Studying the contents of musical-liturgical books and comparing them is an important part of the work of musicologists and liturgists. One purpose of undertaking this work is to establish the provenance of certain codices such as graduals, which are musical-liturgical books containing the Mass repertoire of the entire church year. They are a valuable source of knowledge about the songs of a given place and the time of their creation and use.
In this article an attempt will be made to examine the melodies of alleluiatic verses of the commune sanctorum, which means common forms about saints according to the categories of apostles, martyrs, believers, and virgins in selected Polish graduals from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. The books we will deal with, starting from the oldest, are as follows: WawelFootnote 1 Gradual (PL-Kk Ms. 45), Jan Olbracht Gradual (PL-Kk Ms. 44), and Pauline Gradual (PL-CZ III-913 olim R659). The aim of this study is to contribute to explaining the provenance of the third codex from the Jasna GóraFootnote 2 Monastery (Luminous Mount) in Częstochowa,Footnote 3 Poland. The article by Dr Marta Popowska on the Pauline manuscript was an inspiration to undertake this type of work.Footnote 4 In this text, the author, associated with the Jan Długosz University in Częstochowa (Poland), conducted a source study in which she drew attention to the problem of the origin of the manuscript and its similarity in respect of the commune sanctorum to other books. Investigating this problem could clarify the question of the provenance of the monastic codex. The researcher stated: ‘Comparing the melodies of the alleluiatic verses of this part of our codex with their record in the liturgical books of the Wawel Cathedral and the graduals of the Franciscan family, perhaps would show the archetypes for our manuscript.’Footnote 5 In her article, Popowska precisely indicated the above-mentioned Wawel books as a potential comparative material in this type of study.Footnote 6 Therefore, this is the criterion for selecting the manuscripts in this study, in which we will attempt to carry out the task outlined by the author.
The state of research on this topic includes publications relating to the above-mentioned graduals. According to chronological order, a book by Ignacy Polkowski entitled Katalog rękopisów kapitulnych katedry krakowskiej (‘Catalogue of Chapter Manuscripts of the Cracow Cathedral’)Footnote 7 from 1884 briefly describes manuscripts 44 and 45. The key publication devoted to the Pauline codex, and at the same time its first comprehensive study, is the profound source analysis by Piotr Łysikowski.Footnote 8 The above-mentioned article by Popowska also presents a high scientific value, in which the author published the results of her research on the content of the Pauline Gradual in an edited work, which contains numerous materials on the liturgy in Pauline monasteries. The content of the Pauline Gradual was also researched by Piotr Wiśniewski from the John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin. The author analysed the ordinarium missae found there, and presented his results in a scientific article.Footnote 9 The latest texts by Polish authors on the Pauline Gradual were published by Mariusz Białkowski (Ignacy Jan Paderewski Academy of Music in Poznań),Footnote 10 Remigiusz Pośpiech (University of Wrocław),Footnote 11 and Janusz Zbudniewek (Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński University in Warsaw)Footnote 12 in the same edited book.
A number of valuable publications were written on the Jan Olbracht Gradual, both in the field of musicology and art history. Among many, there are works by Tadeusz MiazgaFootnote 13 and Andrzej Kusiak.Footnote 14 An important publication is Bartosz Izbicki’s thesis on the Jan Olbracht GradualFootnote 15 as well as another text by Popowska.Footnote 16
The master’s thesis of Alicja Jończyk is the key publication on the subject of the Wawel Gradual.Footnote 17 There are also studies in the field of art history devoted to this book. Moreover, numerous studies by Jerzy Pikulik constitute an important collection of auxiliary publications on selected musical and liturgical forms.
In our study, we will limit the researches to comparing Alleluia chants contained in the monastic book with those contained in the codices of the Wawel Cathedral. The first method will be analysis of the melodies of individual alleluiatic verses collected in each of the books. The second method will be comparison of the individual Alleluia chants and the accompanying verses derived from the individual graduals. This is how we show the similarities and differences between specific melodies. The third method will be synthesis, which will allow us to draw conclusions from the obtained information on the possible connection of the analysed chants and the books in which they are located.
