Anonymous I and <i>Prologus in tonarium</i>: Changing Interpretations of Music Theory in Eleventh-Century Germany

Authors

  • T. J. H. McCarthy Dr Thomas McCarthy was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, and Oriel College, Oxford. He teaches in the Department of Medieval History at TCD, where he will take up an IRCHSS Postdoctoral Research Fellowship in Michaelmas 2005. A specialist in medieval intellectual history, he is the author of a number of published and forthcoming articles in Medium Aevum and Revue bénédictine. [August 2005]

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.35561/JSMI01053

Keywords:

music theory, Latin sources

Abstract

This article examines the relationship between Prologus in tonarium by Abbot Bern of Reichenau (d. 1048) and the eleventh-century music treatise known today as ’Anonymous I’ (first published by Dom. Martin Gerbert in Scriptores ecclesiastici de musica sacra of 1784). The authorship and dating of Anonymous I are disputed in current historical literature: Abbot Bern himself has been suggested as its author by one scholar, while dates proposed by other scholars range from c1000 to c1100. The situation is further complicated by the possible connexion of Anonymous I both to an interpolated version of Prologus in tonarium and to the lengthy treatise Breviarium de musica by Frutolf of Michelsberg (d. 1103). This article argues that though Anonymous I was probably written shortly after Prologus in tonarium, it was produced independently of that work. Anonymous I was, however, an important influence on the reception of Abbot Bern’s music theory by eleventh-century clerks.

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Published

30-06-2005

How to Cite

McCarthy, T. J. H. (2005). Anonymous I and <i>Prologus in tonarium</i>: Changing Interpretations of Music Theory in Eleventh-Century Germany. Journal of the Society for Musicology in Ireland, 1, 19–32. https://doi.org/10.35561/JSMI01053

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Articles