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The motets of Philippe de Vitry and the fourteenth-century renaissance*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2008
Extract
Towards the end of August 1350, Petrarch wrote from his home at Padua to Philippe de Vitry, chastising his friend for a letter that he had sent to their mutual patron, Cardinal Guy de Boulogne, papal legate in Italy. Vitry's mind has slowed since their first acquaintance, writes Petrarch, so that he now considers even a glorious absence from France undesirable. The man who, when asked where he was from, answered that he was a citizen of the world, now thinks any departure from France an exile. The dust of France lies too heavily on his shoes; the Petit-Pont in Paris, ‘its arch not quite in the shape of a tortoise shell’, is too appealing to him, and the murmur of the Seine delights his ear too much.
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1 Epistole familiari, ix.13. See Rossi, V., ed., Francesco Petrarca: Le familiari, 4 vols. (Florence, 1933–42), ii, pp. 246–56Google Scholar; also Bernardo, A. S., trans., Letters on Familiar Matters, IX–XV1 (Baltimore and London, 1982), pp. 35–44.Google Scholar For Petrarch's other letter to Vitry (Epistole familiari, xi.14), sent from Avignon on 23 October 1351, see Rossi, , ii, pp. 354–5.Google Scholar See in general on these letters Wilkins, E. H., Studies in the Life and Works of Petrarch (Cambridge, MA, 1955), pp. 66, 82, 90, 113, 171 Google Scholar; Wilkins, E. H., Petrarch's Correspondence, Medioevo e Umanesimo 3 (Padua, 1960), pp. 5, 64, 67.Google Scholar
2 The considerably shorter text of this letter in the later γ tradition substitutes ‘Tu domino nostro compatris …’ for this passage; for this version, see Rossi, , Le familiari, ii, pp. 267–75Google Scholar. The α version is not limited to Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale, MS lat. 8568, as Schrade claims (‘Philippe de Vitry: Some New Discoveries’, Musical Quarterly, 45 (1956), pp. 330–54, on p. 331 n. 3).Google Scholar
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7 See Table 1. The majority of these texts and sources are listed in Walther, H., Initia carminum ac versuum medii aevi posterioris latinorum: Alphabetisches Verzeichnis der Versanfänge mittellateinischer Dichtungen, 2nd edn, Carmina Medii Aevi Posterioris Latina 1 (Göttingen, 1969)Google Scholar, and in the supplements by Stohlmann, J. in Mittellateinisches Jahrbuch, 7 (1971), pp. 293–314 Google Scholar; Stohlmann, J. in Mittellateinisches Jahrbuch, 8 (1972), pp. 288–304 Google Scholar; Stohlmann, J. in Mittellateinisches Jahrbuch, 9 (1973), pp. 320–44Google Scholar; Stohlmann, J. in Mittellateinisches Jahrbuch, 12 (1977), pp. 297–315 Google Scholar; Stohlmann, J. in Mittellateinisches Jahrbuch, 15 (1980), pp. 259–86Google Scholar; Stohlmann, J. in Mittellateinisches Jahrbuch, 16 (1981), pp. 409–41Google Scholar. Of these sources, only Darmstadt, Hessische Landes- und Hochschulbibliothek, MS 521, and F-Pn MS lat. 3343, were known to Schrade (‘Philippe de Vitry’, p. 353; see also Pognon, E., ‘Ballades mythologiques de Jean de le Mote, Philippe de Vitri, Jean Campion’, Humanisme et Renaissance, 5 (1938), pp. 385–417 Google Scholar, and Bibliothèque nationale: catalogue général des manuscrits latins V (nos. 3278 á 3535) (Paris, 1966), pp. 236–48).Google Scholar
8 Codices manuscripti theologici bibliothecae palatinae vindobonensis latini aliarumque occidentis linguarum, 2 vols. in 6 (Vienna, 1793–1802), i/3, cols. 2769–72Google Scholar; see also Appendix, no. 12.
