Einleitung : Akustische Dimensionen des Mittelalters

As any other historical time, the Middle Ages were not silent but full of sounds. In order to come to a fuller understanding of medieval societies and cultures, we need to look at the acoustic dimensions, traces of which can be found in all kinds of sources such as texts, objects and notations. Some...

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Détails bibliographiques
Publié dans:Das Mittelalter. - Heidelberg : Heidelberg University Publishing, 1996. - 27(2022), 1, Seite 1-11
Auteur principal: Clauss, Martin 1973- (Auteur)
Autres auteurs: Mierke, Gesine 1977-
Format: Article en ligne
Langue:German
Publié: 2022-07-21
Accès à la collection:Das Mittelalter
Description matérielle:11
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Résumé:As any other historical time, the Middle Ages were not silent but full of sounds. In order to come to a fuller understanding of medieval societies and cultures, we need to look at the acoustic dimensions, traces of which can be found in all kinds of sources such as texts, objects and notations. Some of the issues that are prominent in a lot of papers in this issue - such as inter-sensuality, mediatization, the function of instruments, the aesthetics of sounds - are exemplified in this introduction by looking at medieval belliphony: by examining a quote from the ‘Colloquia Familiaria’ (Erasmus of Rotterdam) and the ‘Nibelungenlied’, the sounds of war and the sound used to narrate wars come into focus. Keywords Sound; Belliphony; War; Colloquia Familiaria; Nibelungenlied
Description:Gesehen am 28.07.2022
Description matérielle:11
ISSN:2196-6869
DOI:10.17885/heiup.mial.2022.1.24539