The research material allows a three-part structure for the study to be determined. The first part includes a general presentation of each of the graduals. In the second part, twenty-one alleluiatic verses will be briefly presented. In the third part, we will refer to the provenance of the Pauline Gradual by synthesizing the information obtained and drawing conclusions on the similarities and differences between the Pauline and Wawel records.
Presentation of the Graduals
Wawel Gradual PL-Kk Ms. 45
The Wawel Gradual is the oldest source of the Alleluia chants researched in this article. It is considered a typical book representing the musical and liturgical tradition of the Cracow diocese in the Middle Ages. The codex is kept in the Archives and Library of the Cracow Cathedral Chapter. One of its microfilm slides contains the following information about the book: ‘GRADUALE. Inc.: Uterus virgineus. Expl.: Que regina diceris. Fifteenth c., folios 302, 46 × 33 cm. No start. Missing folio in the collection of the National Museum in Krakow. Musical notation: Gothic.’Footnote 18
The exact date and place of the book’s creation as well as its author and recipient are unknown. The analysis of the liturgical content shows the native provenance of the codex and the Wawel scriptorium as the place where the manuscript was prepared. The monument was most likely written in the years 1400–1423. It was intended for the diocesan use of Cracow, presumably for the Wawel Cathedral, as evidenced by the rich collection of songs in honour of St Stanislaus.Footnote 19
The handwritten material of the codex is parchment of the northern type, double-sided, known as German (charta theutonica).Footnote 20 The binding with dimensions of 45.9 × 33.8 cm from the top side is a board 1 cm thick and cardboard on the underside. The covers are coated with paper, and the corners and the back with leather. There are no ornaments on the covers. The current condition of the binding is bad. The current number of 302 folios is not original as some are missing, while folios 1–34 were added, possibly later.Footnote 21
The graphic layout of a folio includes verbal and musical text in a column measuring 37.7 × 23.6 cm. The text of the chants and neumes are written in black ink, while the line systems, rubrics, and margin lines are in red ink.Footnote 22
A Gothic minuscule font was mostly used to record the text. The copyist or copyists also used abbreviations typical of medieval literature in the form of suspensions, contractions, and special characters. The writing was generally done with great accuracy, which gives it high readability. Errors occur in very few places.Footnote 23
All neumes conveying the melody of songs belong to the Gothic, mixed, Metz-German notation.Footnote 24 The C and F clefs were used to determine the pitch of sounds on different lines. The naturals and custodes visible in some places do not constitute the original text, but were probably added later. Table 1 contains a list of neumes used in the Wawel Gradual in the main part of the codex, as well as those in the Jan Olbracht Gradual and the Pauline Gradual. The content of the Wawel book can be broadly divided into the following parts:
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1. Parts added (fols 1r–34v).
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2. Ordinarium missae (fols 35r–51v).
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3. Proprium de tempore (fols 52r–180v).
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4. Proprium sanctorum (fols 181r–252v).
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5. Sequentiae (selectively fols 12r–34v, and 253r–302r).
Neume | Wawel Gradual PL-Kk Ms. 45 (1400–1423) | Jan Olbracht Gradual PL-Kk Ms. 44 (1499–1506) | Pauline Gradual PL-CZ III-913 olim R659 (1596) |
---|---|---|---|
punctum | |||
distropha | |||
virga | |||
pes | |||
pes subbipunctis | |||
clivis | |||
torculus | |||
scandicus | |||
climacus | |||
porrectus | |||
scandicus flexus | |||
climacus resupinus | |||
pressus | |||
C clef | |||
F clef | |||
flat (mollis) |
Jan Olbracht Gradual PL-Kk Ms. 44
Polkowski in his catalogue mentioned the existence of three volumes rich in musical repertoire, funded by Jan Olbracht, the king of Poland (1459–1501).Footnote 25 The individual volumes are devoted to the following topics: ms. 42 de Beata, ms. 43 de tempore, ms. 44 de sanctis. The codices are stored in the Archives and Library of the Cracow Cathedral Chapter.