9 For books of this type see generally Wilpert, P., ‘Die Entstehung einer Miscellanhandschrift des 15. Jahrhunderts” Mittellateinisches Jahrbuch, 1 (1964), pp. 34–47, on pp. 415–17Google Scholar; Sottili, A., ‘Wege des Humanismus: lateinischer Petrarchismus und deutsche Studentenschaften italienischer Renaissance-Universitäten’, From Wolfram and Petrarch to Goethe and Grass: Studies in Literature in Honour of Leonard Forsler, ed. Green, D. H., Johnson, L. P. and Wuttke, D., Saecula Spiritalia 5 (Baden-Baden, 1982), pp. 125–49.Google Scholar The contents of anthologies of this type remain imperfectly surveyed; several, however, receive detailed descriptions in Rose, V., Verzeichniss der lateinischen Handschriften der Königlichen Bibliothek zu Berlin, 3 vols. in 5 (Berlin, 1893–1919).Google Scholar For brief identifying descriptions see also Sottili, , ‘I codici … I−X]”, IMU, 10 (1967), pp. 411–91Google Scholar; Sottili, , ‘I codici … I−X]”, IMU, 11 (1968), pp. 345–448; 12 (1969), pp. 335–476 Google Scholar; Sottili, , ‘I codici … I−X]”, IMU, 13 (1970), pp. 281–167Google Scholar; Sottili, , ‘I codici … I−X]”, IMU, 14 (1971), pp. 313–402 Google Scholar; Sottili, , ‘I codici … I−X]”, IMU, 15 (1972), pp. 361–423 Google Scholar; Sottili, , ‘I codici … I−X]”, IMU, 18 (1975), pp. 1–72 Google Scholar; Sottili, , ‘I codici … I−X]”, IMU, 19 (1976), pp. 429–92Google Scholar; Sottili, , ‘I codici … I−X]”, IMU, 20 (1977), pp. 413–94.Google Scholar
10 Lübeck, Stadtbibliothek, MS 152; see Appendix, no. 6. This anthology was, however, used for Walther, Initia, and for Bertalot, L., Initia humanistica latina: Initienverzeichnis lateinischer Prosa und Poesie aus der Zeit des 14. bis 16. Jahrhunderts (Tübingen, 1985–)Google Scholar; see also Kristeller, P. O., Iter italicum (London and Leiden, 1965–), iii, pp. 598–601.Google Scholar For Baechtz see Kleineidam, E., Universitas studii Erffordensis: Überblick über die Geschichte der Universität Erfurt im Mittelalter, 1392–1521, 2 vols., Erfurter theologische Studien 14, 22 (Leipzig, 1964–1969), i, pp. 246, 319 Google Scholar; Wiegand, F., ‘Arnoldus Sommernat de Bremis, Symon Baechtz de Homborch, und Joannes Osthusen de Erffordia: drei Erfurter Universitätsjuristen des 15. Jahrhunderts als Ratssyndiker von Lübeck’, Beiträge zur Geschichte der Universität Erfurt (1392–1816), 7 (1960), pp. 45–59.Google Scholar
11 See Table 1, and below, pp. 142–4.
12 A-Wn MS 3244; Appendix, no. 11. For Luder, see Wattenbach, W., ‘Peter Luder: der erste humanistische Lehrer in Heidelberg’, Zeitschrift für die Geschichte des Oberrheins, 22 (1869), pp. 33–127 Google Scholar; Baron, F., ‘Peter Luder’, Die deutsche Literatur des Mittelalters: Verfasserlexikon, ed. Ruh, K. et al. (Berlin and New York, 1978–), v, cols. 954–9.Google Scholar Parts of the book may have been copied by Matthias von Kemnat, one of Luder's close associates in Heidelberg ( Baron, F. E., ‘The Beginnings of German Humanism: the Life and Work of the Wandering Humanist Peter Luder’ (Ph.D. dissertation, University of California at Berkeley, 1967), pp. 84–6Google Scholar; Hartfelder, K., ‘Matthias von Kemnat’, Forschungen zur deutschen Geschichte, 22 (1882), pp. 331–49).Google Scholar
