The ninth- or tenth-century manuscript BnF lat. 1154 from the Abbey of St Martial de Limoges has been named ‘the earliest medieval song book’ because it includes two songs labelled ‘versus’.Footnote 1 As in all manuscripts of the first millennium and in many afterwards, its preparation does not include the drawing of musical staves. The music was added above the text, which was written first. John Haines considers that the ‘divorce’ of stave ruling from basic ruling took place from the eleventh to the thirteenth centuries as a ‘spectacular writing achievement that signals the independence of music from text’.Footnote 2 The production of all kinds of manuscripts that include music on staves starts with the decision either to write the text and leave blank space for the music, or to rule entire pages with musical staves before writing both music and text.Footnote 3 I refer to this stave ruling simply as ‘ruling’ in the context of this article, and this should be differentiated from the basic ruling of the page before the addition of any graphic elements. Such pre-ruling has been regarded as a distinctive marker of late medieval manuscripts of polyphonic music, which Albert Derolez refers to as ‘“full” music manuscripts’.Footnote 4
At first glance, there are obvious differences between the formatting of thirteenth-century and late fifteenth- or early sixteenth-century French collections of monophonic songs, despite their almost identical dimensions (c.30 × 20 cm). In the thirteenth-century manuscripts, there is what Uri Jacob, discussing the earliest manuscripts including French and Anglo-Norman songs on staves, calls ‘strophic page layout’.Footnote 5 The first strophe of the text, which is accompanied by music, is closely followed by the text of the subsequent strophes without music, but in fact there are three different strophic page layouts (Figure 1).
By contrast, in fifteenth-century manuscripts, the music is separated from the text block, either by writing the subsequent strophes on the other page of the opening (BnF fr. 9346) or by first presenting the entire poem and then the music accompanied by a repetition of the first strophe at the bottom of the page (BnF fr. 12744).Footnote 6 Moreover, not only is there a change in the layout, but a fundamental change in the production process of these manuscripts also took place. In the thirteenth century, the first step after pricking and ruling the folio was to copy the text; staves, music and decoration were added only later.Footnote 7 In the two fifteenth-century manuscripts, the musical staves were entered first, obviously so, because there are empty staves leftover.Footnote 8 The underlaid text often exceeds the writing block on the right side in order to be aligned with the music that has been written first, as visible on the final pages of BnF fr. 12744 (fols. 98v–99r) with the complete text block but no text under the staves.
Lawrence M. Earp observes that further research is required ‘to determine how long this most meticulous manner’ of ‘initially copying text’ in thirteenth-century manuscripts was followed and ‘to determine when scribal practice definitively changed to the entry of all music before text’,Footnote 9 as in the French chansonniers with polyphony from c.1460 onwards.Footnote 10 This study addresses these questions, additionally taking into account the distribution of different layouts and asking how the manuscript types of song book and music manuscript interrelate.
Manuscript types
In contrast to French thirteenth- and fifteenth-century chansonniers, other song collections do not match Marisa Galvez's definition of ‘songbook’ as a ‘multiauthor and anonymous lyric anthology contained in a manuscript codex or volume of parchment leaves bound together in book form … that displays an intention to gather and organize different vernacular lyric texts as an overall collection’.Footnote 11 The scribes of CZ-Pu XI E 9, a music manuscript including a music treatise written prior to 1415 in Strasbourg, are not interested in lyrics at all and give only the incipits of the texts.Footnote 12 There is not only a ‘textualisation of music’ as in all manuscripts including songs with music, but also a materialisation of songs only as music.Footnote 13 In contrast to Galvez's ‘songbooks’, which must contain lyrics but need not contain music, ‘song books’ of this kind must contain music and need not contain lyrics. Neither French thirteenth- nor fifteenth-century chansonniers can be conceived as ‘“full” music manuscripts’. But even if the latter contain pages without music as well, I propose to recognise the different production process employing pre-ruling in labelling them ‘music manuscripts’ in contrast with the thirteenth-century ‘manuscripts with music’.Footnote 14
