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Te Deum stained glass window by Christopher Whall at St Mary's church, Ware, Hertfordshire. The Te Deum (/ t eɪ ˈ d eɪ əm / or / t iː ˈ d iː əm /, [1] [2] Latin: [te ˈde.um]; from its incipit, Te Deum laudamus (Latin for 'Thee, God, we praise')) is a Latin Christian hymn traditionally ascribed to a date before AD 500, but perhaps with antecedents that place it much earlier. [3]
He was elected by the Propaganda Fide on 12 January 1687, and was consecrated at Somerset House on 13 May 1688 as titular bishop of Calliopolis. [1] After his consecration he went to his vicariate, arriving on 2 August at York , where he was received by the secular and regular clergy, who sang the Te Deum .
Marc-Antoine Charpentier composed six Te Deum settings, but only four of them have survived. [1] Largely because of the great popularity of its prelude, the best known is the Te Deum in D major, H.146, written as a grand motet for soloists, choir, and instrumental accompaniment probably between 1688 and 1698, during Charpentier's stay at the Jesuit Church of Saint-Louis in Paris, where he held ...
Te Deum: LWV 56 Psyché: LWV 57 Bellérophon: LWV 58 Proserpine: LWV 59 Le triomphe de l'amour: LWV 60 Persée: LWV 61 Phaëton: LWV 62 De profundis: LWV 63 Amadis: LWV 64 1. Dies irae: 2. Benedictus: LWV 65 Roland: LWV 66 Marches pour le régiment de Savoie: LWV 67 Quare fremuerunt: LWV 68 Idylle sur la paix: LWV 69 Le temple de la paix: LWV ...
Desmarets' Te Deum was performed in the oratory of the Louvre Palace in February 1687 to celebrate Louis XIV's recovery from illness, and later that year the king granted him a pension of 900 livres. Desmarets married Élisabeth Desprez, the daughter of a Parisian blade manufacturer, in 1689, and the following year their daughter, Élisabeth ...
Beldwin's copy includes some sections of the Te Deum and Benedictus from the Morning Canticles, given in score. Recent research suggests that it may have been composed somewhat earlier, for a copy in the York Minster part-books (York Minster MS 13/1-5) made by the singer John Todd about 1597-99 describes it as 'Mr Byrd's new sute of service for ...
During a performance of his own Te Deum, Jean-Baptiste Lully injures his foot with the point of his cane; this results in death from gangrene a few weeks later. Jean-Nicolas Francine , Lully's son-in-law, becomes director of the Paris Opera.
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