13 D-B MS lat. 2° 49 (Appendix, no. 2); Kremsmünster, Stiftsbibliothek, MS 149 (Appendix, no. 5).
14 For this book see Bertalot, L., Humanistisches Studienheft eines Nürnberger Scholaren aus Pavia (1460) (Berlin, 1910)Google Scholar, reprinted in Studien zum italienischen und deutschen Humanismus, 2 vols., ed. Kristeller, P. O., Storia e Letteratura: Raccolta di Studi e Testi 129 (Rome, 1975), i, pp. 83–161 Google Scholar; Kristeller, , Iter italicum, iii, p. 411 Google Scholar; Appendix, no. 4. For Schaller see also Sottili, , ‘L'Università di Pavia nella politica culturale sforzesca’, Gli Sforza a Milano e in Lombardia e i low rapporti con gli stati italiani ed europei (1450–1535): Convegno internazionale, Milano, 18–21 Maggio 1981 (Milan, 1982), pp. 522–3, 540.Google Scholar
15 Darmstadt, MS 521; A-Wn MS 883 (Appendix, nos 3, 9).
16 In A-Wn MS 4195 the texts ‘Petre clemens’, ‘Lugentium siccentur’ and ‘Non est inventus similis illi’ are labelled ‘Triplum’, ‘Motetus’ and ‘Tenor’ respectively. In both D-B MS lat. 2° 49 and A-Wn MS 3244 the text ‘Egregius labor’ is labelled ‘Contra’ (see also below, pp. 143−4). In F-Pn MS lat. 3343, the texts ‘O deus creator’, ‘Jacet granum’, ‘Quam sufflabit’ and ‘Phi millies’, are labelled ‘Motetus’, ‘Tenor’, ‘Contratenor’ and ‘Triplum’.
17 First appearing in Carmina vetusta ante trecentos annos scripta, quae dephrant inscitiam Evangelij, et taxani abusus ceremoniarum, ac quae ostendunt doctrinam, huius temporis non esse novam … (Wittenberg, G. Rhau, 1548) and, in revised and expanded versions, in Pia quaedam vetustissimaque poemata partim antichrislum, eiusque spirituales filiolos in sectantia … (Magdeburg, Michael Lotter, 1552) and Varia doctorum piorumque virorum de corrupto ecclesiae statu, poemata, ante nostram aetatem conscripta … ( Basel, J. Oporinus, 1557), pp. 29–89 Google Scholar (of which an annotated copy, with emendations to Quid scire, is London, British Library, [pr. bk.] 238. m. 29). See further on these books Preger, W., Matthias Flacius lllyricus und seine Zeit, 2 vols. (Erlangen, 1859–62), ii, pp. 239ffGoogle Scholar, and Mirković, M., Matija Vlačić llirik, Djela Jugoslavenske Akademije Znanosti i Umjetnosti 50 (Zagreb, 1960), pp. 341–2Google Scholar; see also pp. 58–73, 336ff. For Flacius' ownership of W1 and W2 (D-W MSS Helmst. 628 and 1099) see Reaney, G., Manuscripts of Polyphonic Music, 11th – Early 14th Century, Répertoire International des Sources Musicales, B/iv/1 (Munich and Duisburg, 1966), pp. 97–8, 171.Google Scholar
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19 For collections of Magnus liber poetry without music, see Falck, R., The Notre-Dame Conductus: a Study of the Repertory, Wissenschaftliche Abhandlungen 33 (Henryville, Ottawa and Binningen, 1981), pp. 140–52.Google Scholar See also sources cited in Walther, Initia, nos. 2254, 2607, 2763, 3470, 3799, 4349, 6487, 8391, 8394, 8401, 9038, 9150, 11448, 12510, 13814, 16158, 17915, 20563, 21142, 21206 and 21209.