The conductus In hoc ortus occidente is found with music in three manuscripts: GB-Cu Ff.i.17(1),Footnote 15 I-Fl Plut. 29.1Footnote 16 and E-BUlh.Footnote 17 It may serve as an example to test and refine these distinctions. A comparison of these sources reveals remarkable differences in their production methods. The earliest of these manuscripts is the so-called twelfth-century Later Cambridge Songs (GB-Cu Ff.i.17[1]), consisting of only four small bifolios and containing thirty-five songs, including thirteen monophonic songs with music and thirteen polyphonic ones. It was clearly conceived as a songbook and was apparently written in England.Footnote 18 It is evident that the texts were copied first and the four-line staves were added later according to the pre-disposition of the text (layout 3, also in the polyphonic songs),Footnote 19 because they are lacking elsewhere, (e.g., on fol. 4r). Sometimes the staves have been left blank.Footnote 20 John Stevens considers that a rastrum was used on the first few pages only,Footnote 21 but Haines doubts that a rake or rastrum was in use to draw staves before the end of the thirteenth century.Footnote 22
The latest of these three manuscripts is the Las Huelgas Codex (E-BUlh), a small quarto manuscript produced at the Cistercian convent in Burgos for its female choir. It is definitely not a songbook. Only at the end of this manuscript – containing for the most part polyphonic organa, motets, sequences and conducti as well as monophonic sequences and Benedicamus tropes – are fifteen monophonic conducti included.Footnote 23 E-BUlh was prepared c.1319–40 by Johannes Roderici who acted as a scribe, compiler and corrector by first ruling the book throughout with six red five-line staves per page. This is obvious because there are staves without music, there is text written between the lines of some staves (fols. 155r and 164r) and the initials are written over some staves too.Footnote 24 None of the monophonic conducti has the texts of subsequent strophes, which are known from other sources.
The slightly smaller Notre-Dame manuscript F (I-Fl Plut. 29.1), produced in Paris in the atelier of Johannes Grusch c.1248 (with additions up to 1252),Footnote 25 includes – beyond twenty-three gatherings of polyphonic organa, clausulae, conducti and motets – two fascicles with monophonic songs.Footnote 26 The pages at the end of all the fascicles are ruled, two of these with ten red five-line staves. This is by no means proof that the entire manuscript was pre-ruled. In the rondellus gathering and in the first of the conductus gatherings (fols. 415–430) the mise-en-page is arranged throughout according to the strophic texts. What makes a difference to the layout of chansonniers employing layout 3 (Table 1) is that here the next song begins within the line if there is enough space. Musical staves do not interrupt a text block, but text blocks interrupt staves. It is evident that the staves were ruled after the text was copied because the top lines of the staves are sometimes interrupted in order to avoid overlapping with the text (e.g. fols. 421v, 423v and 424r). Only in gatherings 25–26 (fols. 431v–462v, except for the first page) have the staves been ruled to fill the entire writing block. As Susan Rankin observes, almost all the songs entered here have only one strophe while in other manuscripts many of them are found with multiple strophes (in three songs the subsequent strophes are included but accompanied with music as in the case of the first strophe so that there are no text blocks).Footnote 27 From fol. 437r onwards up to the end of gathering 26, the coloured initials overwrite the staves because no blank space has been left for them. Fols. 447v–448r, which lack both musical notation and decoration, suggest that the decoration was added after the music. However, the most convincing evidence that the staves were ruled after the text is that the red lines of the staves overwrite the larger black letters that are not part of the decoration.Footnote 28
a See Elizabeth Aubrey, ‘Sources, MS III, 4 Secular Monophony: French’, in New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 2nd edn, ed. Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell, 29 vols. (London, 2001), 23: 851–60 and Gaël Saint-Cricq, ‘Motets in Chansonniers and the Other Culture of the Thirteenth-Century Motet’, in A Critical Companion to Medieval Motets, ed. Jared C. Hartt, Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Music 17 (Woodbridge, 2018), 225–42, except for i, D, e and j; on K, N and O, see Everist, Polyphonic Music, 187–203.
How might the three aforementioned manuscripts in question here be categorised? I would argue that GB-Cu Ff.i.17(1) is a songbook due to its content (even if there are a few sequences and tropes) and a manuscript with music due to its production process and layout. I-Fl Plut. 29.1 is what in the thirteenth century was called a liber organorum, a book of polyphony, including a song collection of which the first and third parts could be conceived as songbooks and the middle part as song book. Its production process in the fascicles with monophonic song is akin to that of a manuscript with music. E-BUlh is neither a songbook nor a song book and, even if it were for use in the liturgy, its contents, layout and preparation qualify it as a liber organorum and as a music manuscript.Footnote 29 In sum, none of these three manuscripts is both music manuscript and a songbook nor a song book.
