Hucbald(c. 840 or 850– 20 June 930; alsoHucbaldusorHubaldus) was aBenedictine monkactive as amusic theorist,poet, composer, teacher, andhagiographer.[1]He was long associated withSaint-Amand Abbey,so is often known asHucbald of St Amand.[2]Deeply influenced byBoethius'De Institutione Musica,Hucbald's (De)Musica,formerly known asDe harmonica institutione,aims to reconcileancient Greek musictheory and the contemporary practice ofGregorian chantwith the use of many notated examples. Among the leading music theorists of theCarolingian era,he was likely a near contemporary ofAurelian of Réôme,the unknown author of theMusica enchiriadis,and the anonymous authors of other music theory textsCommemoratio brevis,Alia musica,andDe modis.[1]

Hucald'sMusica,page 125 in the Codex 169(468) from theAbbey library of Saint Gall

Life

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Born in northern France, about 840[3][4][5]or 850,[1]Hucbald studied at Elnone Abbey (later namedSaint-Amand Abbey,after its 7th-century founder) where his uncle Milo was chief master of studies (scholasticus), in the diocese ofDoornik.[6]He made rapid progress in the sciences of thequadrivium,including that of practical music, and, according to a laudatory 11th-century biographical account, at an early age composed ahymnin honour ofSt Andrew,which met with such success as to excite the jealousy of his uncle.[citation needed]It is said that Hucbald in consequence was compelled to leave Saint-Amand[7]and to seek protection from the bishop ofNevers.

He was also a companion of studies of such future masters asRemigius of AuxerreandHeiric of Auxerre,perhaps as a disciple of the court philosopherJohannes Scottus Eriugena.In 872 he was back again at Saint-Amand as the successor in the headmastership of the monastery school of his uncle, to whom he would have been presumably reconciled. Between 883 and 900 Hucbald went on several missions to reform and reconstruct schools of music damaged or destroyed by theNorman,including those ofSt. BertinandRheims.In 900, however, he returned to Saint-Amand, where he remained until his death on 20 June 930.[7]

Works

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Music theory

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A 19th century piano depicting Hucbald (far left) among other Christian and musical figures.

The only theoretical work which can positively be ascribed to Hucbald is hisMusica(formerly known asDe harmonica institutione), probably written about 880.[8][9]The work shows considerable influence from the writings ofBoethius,and by extensionPtolemy.[8]

TheMusica enchiriadis,published with other writings of minor importance inGerbert'sScriptores de Musica,and containing a complete system of musical science as well as instructions regarding notation, has now been proved to have originated elsewhere about the same time and to have been the work of unknown writers belonging to the same intellectualmilieu.This work is celebrated chiefly for an essay on a new form of notation described today asDaseian notation[7]and its readable transmission of the first record of Westernpolyphonic music.[citation needed]

Compositions

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A few sacred compositions can be somewhat securely attributed to Hucbald,[10]some are found in theWinchester Troperand Sarum antiphoner.[11]Literary sources suggest that he wrote many other now lost works.[11]

Other works

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In addition to his musical works, Hucbald also wrote literary poetry intended to be read rather than sung. Two poems in classical Latinhexameterssurvive. One is the remarkableEcloga de calvis,a poem of 146 lines in praise of baldness, in which every word begins with the letter C (the first letter in the wordcalvus,"bald" ).[12]The catalogue of illustrious bald men includes kings, generals, poets, doctors, and even the apostle Paul.[13]Although the poem was probably written during the reign ofCharles the Bald,there is no evidence to support the common assumption that it was dedicated to him, and a separate 54-line prefatory poem that precedes the work in the manuscripts explicitly dedicates it toHatto,the archbishop of Mainz.[14]TheEcloga de calviscirculated widely during the Renaissance: at least six printed editions are known from the first half of the 16th century, andErasmusin one of his dialogues recommends recitation of its alliterative lines as a cure for stuttering.[15]

The other hexameter work,De diebus Aegyptiacis,is a short astrological poem listing the days of ill omen in each month of the year.[16]Hucbald also wrote a number of prose saint's lives.[17][18]