20 Schrade, L., ed., The Roman de Fauvel: the Works of Philippe de Vitry: French Cycles of the Ordinarium Missae, Polyphonic Music of the Fourteenth Century 1 (Monaco, 1956), pp. 104–5 (no. 13)Google Scholar; the motet is omitted from the worklist in Sanders, E., ‘Vitry, Philippe de’, The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. Sadie, S., 20 vols. (London, 1980), xx, p. 27 Google Scholar. For sources see Table 1.
21 Leech-Wilkinson, D., ‘Related Motets from Fourteenth-Century France’, Proceedings of the Royal Musical Association, 109 (1982–1983), pp. 1–22, on p. 11.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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36 Listed in Wood, D., Clement VI: the Pontificate and Ideas of an Avignon Pope, Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought, 4th series, 13 (Cambridge, 1989), pp. 209–15Google Scholar, and, for what follows, see pp. 31–2, 152. For Clement's sermons see also Schneyer, J. B., Repertorium der lateinischen Sermones des Mittelalters für die Zeit von 1150–1350, 11 vols., Beiträge zur Geschichte der Philosophic und Theologie des Mittelalters 43 (Münster, 1969–90), iii, pp. 757–69.Google Scholar
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40 Codices, i/3, cols. 2768–9.
41 ‘Let those who recollect in such a manner meditate with themselves in [their] hearts: when Peter, the head of the church, the father of all and door-keeper of heaven, rebuffed those whom he called and abandoned those whom he took up, when his vicar, the father of the world, remained inhuman to human creatures’. A-Wn MS 4195, fol. 156v.
42 For the election, see Wood, pp. 142–52.
43 For another case see Wathey, A., ‘The Marriage of Edward III and the Transmission of French Motets to England’, Journal of the American Musicological Society, 45 (1992), pp. 1–29, on pp. 14–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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52 Sanders, , ‘Vitry, Philippe de’, p. 27 Google Scholar; Gomez, M. del Carmen, ‘Más códices con polifonía del siglo XIV en España’, Acta Musicologica, 53 (1981), pp. 58–90, on pp. 85–6.Google Scholar
53 Walther, Initia, no. 5291; Walther, H., Proverbia sententiaeque latinilalis medii aevi: Lateinische Sprichwörter und Sentenzen des Mittelalters, 5 vols., Carmina Medii Aevi Posterioris Latina 2 (Göttingen, 1963–7), i, p. 878, no. 7013Google Scholar; Schumann, O., Lateinisches Hexameter-Lexikon: dichterisches Formelgut von Ennius bis zum Archipoeta, 6 vols., Monumenta Germaniae Historica, Hilfsmittel 4 (Munich 1979–83), i, pp. 373–4.Google Scholar
54 For sources of this verse see Table 1; the verse is so headed in Signum quindecim horribilia de fine mundi et extremo judicio (Cologne, Merlin von Werden, after 1500), and in Trier, Stadtbibliothek, MS 804. For ‘Nocte dieque’ (Walther, Sprichwörter, no. 17056, with further sources), and the Schedel books (Munich, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, clm 460 and 650), see Stauber, R., Die Schedelsche Bibliothek (Freiburg im Breisgau, 1908), pp. 32, 46 Google Scholar. Further related verses are: ‘Ire, redire, sequi regum sublimia castra; Egregius status eximius, sed sic non itur ad astra’ in Weimar, MS Q. 108, copied at Erfurt in the 1470s, among other sources (Walther, Sprichwörter, no. 12925; see also Wattenbach, W., ‘Weiteres aus der Weimarer Handschrift’, Anzeiger för Kunde der deulschen Vorzeit, 28 (1881), col. 246Google Scholar; Dr Fromman, ‘Findlinge’, ibid., 21 (1874), col. 256; Kristeller, , Iter italicum, iii, pp. 463–4)Google Scholar, ‘Qui sequitur castra, non multum cogitat astra’, ‘Qui servit rastro, servire nequit bene castro’ and ‘Sunt et dicuntur miseri, qui castra sequuntur’ (Walther, SprichwÖrter, nos. 24709, 24724, 30723).