Vernacular songbooks
The subsequent discussion focuses on manuscripts designed as collections of vernacular songs without considering various isolated songs in Occitan,Footnote 30 Catalan,Footnote 31 Italian,Footnote 32 French,Footnote 33 Anglo-Norman,Footnote 34 English,Footnote 35 Dutch,Footnote 36 CzechFootnote 37 and German,Footnote 38 which have been added to manuscripts with unrelated contents or can be found on flyleaves of uncertain provenance. Without any doubt, every single manuscript is unique and it must be considered that many manuscripts have been lost. Therefore, the aim of this synopsis is not to suggest teleological developments but to overcome the current scholarly tendency to separate repertories by the language of their texts in order to point out similarities and differences, respecting the otherness and plurality of medieval manuscripts.Footnote 39
Helen Deeming states that none of the extant manuscripts including songs with musical notation in British sources up to c.1300 are ‘what we might call a song book’.Footnote 40 But GB-Ob Rawl. G. 22, a small (21.5 × 15 cm) bifolio containing an English and two Anglo-Norman songs, the latter with strophic texts, has presumably been cut away from a songbook.Footnote 41 This manuscript is the earliest (c.1225–40) extant songbook to make use of a two-column layout (layout 1); a layout which became characteristic in French, Occitan and Galego-Portuguese chansonniers during the course of the thirteenth century and was also adopted in German and Dutch songbooks in the fourteenth century. But it is unlikely that the scribe of GB-Ob Rawl. G. 22 followed French models because early French (and Occitan) chansonniers do not employ a layout in columns.
From 1231 onwards, a good number of French trouvère chansonniers with musical notation survive (see Table 1).Footnote 42 In all these songbooks, red staves are drawn according to the already prepared layout of the text (only the second part of V has black stave lines).Footnote 43 This is most often in layout 3, which in all single-column manuscripts (as in the conductus manuscripts discussed and in BL Harley 1717, fol. 251v)Footnote 44 is predominantly and often exclusively employed,Footnote 45 alternating with layout 2 in F, T and B/L. Some two-column manuscripts adopted this early practice, Q and the second part of V show only layout 3, which alternates with layout 2 in K, N, P, O, I and j and the second part of M. In M, O and j, music for the beginning of the second strophe was added.Footnote 46 As in the single-column manuscripts, in K and N there is no music for a second strophe and in P the staves were only drawn until the end of the first strophe. The first part of V abandoned this practice (as sometimes did B/L), the beginning of the second strophe was written on a new line, and the end of the line with the last stave was left blank. In W the last stave was drawn across the whole column, if not in layout 3, then in layout 1 (sometimes also in i). A, the first part of M, X and a show only a unified layout 1. The only single-column manuscript employing layout 1 alternating with layout 3 is R, in which a rastrum was in use.Footnote 47 The trouvère manuscripts are predominantly arranged in two columns with four-line staves,Footnote 48 five-line staves are found in all manuscripts including polyphony and in some late manuscripts,Footnote 49 but five-lines staves and layout 1 do not coincide and therefore, in contrast to the difference between liturgical manuscripts and music manuscripts observed elsewhere,Footnote 50 the number of stave lines is not significant in the songbooks.
In the light of these different layouts, GB-Ob Rawl. 22 raises even more questions because its layout (1) does not occur in French chansonniers before the last third of the thirteenth century. Even if there is no extant roll preserving monophonic song with music, one could speculate that, at the outset, the use of a two-column layout was as a result of copying songs from small single-column rolls or libelli into a codex, maintaining the width of their columns.Footnote 51 Considering that columns are only and predominantly in use from the 1260s onwards,Footnote 52 the influence of Dominican models of liturgical books developed c.1260 with a similar mise-en-page is most likely.Footnote 53 Nevertheless, some later manuscripts are not arranged in columns. Albeit U and F are significantly smaller than most of the chansonniers in a two-column layout, and format is not the only reason for employing a single-column layout here, because P and W have almost the same format and are in any case smaller than other two-column-layout chansonniers.Footnote 54 It is clear that some (but not all) of the chansonniers with a single-column layout were produced in the Lorraine region, which was somewhat peripheral with regard to the activities of the trouvères and that the layout of exemplars was sometimes preserved.Footnote 55
Apart from the Occitan troubadour songs included in some of the thirteenth-century trouvère manuscripts,Footnote 56 there are two troubadour chansonniers with music, another one with blank space for staves, and a fragment (Table 2). V and I-CF 1484 both make use of a single-column layout, like the earliest trouvère chansonniers, and were produced in peripheral regions.Footnote 57 G and R have a two-column layout akin to many of the later trouvère chansonniers. The small number of extant troubadour chansonniers does not allow conclusions to be drawn as to whether the two-column layout first occurred in troubadour or trouvère chansonniers and was then adopted in the other tradition. While R shows layout 3, G is different from all other extant Occitan and French chansonniers in its layout because at the beginning, each verse has been written into a stave of its own, which is also the case for the text of the subsequent strophes throughout.Footnote 58 This disposition of the subsequent strophes is also found in the manuscripts of the Breviari d'Amore by Matfre Ermengaud, including only one song.Footnote 59
a See Elizabeth Aubrey, ‘Sources, MS III, 3 Secular Monophony: Occitan’, The New Grove Dictionary, 23: 848–51 for G and R.