In total, the work was created in the years 1499–1506 in the Wawel scriptorium by Stanislaus of Buk and Peter of Chorzenice. Volume de sanctis was written between 1501 and 1506. The recipient of the gradual was the Cracow Cathedral on the Wawel Hill.Footnote 26
The frame consists of two boards, 1.8 cm thick. They are covered with blind embossed leather. The covers feature slightly damaged, embossed ornaments with gilding in the shape of a lyre, a rosette, and floral motifs. The writing material of each of the volumes is parchment of the northern type.Footnote 27 Volume 44 with the dimensions of a folio 75.3 × 53.2 cm is well preserved, although there are traces of use on it. On 409 folios there is an original Roman discontinuous red foliation in the middle of the top margin and a new Arabic continuous pagination, applied with a pencil in the lower right corner.Footnote 28
The verbal text was made in a uniform late Gothic font with a careful pattern. The verbal and musical content was presented in a column separated from the edge of a folio by margins. The margins were marked by two vertical lines, between which the clefs and custodes were placed. Red ink was used to write lines and rubrics, and black ink was used to write the liturgical text, neumes, clefs, and custodes. The copyist used numerous abbreviations and punctuation in quoting the liturgical content.Footnote 29
The Jan Olbracht Gradual is richly decorated with late Gothic miniatures inspired by Flemish art. The neumes used to record the melodies represent the Gothic mixed Metz-German notation of the late Cracow variation.Footnote 30 The notation includes the C and F clefs, located alone or in combination, and G, always next to another clef. The lack of added lines meant that the copyist frequently changed the clef over the course of the same piece, or even the system.
The liturgical content of the Jan Olbracht Gradual can be divided into four parts:
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1. Ordinarium missae (1v–54v).
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2. Proprium de sanctis (fols 55r–168v).
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3. Commune sanctorum (fols 169r–265v).
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4. Sequentiarum de sanctis (fols 266r–409v).
Pauline Gradual PL-CZ III-913 olim R659
The codex is the oldest surviving gradual of the Order of Saint Paul the First Hermit.Footnote 31 On the upper cover there is the title ‘GRADUALE SANCTI PAULI EREMITAE’ written in capital letters and the date ‘ANNO DOMINI MDXCVI’, which is considered the time of the book’s creation. The author of the manuscript was Szymon Mielecki (1560–1612), a Pauline writer.Footnote 32
The place of the manuscript’s usage is specified in the note on the inside of the top binding: ‘Conventus Vielunensis Ordinis S Pauli Primi Eremitae.’ It is possible that the book was prepared in Cracow.Footnote 33 It was framed in the Jasna Góra scriptorium of Marcin of Łubnice (d. 1600).Footnote 34 Certainly, it was made for the use of the Wieluń convent (Central Poland), where in 1388, thanks to Prince Władysław Opolczyk, the Pauline monks came to take care of the local church and the hospital of St Nicholas. In 1819 the manuscript was transferred from Wieluń to Jasna Góra.Footnote 35
The dimensions of the codex together with the binding are 41.5 × 27 cm, and the folios themselves 40 × 26.5 cm. The original binding is boards covered with light, sometimes contaminated, pigskin. The four corners of the book were once secured on both sides with metal elements that have only partially survived so far. Two leather straps with metal clasps and pins were used to close the book. The upper bezel features floral decorations, lion heads, and images of people with signatures: Erasmus (from Rotterdam), Johan (Petri or Calvin), Martin (Luther), and Philip (Melanchthon). Next to it, there are biblical scenes. The Pauline Gradual was written on faded handmade paper. The book has 188 folios and 408 pages, including those later added at the beginning and end of the codex. Their content has been written down with extreme care.
The verbal and musical content was included in a column measuring 22 × 35 cm, surrounded by margins. There are usually eight four-line systems on a page. The width of one system is 2.3 to 2.5 cm. When writing, the copyist used a feather. The neumes and the text are written in black ink, and the musical lines are outlined in red ink.Footnote 36 The font used is the minuscule and capital letters of the humanist antiqua of the transition from Gothic to Renaissance.Footnote 37 The beginning of each text is decorated with stylized miniatures.
