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  2. Medieval music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_music

    Medieval music encompasses the sacred and secular music of Western Europe during the Middle Ages, [1] from approximately the 6th to 15th centuries. It is the first and longest major era of Western classical music and is followed by the Renaissance music; the two eras comprise what musicologists generally term as early music, preceding the common practice period.

  3. Music in Medieval England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_in_Medieval_England

    Music in Medieval England. Music in Medieval England, from the end of Roman rule in the fifth century until the Reformation in the sixteenth century, was a diverse and rich culture, including sacred and secular music and ranging from the popular to the elite. The sources of English secular music are much more limited than for ecclesiastical music.

  4. Music in Medieval Scotland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_in_Medieval_Scotland

    The Queen Mary Harp, preserved in the National Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh. Music in Medieval Scotland includes all forms of musical production in what is now Scotland between the fifth century and the adoption of the Renaissance in the early sixteenth century. The sources for Scottish Medieval music are extremely limited.

  5. Early music of the British Isles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_music_of_the_British...

    Surviving sources indicate that there was a rich and varied musical soundscape in medieval Britain. [1] Historians usually distinguish between ecclesiastical music, designed for use in church, or in religious ceremonies, and secular music for use from royal and baronial courts, celebrations of some religious events, to public and private entertainments of the people. [1]

  6. Medieval dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_dance

    The most documented form of secular dance during the Middle Ages is the carol also called the "carole" or "carola" and known from the 12th and 13th centuries in Western Europe in rural and court settings. [2] It consisted of a group of dancers holding hands usually in a circle, with the dancers singing in a leader and refrain style while ...

  7. Court music in Scotland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Court_music_in_Scotland

    Court music in Scotland is all music associated with the Royal Court of Scotland, between its origins in the tenth century, until its effective dissolution in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries with the Union of Crowns 1603 and Acts of Union 1707. Sources for Ireland suggest that there would have been filidh in early Medieval Scotland ...

  8. Old Hall Manuscript - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Hall_Manuscript

    Folio 12v of the Old Hall Manuscript contains the decorated opening to a Gloria by Roy Henry (probably King Henry V).. The Old Hall Manuscript (British Library, Add MS 57950) is the largest, most complete, and most significant source of English sacred music of the late 14th and early 15th centuries, and as such represents the best source for late Medieval English music.

  9. Guillaume de Machaut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guillaume_de_Machaut

    Renaissance music →. v. t. e. Guillaume de Machaut (French: [ɡijom də maʃo], Old French: [ɡiˈʎawmə də maˈtʃaw (θ)]; also Machau and Machault; c. 1300 – April 1377) was a French composer and poet who was the central figure of the ars nova style in late medieval music. His dominance of the genre is such that modern musicologists ...