55 Described in A. Wathey, ‘European Politics and Musical Culture at the Court of Cyprus’, a paper delivered at a Congress on the Cypriot-French Repertory of the Manuscript Torino J. ii. 9, Paphos, 20 March 1992; see also ‘The Marriage of Edward III’, p. 12, n. 18.
56 ‘Postquam tamen ab Avinione redivissem Parisius … magister Philippus de Vitriaco, vir utique excellentis ingenii, moralis philosophic, hystorie ac etiam antiquitatis zelator precipuus et in cunctis mathematicis scienciis eruditus, dictum gallicum librum michi tradidit, in quo procul dubio multas bonas exposiciones, tarn allegoricas quam morales, inveni’ (‘But after I returned from Avignon to Paris … master Philippe de Vitry, a man, to be sure, of excellent intellect, an exceptional ardent lover of moral philosophy, history, and also antiquity, and learned in all the mathematical sciences, handed to me the aforesaid French book, in which I found without doubt many good expositions, allegorical as well as moral‘); quoted, with errors, in Samaran, ‘Pierre Bersuire’, pp. 342–3. Bersuire also cited Vitry as an authority, in the description of a large warlike fish in his Reductorium (ix, cap. 136): ‘Zytiron, id est miles marinus: monstrum est marinum sicut dicit liber de natura rerum … Ab altero viro audivi semel in eodem mari [Britannico[ prope insulam ciocam parvulum piscem captum, ad formam armati militis figuratum, casside et scuto et lorica armatum. Cuius simile audivi a venerabili viro magistro Philippo de Vitriaco, asserente in Normandia similem militem vidisse’ (‘Zytiron, that is marine knight: it is a marine monster, as the book De natura rerum says …. From another man I heard once in the same sea near the isle of Cioca (?) a tiny fish [was] taken, shaped to the form of an armed knight, armed with a helmet and shield and breastplate. The like of which I have heard from the venerable man master Philippe de Vitry, asserting that he had seen in Normandy a similar knight’); Pictaviensis, Petrus Berchorius, Reductorii moralis … libri quatuordecim (Venice, Gasparo Bindoni, 1589), p. 310.Google Scholar
57 The known examples of Vitry's seals survive in F-Pn p. o. 3032 (MS fr. 29516), dossier ‘Vitry’ (67183): (i) attached to nos. 6 and 8, quittances issued at Paris by Vitry on 17 August 1346 and 3 January 1350, bearing the legend ‘sigillum secreti phi[…]’, and portraying Hercules with a club resting on his right shoulder, the defeated lion's head under his right arm, and a shield decorated with a ram rampant in his left hand; (ii) attached to no. 12, a quittance issued by Vitry at Villeneuve-lés-Avignon on 29 September 1350, without surviving legend, bearing a lion surmounted by Hercules and David, both armed with clubs. Both seals are damaged, and the descriptions in the unprinted third volume of Roman, J., Inventaire des sciaux de la collection des piéces originates du Cabinet des Titres à la Bibliothèque nationale, i (Paris, 1909; vols. ii and iii in microfiche: Paris, Archives Nationales, 1987), iii, p. 908 Google Scholar, made when the seals' deterioration was less advanced, are therefore valuable. For the Hercules legend, see Witt, , Hercules at the Crossroads, pp. 216–17Google Scholar; Gaeta, F., ‘L'avventura di Ercole’, Rinascimento, 5 (1954), pp. 227–60Google Scholar; Mommsen, T. E., ‘Petrarch and the Story of the Choice of Hercules’, Medieval and Renaissance Studies (New York, 1959), pp. 175–96.Google Scholar
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