The neumes used to write the melody represent the Gothic mixed Metz-German notation with an indication of the late Silesian variation.Footnote 38 At the end of each system, there is a custos located next to the vertical line that marks the right page margin. The C and F clefs appear in the music notation. There is also a flat (mollis) in the book, which is placed next to a clef (fol. 142r) or neume (fol. 153v).
The liturgical content of the Pauline Gradual can be divided into the following six parts:
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1. Ordinarium missae (fols 1r–27r).
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2. Proprium de tempore (fols 29r–245r).
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3. Proprium sanctorum (fols 245r–317r).
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4. Commune sanctorum (fols 317r–356r).
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5. Missae votivae (fols 356r–373r).
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6. Appendix (fols 374r–408r).
* * *
The presented manuscripts are valuable objects of research in the field of art history, liturgy, and musicology. The presented basic information creates an image of the Polish musical, liturgical, and writing culture at the turn of the Middle Ages and Renaissance. With regard to the research problem undertaken in the article, conclusions about the origin of the Pauline Gradual and its possible connections with the Wawel books should be drawn very carefully. Its liturgical content is of key importance in this regard, as it exhibits features common to both diocesan and monastic traditions. We will try to find an answer to the question of whether the content of the Cracow books could have influenced the content of the Pauline manuscript by comparing the commune sanctorum alleluiatic repertoire of these books.
Melodies of the Commune Sanctorum Alleluiatic Verses
Alleluia chants about saints play a special role in the task of establishing the provenance of certain codices. Owing to the circumstances of their formation, which were canonizations and universal and local cult of saints, they reflect the musical style of a given era, place, or community.Footnote 39 In this part we will describe twenty-one alleluiatic verses contained in the Pauline Gradual, the Jan Olbracht Gradual, and the Wawel Gradual. This number was dictated by the criterion of the presence of a given verse in the Pauline manuscript. If any verse of the commune sanctorum appears in the Wawel books, but is missing from the monastic codex, it will not be included in the research. The transcription of the chants in mensural notation reflects the following data presented in Examples 1–21.
‘Tu es sacerdos in aeternum’
The oldest information on this work is probably from the tenth century in Einsiedeln (Example 1). In the following century, it was widely known in France and Italy. In Poland, this singing functioned with two melodies: its own in Franciscan graduals and one unidentified in diocesan graduals.Footnote 40 Later it was included in the Vatican edition.Footnote 41
The notation of the verse ‘Tu es sacerdos in aeternum’ appears in two melodic variants. The Alleluia of the first one is notated in mode 5, with the final F and the characteristic final third F–G–A. The Alleluia, written with a C clef on the third line, begins and ends with a repetition on the sound F. In the verse, one can observe the features of both modes 5 and 6. In this part of the piece, the copyist notated a flat three times next to the C clef. For unknown reasons, a fragment of the first variant has been sealed, making it impossible to read several neumes.
The Alleluia melody of the second variant in the Pauline codex appears in mode 1, as evidenced by the final on the D note and the third D–E–F. The melody of the verse is recorded in mode 8 with the final G reached from below and repeated twice. The copyist did not notate a flat.
In the Wawel codices, all the melodies appear in the same mode 7. The final sound falls on G, below which the melody never descends. In both cases the copyist used the C clef on the third line without notating a flat. Figures 1–4 illustrate the first alleluiatic verse in each gradual.Footnote 42
‘Hic est sacerdos’
This piece was probably first recorded in the eleventh century in Bobbio, Italy (Example 2). It did not appear in French, German, or Swiss manuscripts. The melody of ‘Dies sanctificatus’, included in the Vatican edition, was adapted to the text of ‘Hic est sacerdos’. However, in the eleventh and twelfth centuries in Italy, the text was also adapted to the melody of ‘Dicite in gentibus’, which was unknown in Poland.Footnote 43
The melody of the Alleluia and verse appears in the Pauline manuscript in two variants. The first shows the features of mode 1. The final falls on D, the dominant on the fifth A, and the final third is D–E–F. The second Pauline variant represents mode 3 or 4 in the Alleluia and mode 4 transposed in the verse. The final is E, the dominant A, and the final third E–F–G. The Wawel records in their entirety are distinguished by mode 2 with the final D, the third D–E–F, and the dominant F. In each of the variants in the monastic manuscript, the copyist used the F clef, placing it on the second line. The Wawel records also contain the F clef. No flat was written in any of the codices.
