Sainte-Chapelle (choir)

The Sainte-Chapelle was the name for the chapelle, the men of the clerical and musical institution which attached to the building, the Sainte-Chapelle (built 1243–1249), in Paris.

The establishment of the Sainte-Chapelle royale consisted of a treasurer, canons, and college - the members of which may have overlapped with the choir and instrumentalists.[1] However, following the dissolution of the musical establishment in the French Revolution, the term Sainte-Chapelle after 1803 applies only to the building.

Cappella

The distinction between the men and the building comes from the original meaning of French chapelle, as with Italian cappella or Spanish capilla, to mean a choral establishment, rather than the building where the priests, singers and instrumentalists of the chapelle were based. Consequently, as with the Chapelle royale the Sainte-Chapelle originally indicated not only the building, but more the costs and functions of clerical and musical establishment attached to it. However, unlike the Chapelle-royale the choir of the Sainte-Chapelle did not change residence or travel with the king.[2]

Between King and Pope

The Burgundian Duke Hugues III founded a Sainte-Chapelle in 1172. Although this is not the direct ancestor of the Saint-Chapelle established to serve the new building in the 1240s, Duke Hugues' Sainte-Chapelle also found itself between royal and papal authority.[3] Rivalry between the Sainte-Chapelle and Chapelle royale existed from at least 1511 when Louis XII was petitioned by both the treasurer of the Sainte-Chapelle and the master of the Chapelle royale for funds.

Masters of the Sainte-Chapelle

Notable composers who served as maîtres and sous-maîtres of the Sainte-Chapelle include Pierre Certon, Claudin de Sermisy, Nicolas Formé, Thomas Gobert, and Jean Veillot, but the most notable was perhaps Marc-Antoine Charpentier, from 1698. The masters were not only responsible for music for services, but also for the care of the enfants de la chapelle, the boys choir. Although this was officially part of Charpentier's job, from the 1460s the non-musical responsibilities in regard to the boys in practice delegated to the maître de grammaire (grammar teacher) and sous-maîtres of the chapelle.[4]

gollark: Also, since they're not very hard you'd probably have a lot of unfilled time if you replaced all school past year 5 with them?
gollark: I would prefer childhood and school to be a respite from the horrors of paperwork and simple but annoying finance things.
gollark: Mortgages are *also* pretty basic maths.
gollark: Saving money isn't complicated, it's just difficult to actually do.
gollark: ↑

References

  1. Constitutions des tresorier, chanoines et college de la Sainte-Chapelle du palais; Paris , 1779
  2. Isabelle Cazeaux French music in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries 1975 "Since the two institutions had become more distinct than in the past — in fact they were by then completely separate, although some of the members of the Sainte-Chapelle might also have had duties in the royal chapel, as Claudin de Sermisy"
  3. Bernard Dompnier Maîtrises & chapelles aux XVIIe & XVIIIe siècles 2003 p248 "La Sainte-Chapelle avait été fondée par le duc Hugues III en 1172. Elle dépendait directement des deux autorités royale et papale, et son prestige avait été encore rehaussé par le don de la Sainte-Hostie dû au Pape Eugène IV et ..."
  4. Michel Brenet Les musiciens de la Sainte-Chapelle du Palais 1973 "Nous ne trouverons pas avant l'année 1463 un document qui désigne nominativement l'un des maîtres des enfants de la Sainte-Chapelle"
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