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  2. Lyon & Healy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyon_&_Healy

    The "Shamrock model folk harp" has 34 strings. It stands 55 inches (140 cm) tall with its legs. The legs can be removed so the player can hold the instrument lap—style on the knees. It weighs about 10 kilograms (22 lb). It features Celtic designs on the soundboard. An Irish or folk harp player is sometimes called a harper rather than harpist.

  3. Celtic harp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celtic_harp

    Only two quadrangular instruments occur within the Irish context on the west coast of Scotland and both carvings date two hundred years after the Pictish carvings. [14] The first true representations of the Irish triangular harp do not appear till the late eleventh century in a reliquary and the twelfth century on stone and the earliest harps used in Ireland were quadrangular lyres as ...

  4. Sylvia Woods (harpist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sylvia_Woods_(harpist)

    Woods’ initial foray into harp sales grew into a large mail-order catalog offering products and resources for harpists worldwide; her brick-and-mortar store, the Sylvia Woods Harp Center, opened in 1992 and was believed to be the largest harp store in the world, with between fifty and 100 harps on the floor at any given time.

  5. Origin of the harp in Europe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origin_of_the_harp_in_Europe

    The Nigg Stone 790–799 AD carving of a Pictish harp, selected portion of a 19th-century illustration. The earliest depiction of an Irish harp, c.1000—1100 AD. Depicted on the side of the reliquary shrine of St. Máedóc or Mogue of Ferns, County Wexford, Ireland. The origins of the triangular frame harp are unclear.

  6. Trinity College harp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trinity_College_Harp

    It is an early Irish harp or wire-strung cláirseach. It is dated to the 14th or 15th century and, along with the Queen Mary Harp and the Lamont Harp, is the oldest [1] of three surviving medieval harps from the region. [2] The harp was used as a model for the coat of arms of Ireland and for the trade-mark of Guinness stout.

  7. Morley Harps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morley_Harps

    After the First World War, the demand for new pedal harps had dropped to the point where John Sebastian began to concentrate exclusively on harp repair and the making of small, Irish-style harps. [3] John Sebastian Morley was the founding president of the United Kingdom Harp Association.