Online Encyclopedia

CLAVICYTHERIUM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 469 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CLAVICYTHERIUM  , a name usually applied to an upright

spinet (q.v.), the soundboard and strings of which were vertical instead of
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horizontal, being thus perpendicular to the keybcard; but it would seem that the clavicytherium proper is distinct from the upright spinet in that its strings are placed horizontally . In the early clavicytherium there was, as in the spinet, only one
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string (of gut) to each key, set in vibration by means of a small
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quill or leather plectrum mounted on a
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jack which acted as in the spinet and harpsichord (q.v.) . The clavicytherium or keyed 1 The words clavicorde, clavicordo and clavicordio, respectively French,
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Italian and
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Spanish, were applied to a different type of instrument, the spinet (q.v.) . 2 See Sebastian Virdung, Musica getutscht and auszgezogen (Basel, 1511) (facsimile reprint Berlin, 1882, edited by R . Eitner); J . Verschuere Reynvaan, Musijkaal Kunst-Woordenboek (Amsterdam, 1795) (a very scarce
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book, of which the
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British Museum does not possess a copy) ; Jacob AdIung, Musica Mechanica Organoedi (Berlin, 1768), vol. ii. pp . 158-9; A . J . Hipkins, The
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History of the Pianoforte (
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London, 1896), pp . 61 and 62 . cythera or cetra, names which in the 14th and 15th centuries had been applied somewhat indiscriminately to
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instruments having strings stretched over a soundboard and plucked by fingers or plectrum, was probably of Italian ' or possibly of south German origin . Sebastian Virdung,2 writing early in the 16th century, describes the clavicytherium as a new invention, having gut strings, and gives an
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illustration of it .

(See PIANOFORTE.) A certain amount of uncertainty exists as to its exact construction, due to the extreme rarity of unrestored specimens extant, and to the almost

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total absence of trustworthy
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practical information . In a unique specimen with two keyboards dating from the 16th or 17th century, which is in the collection of Baron Alexandre Kraus,' what appear to be vibrating strings stretched over a soundboard perpendicular to the keyboard are in reality the wires forming
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part of the mechanism of the
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action . The arrangement of this mechanism is the distinctive feature of the clavicytherium, for the wires, unlike the strings of the upright spinet, increase in length from
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left to right, so that the upright harp-shaped back has its higher side over the treble of the keyboard instead of over the bass . The vibrating strings of the clavicytherium in the Kraus Museum are stretched horizontally over two kinds of psalteries fixed one over the other . The first, serving for the
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lower
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register, is of the well-known trapezoid shape and lies over the keyboards; it has 30 wire strings in pairs of unisons corresponding to the 15 lowest keys . The second psaltery resembles the kanoun of the
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Arabs, and has 36 strings in courses of 3 unisons corresponding to the next 12 keys, and 88 very thin strings in courses of 4, completing the 49 keys; the compass thus has a range of four octaves from C to C . The quills of the jacks belonging to the two keyboards are of different length and thickness . The jacks, which
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work as in the spinet, are attached to the perpendicular wires, disposed in two parallel rows, one for each keyboard . There is a very
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fine specimen of the so-called clavicytherium (upright spinet) in the Donaldson museum of the Royal College of
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Music, London, acquired from the Correr collection at Venice in 1885.' The instrument is undated, but A . J . Hipkins 6 placed it early in the 16th or even at the end of the 15th century . There is German writing on the inside of the back, referring to some agreement at
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Ulm .

The

case is of pine-wood, and the natural keys of box-wood . The jacks have the early steel springs, and in 1885 traces were found in the instrument of
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original brass plectra, all of which point to a very early date . A learned Italian, Nicolo Vicentino,6 living in the 16th century, describes an archicernbalo of his own invention, at which the per-former had to stand, having four rows of keys designed to obtain a
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complete mesotonic pure third tuning . This was an attempt to reintroduce the ancient Greek musical
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system . This instrument was probably an upright harpsichord or clavicembalo . For the history of the clavicytherium considered as a forerunner of the pianoforte see PIANOFORTE . (K .

End of Article: CLAVICYTHERIUM
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