References

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  1. ^abcChartier 2001,"Introduction".
  2. ^Chartier 2001,"1. Life".
  3. ^Manitius 1911,p. 588.
  4. ^Raby 1934,p. 249.
  5. ^Weakland 1956,p. 68.
  6. ^Britannica2021.
  7. ^abcChisholm 1911.
  8. ^abPalisca 1978,p. 5.
  9. ^Chartier 2001,"3. The theorist".
  10. ^Chartier 2001,"3. The composer".
  11. ^abPalisca 1978,p. 4.
  12. ^Text inWinterfeld 1899, pp. 261–271;Patrologia Latina132, cols. 1041–1045.
  13. ^Raby 1934,pp. 249–250.
  14. ^The assumption that Hucbald wrote the work for Charles, which was already circulating in the 11th century, was repeated by the editors of the earliest printed editions, including the 17th-century German philologist Kaspar von Barth, who added to the poem 15 spurious verses containing a direct address to the emperor in order to support his argument. Winterfeld (1899, pp. 264, 271) reviews the evidence and both he and Manitius (1911, pp. 588, 591) dismiss it as a fiction. The confusion is compounded by the fact that Hucbald is known to have sent other verses to Charles, including a poem on self-control (De sobrietate) written by his uncle, Milo (Manitius 1911, pp. 588, 590).
  15. ^Sheerin 1980.
  16. ^Text inWinterfeld 1899, p. 272.
  17. ^Texts inPatrologia Latina132.
  18. ^Manitius 1911,pp. 591–592.

Sources

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  • This article incorporates text from a publication now in thepublic domain:Chisholm, Hugh,ed. (1911). "Hucbald".Encyclopædia Britannica.Vol. 13 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 847.
  • Chartier, Yves (2001)."Hucbald of St Amand".Grove Music Online.Oxford:Oxford University Press.doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.13475.(subscription orUK public library membershiprequired)
  • Manitius, Max (1911).Geschichte der lateinischen Literatur des Mittelalters I: Von Justinian bis zur Mitte des zehnten Jahrhunderts.Munich: Beck. pp. 588–594.
  • Palisca, Claude V., ed. (1978).Hucbald, Guido, and John on music: Three Medieval Treatises.Translated by Babb, Warren. Index of chants byAlejandro Enrique Planchart.New Haven and London:Yale University Press.ISBN978-0-300-02040-3.
  • Raby, F. J. E. (1934).A History of Secular Latin Poetry in the Middle Ages, vol. 1.Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 249–250.
  • Sheerin, Daniel J. (1980). "A Carolingian Cure Recovered: Erasmus' Citation of Hucbald of St. Amand'sEcloga de Caluis".Bibliothèque d'Humanisme et Renaissance.42(1): 167–171.JSTOR20676067.
  • Weakland, Rembert (January 1956). "Hucbald as Musician and Theorist".The Musical Quarterly.42(1).Oxford University Press:66–84.JSTOR740475.
  • Winterfeld, Paul von (1899).Poetae Latini Aevi Carolini IV.1.Berlin: Weidemann. pp. 261–275.(In the seriesMonumenta Germaniae Historica.)
  • "Hucbald | French music theorist | Britannica".Encyclopædia Britannica.Chicago:Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.1 January 2021.Archivedfrom the original on 27 August 2021.

Further reading

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  • McAlhany, J.Beards & Baldness in the Middle Ages: Three Texts.Brooklyn, NY: Leverhill, 2024 (contains a translation of theEcloga de calvis,with notes, and brief overview of Hucbald's life and career)ISBN979-8-9896993-0-8
  • Chartier, Yves (1995).L'oeuvre musicale d'Hucbald de Saint-Amand: les compositions et le traité de musique.Montréal: Bellarmin.ISBN978-2-89007-732-4.
  • Fuller, Sarah (Spring 2008). "Interpreting Hucbald on Mode".Journal of Music Theory.52(1): 13–40.JSTOR40607028.
  • Grutchfield, E. J. (1 June 1930). "Hucbald: A Millenary Commemoration".The Musical Times.71(1048): 507–510.doi:10.2307/917357.JSTOR917357.
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