
gollark: It's still slow.
gollark: `WHY` is fully Turing-complete, and uses modern, advanced compiler technology.
gollark: Should computers become faster, the `WHY` language compiler can easily be modified to keep up.
gollark: Yes......
External links
- (in French) musicologie.org page
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.