‘Posuisti Domine’
The oldest record of this work comes from the tenth century in St Gall (Example 3). In the following century it was recorded in the Chartres, Einsiedeln, and Winchester manuscripts. Later it spread to France, Germany, and Italy. It was performed in Poland in many diocesan and monastic centres in two melodic variants: of undefined provenance and of German origin (?).Footnote 44 The first of them was included in the Vatican edition.Footnote 45
In the Pauline Gradual on folio 145r in the upper right corner we find only a verbal reference ‘Alla Posuisti’ to folio 142v, where this composition appears only in the form of the verse without Alleluia, as a tract. Perhaps, in order to save writing material, the copyist performed such a procedure, which is common throughout the manuscript. Moreover, the Pauline version of the text is devoid of the word ‘Domine’, which appears in this work elsewhere in the same book, as well as in the Wawel manuscripts. The reason for the lack seems to be a mistake of the copyist. The melody in the Pauline codex presents mode 8. Its final sound is G and the final third is G–A–B. The dominant is the sound C. The author used the C clef, putting it on the third and fourth lines. He changed its position inside one system, which he marked with a custos. However, he did not use a flat.
In each of the Wawel codices we find two melodic variants of the Alleluia with the verse ‘Posuisti Domine’. Basically, they represent the Gregorian protus. The final is D, the dominant A, and the final third is D–E–F.
‘Qui sequitur me’
This work dates back to the eleventh century, when it was recorded in Italian manuscripts from Lucca and Bologna (Example 4). In Poland, it functioned in diocesan and monastic centres with two melodies: its own and the original Cracow(?).Footnote 46 The first one was also included in the Vatican edition.Footnote 47
If we accept the principles of defining the church modes used so far in the Gregorian chant, we can state that the Alleluia and the verse in the Pauline codex show the features of different Gregorian modes. Such a phenomenon appears to be unusual, concerning the previous analyses, where in each case we observed a modal correspondence between the Alleluia and the verse. Thus, in the Alleluia melody we see mode 3 with the final E, dominant B or C, and the third E–F–G. The melody of the verse is notated in mode 5 with the final F, the third F–G–A, and the dominant C. The copyist used the F clef on the second line, but did not notate a flat.
In both Wawel codices, the Alleluia and the verse show the features of modes 3 and 4. Both are characterized by the final E and the third E–F–G. However, each of the records is characterized by modal confusion and sounds beyond the basic range. In ms. 44 the author used the C clef on the fifth line and the F clef on the third line. In ms. 45 there is only the F clef on the third line. No flat was recorded in any of the manuscripts.
‘Sancti Tui Domine florebunt sicut lilium’
This chant was commonly performed in the eleventh century in Austria, France, Germany, and Italy (Example 5). However, one of the records comes from the tenth century from a cantatorium in Bamberg.Footnote 48 It was performed with two melodies: its own and one borrowed from the piece ‘Surrexit pastor bonus’.Footnote 49 The first one was more popular and was included in the Vatican edition.Footnote 50
In the Pauline codex, the Alleluia exhibits features of mode 2 with the final D repeated, the third D–E–F, and the dominant F. The verse begins with D and ends with double G, so unlike the final of the Alleluia. Thus, it presents the features of mode 7 with the dominant D and the third G–A–B. In the Pauline version, the scribe used the F clef on the second line, but did not notate a flat.
In ms. 44 both the Alleluia and the verse show the features of mode 8. Both parts end with the sound G, the third G–A–B, and the dominant C. The copyist used the C clef on the fourth line, but did not write a flat. In ms. 45 this chant appears in the proprium sanctorum part, therefore, in line with the subject of this article, we do not deal with this record.