The making of such songbooks was a practice not confined to France, but is also evident in troubadour sources from Languedoc, Lombardy, Catalonia or Aragon and perhaps Friuli. Owing to its early date, V – the only extant troubadour manuscript designed for music and produced on the Iberian peninsula – is not arranged in columns, but it is likely that models of troubadour chansonniers, whose repertory was well known there,Footnote 60 were picked up in the Galego-Portuguese cancioneiros, all of them with five-line staves and most of them very large (Table 3).
a See David Fallows and Manuel Ferreira, ‘Sources, MS III, 6 Secular Monophony: Galego-Portuguese’, The New Grove Dictionary, 23: 865–6 except for the fragments.
The single (bi-)folios including the Galego-Portuguese songs of Martim Codax and Don Dinis were once part of songbooks.Footnote 61 They have a layout (1) comparable to that of the troubadour chansonnier I-Ma R 71 sup., presenting each verse of their subsequent strophes in a separate line. The same holds true for the Cancioneiro da Ajuda (P-La, in which space for the music has been left blank, but no staves have been drawn), and for the three earlier manuscripts of the Cantigas di Santa Marìa from the scriptorium of Alfonso X. One could speculate that the custom to present each verse in a separate line originated on the Iberian peninsula but it is just as plausible that troubadour chansonniers prior to I-Ma R 71 sup. served as models for the Galego-Portuguese cancioneiros. With the exception of E, the manuscripts of the Cantigas di Santa Marìa include some pages in a single-column layout.Footnote 62 In T and F (where only the first part of the manuscript includes musical notation, but it was clearly planned for the second half too, since staves have been ruled but the music has not been copied), there are pages with the music arranged in a single column and the text block in one, two or three columns. In To, there are some folios with a single-column layout but the staves do not fill the same writing block and are not always filled with text and music to the end of each line.Footnote 63 Stephen Parkinson has shown that ‘the cantigas with planned single-column layout represent the majority of those in To with long lines (12 syllables or more)’.Footnote 64 The reason for this change in layout is that, in contrast to the other two manuscripts in which the metrical structure of the texts does not have any impact on the format, the scribes of To favoured the copying of each verse on a separate stave, much like at the beginning of I-Ma R 71 sup. Thus, the changing layout between one and two columns did not have any musical implications, but rather followed a structured presentation of the lyrics. These two manuscripts may indicate that the emergence of a two-column layout in songbooks in the Mediterranean region might have been promoted by copying each verse on a single line. Further, this layout suggests that song was conceived as a sequence of verses to which music was aligned.
There is no German songbook of Minnesang and Sangspruch with music before 1300.Footnote 65 The earliest is the Jena Liederhandschrift,Footnote 66 with a two-column layout with four-line staves (as in all German manuscripts except CH-Bu Cod. N I 3.145).Footnote 67 It differs from all the other German manuscripts in a similar two-column layout due to its extra-large format, the red ink for the four-line staves and the use of square notation instead of German chant notation (Table 4).Footnote 68 The difference in the type of notation employed is remarkable in the case of CH-Bu Cod. N I 3.145, which shares repertory, readings and provenance with the Jena Liederhandschrift.Footnote 69 It has been argued that plenary missals may have served as a model for both sources.Footnote 70 But taking into account the northwestern provenance of some of the other fragments,Footnote 71 one might question whether their scribes were also familiar with French rolls, libelli or chansonniers that they may have encountered; for example, at one of the minstrel schools, which from 1313 at the latest are documented in the Netherlands,Footnote 72 Germany and France.Footnote 73 While the extant chansonniers were not designed for performance and it is unlikely that musicians carried them to such events, there is evidence for the existence of French single-author libelli in two columns (such as fols. 2–9 in BnF fr. 25566 and fols. 13+59–77 in BnF fr. 844).
