Online Encyclopedia

BUMBULUM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 796 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BUMBULUM  , BoMBULUM or BUNIBULUnt, a fabulous musical

instrument described in an apocryphal letter of St Jerome to
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Dardanus,1 and illustrated in a series of illuminated
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MSS. of the 0th to the 11th century, together with other
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instruments described in the same letter . These MSS. are the Psalter of Emmeran, oth century, described by Martin Gerbert,2 who gives a few illustrations from it; the Cotton MS . Tiberius C . VI. in the
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British Museum, 11th century; the famous Boulogne Psalter, A D . 1000 ; and' the Psalter of
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Angers, 9th century.' In the Cotton MS. the instrument consists of an angular
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frame, from which depends by a chain a rectangular metal
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plate having twelve bent arms attached in two rows of three on each side, one above the other . The arms appear to terminate in small rectangular bells or plates, and it is supposed that the standard frame was intended to be shaken like a sistrum in order to set the bells jangling . Sebastian Virdung 4 gives illustrations of these instruments of Jerome, and among them of the one called bumbulum in the Cotton MS., which Virdung calls Fistula Hieronimi . The general outline is the same, but instead of metal arms there is the same number of bent pipes with conical
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bore . Virdung explains, following the apocryphal letter, that the stand re semb!
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ing the draughtsman's square represents the
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Holy
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Cross, the rectangular
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object dangling therefrom signifies Christ on the Cross, and the twelve pipes are the twelve apostles . Virdung's
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illustration, probably copied from an older
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work in
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manuscript, conforms more closely to the text of the letter than does the instrument in the Cotton MS . There is no evidence whatever of the actual existence of such an instrument during the
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middle ages, with the exception of this series of fanciful pictures
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drawn to illustrate an instrument known from description only . The word bombulum was probably derived from the same root as the 0o,uOai Xios of Aristophanes (Acharnians, 866) ((3b0or and (tabs), a comic compound fora bag-
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pipe with a
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play on flo,u$uXu5s, an
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insect that hums or buzzes (see BAG-PIPE) .

The

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original described in the letter, also from hearsay, was probably an early type of
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organ . (K .

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