Given the importance of Italian poetry in the Duecento,Footnote 74 the number of Italian secular songs preserved with musical notation is rather small. Italian lyrics from the thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries did not find their way into canzonieri with music and no such manuscript is extant at all. On the other hand, the lauda as the devotional song of the lay confraternities is found with music in two extant laudarii and fragments of two more such manuscripts (Table 5).Footnote 75 All the laudarii are in single-column layout, red four-line staves reminiscent of liturgical manuscripts are drawn according to the text layout, filling the entire writing space.Footnote 76 These manuscripts were purposely designed in a style that bears no relation to a chansonnier, a manuscript type that was well known in northern Italy due to the dissemination of the troubadour and trouvère repertory including the production and circulation of manuscripts there. The later (not before 1282) additions in one such source – BnF fr. 844, of which at least some parts were probably written in NaplesFootnote 77 – demonstrate a new approach to writing monophonic songs, because pages used for them were pre-ruled in two columns.Footnote 78
Manuscripts with music, music manuscripts and ‘full’ music manuscripts
In contrast to French, Occitan, Galego-Portuguese and German songbooks, none of the Italian manuscripts including monophonic songs with music indicates their poets. But I-Fl Mediceo Palatino 87 not only indicates the musical composers but also is subdivided in distinct composer sections. Such Italian collections of mainly polyphonic songs were designed as well as songbooks as ‘full’ music manuscripts written on pre-ruled pages.Footnote 79 Three of them – BAV Rossi 215/I-OST,Footnote 80 I-REas,Footnote 81 I-Fl Mediceo Palatino 87Footnote 82 – include monophonic ballate. Between the first two manuscripts, dating from the third quarter of the fourteenth century,Footnote 83 and the latter compiled in the second decade of the fifteenth century,Footnote 84 there is no change to the practice of including monophonic song in ‘full’ music manuscripts prepared for polyphony on pre-ruled pages with red six-line staves. This predominance of six-line staves in Italian music manuscripts might be seen as an emphatic means of distinguishing them from manuscripts with music, such as the laudarii. Regarding their qualities as songbooks, the three aforementioned manuscripts differ from others sharing the polyphonic repertory (as, e.g., BL 29987) in neither including French songs, nor songs without text or music of other genres.
Neither in France, nor on the Iberian Peninsula, nor in England were vernacular monophonic songs included in such music manuscripts.Footnote 85 Only in the German manuscript CZ-Pu XI E 9 are there tenors from German Lieder and a monophonic Italian song. French fourteenth-century manuscripts preserving song, such as the large (34 × 24 cm) manuscript of the Roman the Fauvel compiled in 1317 as well as the Machaut collections from the second half of the fourteenth century, are neither music manuscripts nor songbooks. Despite their different content, from the point of view of production process and layout they continue the manuscript tradition of the trouvère chansonniers, with staves (albeit using a rake)Footnote 86 still ruled according to the disposition of the text, which was written first.Footnote 87 BnF fr. 146 has a three-column layout. It includes a fascicle with songs by Jehannot de Lescurel that may have previously belonged to a larger manuscript due to their alphabetical ordering, which ends here at ‘G’ (fols. 57r–59v).Footnote 88 However, there are other musical interpolations within in the Roman de Fauvel. Changes in its layout not only occur in some double motets where columns have been connected with continuous staves drawn across them,Footnote 89 but also in the French lais due to their structure in unequal strophes.Footnote 90 The four lais have been arranged in two rather than three columns, with entire pages devoted to a single lai.Footnote 91
In all the Machaut manuscripts containing music, the music of the lais is arranged in a single-column layout (Table 6).Footnote 92 For the chansons, ballades, virelais and rondeaux with strophic texts, four manuscripts have music copied in a single-column layout, C has a section with and another without columns,Footnote 93 and only F–G has two columns throughout. There is no real pre-ruling of pages in the song sections, but in A and B,Footnote 94 empty space has been filled with staves (as in I-Fl Plut. 29.1).Footnote 95 In A, these pages have been used by a different scribe to add the lai Qui bien aime.Footnote 96 In the Remede de Fortune, the layout of the music shows the different copying practices for lais in the French manuscript tradition.Footnote 97 In Vg and B, all the songs are written in two columns. In all the other manuscripts, the lai Qui n'aroit autre deport occupies a full page and has a single-column layout; in C and E, in contrast to the text, the music of all the songs in the Remede is copied in a single-column layout, as it is for the Voir dit in E.
Except for the Jena Liederhandschrift, all the fourteenth-century German manuscripts including Leich make use of a single-column layout (Table 7). In contrast to BnF fr. 146 and the Machaut-manuscripts, in all these German manuscripts (except for A-Wn 2856 with staves interrupted for the rubrics)Footnote 98 no space has been reserved for coloured initials and rubrics.Footnote 99 In D-Mu 4° Cod. ms. 921,Footnote 100 the staves have only been drawn after the initials, and the number of staves changes from twelve (fol. 1) to eleven (fol. 2), though the production process of this manuscript is the same as that of the earlier discussed Liederhandschriften. In D-MZs Hs. Frag 3a–c, A-SPL Cod. 24/8 and PL-WRu Cod. I Q 368a, the number of staves is consistent on all pages (9, 14 and 8 staves, respectively) and the rubrics have only been added after the staves were ruled.Footnote 101 However, it is impossible to discern from the extant folios whether the staves or the text were entered first. It has been convincingly argued that the antigraph of A-SPL Cod. 24/8 was a manuscript in two-column layout,Footnote 102 so the change in the layout by the scribe(s) of this source and the use of five-line staves point to the intention to create a music manuscript akin to A-Wn 2701. This latter manuscript, the so-called Wiener Leichhandschrift, consists of three parts, all of which may have formerly been part of a larger manuscript.Footnote 103 Apart from the later additions on fols. 1 and 10 (and with the exception of the first part of the manuscript, where the space needed for the Latin translation of Frauenlob's Marienleich has been calculated rather than ruled with staves) all the other pages have been pre-ruled. This is evident because the subsequent strophes have been written onto the staves on fols. 17r–18v and 49r, but the underlaid text has been written before the music, which is lacking on fols. 16v and 49v–50r (Table 8).
Clearly, this manuscript is both a songbook and a music manuscript. But in contrast to the later music manuscript CZ-Pu XI E 9,Footnote 104 the main interest in A-Wn 2701 is still in the text, as the two songs without music show. The early fifteenth-century manuscript A of Oswald von Wolkenstein (A-Wn 2777, c.1425, with later additions up to 1436) merges characteristics of the literary tradition – a single-author collection and portrait, here with a music manuscript in his hand presenting Oswald as a composer despite his having borrowed much of the musicFootnote 105 – with the new type of the music manuscript including polyphony to create a unique, complex, multigraphic written artefact. In contrast to manuscript B (A-Iu) and other contemporary songbooks such as A-Wn 2856, in Wolkenstein A the main corpus up to fol. 49r is entirely pre-ruled with nine five-line (fol. 28r–38v four-line) staves.Footnote 106 Only on some pages has space been left blank for the insertion of initials, in the upper left corner at the beginning of the first stave (fol. 25r) or the first two staves.Footnote 107 Text of subsequent strophes, initials and rubrics are written on the staves. Laurenz Lütteken argues that the layout as well as the large format (37 × 27 cm) – which is comparable to that of some contemporary Italian music manuscripts such as I-Bu 2216 (39.7 × 28.9 cm) and I-Moe α.XX.1.11 (41.1 × 28.2 cm) – point to northern Italian models for this manuscript.Footnote 108 But regardless of whether or not Wolkenstein A was written in the scriptorium of Ulrich and Wolfgang von Starkenberg,Footnote 109 pre-ruled manuscripts such as A-Iu 457 evidently not only circulated but were also produced in the region of Oswald's castle.Footnote 110 Furthermore, there were German song collections, such as A-Wn 2701 and CZ-Pu XI E 9, designed as music manuscripts before Oswald, the latter containing the French model for one of Oswald's songs.Footnote 111
A-Wn 2777 is unique in merging song book and music manuscript, but it does not establish a model. The Lochamer Liederbuch (D-B mus. ms. 40613), written c.1453–60 and containing one of Oswald's songs,Footnote 112 includes only at its end some pre-ruled pages (pp. 38–42). The Lochamer Liederbuch scribes are interested neither in the poets nor in the composers, just as in the French fifteenth-century manuscripts with monophonic songs. Nevertheless, the change in the materialisation of song is first visible in the different approach towards lais and Leich in French and German manuscripts, and some of the latter represent the very first pre-ruled song books as music manuscripts.