‘Pretiosa in conspectu Domini’
The oldest records of this chant come from the tenth century in Einsiedeln and Ripoll, and others from France, Germany, and Italy (Example 6). It was not a popular piece. In Poland, it functioned with two melodies: one French and one of undefined provenance.Footnote 51 The first of them was included in the Vatican edition.Footnote 52
The piece in the Pauline codex was notated in mode 6. The final repeated twice is F, the third F–G–A and the dominant A. The copyist used the F clef on the second line without notating a flat.
The Wawel records show the features of mode 8. The final is G which in ms. 44 was extended by a dot, and in ms. 45 was repeated twice. The dominant is C, and the third covers the sounds G–A–B, although the notation does not contain the note B. Both Wawel records use the C clef on the fourth line, without noting a flat. In all records there is a plagal mode and a low register of the melodies, according to the given mode.
‘Corpora sanctorum’
The chant was created at the turn of the tenth and eleventh centuries. It was known in the early eleventh century in Italy and Regensburg, but with a different melody (Example 7). It appeared in various variants in diocesan and religious codices.Footnote 53 The Italian version was included in the Vatican edition.Footnote 54
In the Pauline codex, the Alleluia was written in mode 1, whose final is D, the third D–E–F, and the dominant A. The verse was notated in mode 2 with the dominant F. The scribe used the F clef on the second line without notating a flat.
In ms. 44 in modal terms, the work contains a certain ambiguity, which also occurs to a lesser extent in ms. 45. The ambiguity lies in the presence of the features of different modes. The Alleluia melody ends with F. We can therefore state the presence of mode 6, the final of which is F and the dominant A. The verse shows the features of mode 4 with the final E. The dominant then may be the sound A. The reason for the difficulty in defining the mode is a relatively large ambitus of the melody a–d′.
In ms. 45 both the Alleluia and the verse end with an identical melodic formula C–D–D. In the first part, we observe the features of mode 1, while in the second part modes 1 and 2. In both Wawel records, the copyist used the F clef on the third and fourth lines without notating a flat. Perhaps the reason for the difference in pitch between the Wawel records with an almost identical drawing of the melodic line is the change in the position of the clef, which in ms. 44 was made with the change of the page.
‘Iusti epulentur’
This chant is one of the oldest and was known in the ninth century thanks to the Mass antiphonary from Compiègne (Example 8). In the following century it was recorded in the St Gall Cantatorium, the Einsiedeln Gradual, and the Winchester Troper. Later it spread in western Europe. In Poland, it occurred in many diocesan and religious sources.Footnote 55 The work was also included in the Vatican edition.Footnote 56
The Alleluia of the Pauline codex and both Wawel manuscripts fully present the features of mode 1. In each case the final is D, the third D–E–F, and the dominant A. In the melody of the Pauline verse, we notice the features of mode 2. In this version, the scribe used the F clef on the second line. The Wawel records contain the C clef on the fifth line in ms. 44 and on the fourth line in ms. 45. No flat was recorded in any of the manuscripts.
‘Te martyrum’
This piece was recorded in the ninth and at the turn of the ninth and tenth centuries in the Mass antiphonaries from Compiègne and Corbie (Example 9). In the tenth century, it was found in the graduals of Chartres, Einsiedeln, Sankt Gallen, and Winchester. Later it spread throughout western Europe.Footnote 57 It was also included in the Vatican edition.Footnote 58 The text ‘Te martyrum candidatus laudat exercitus Domine’ (‘The white-robed army of martyrs praise you’) comes from the early Christian hymn ‘Te Deum’. Among the three examined manuscripts, this verse in the commune sanctorum part appears only in the Pauline manuscript, therefore it will not be compared with other versions.
In the Pauline codex, both the Alleluia and the verse are notated in mode 5. The final sound is F, the third F–G–A, and the dominant A. The range of the melody is determined by the fifth F–C and the fourth C–F above. The copyist used the C clef on the third line, not writing a flat.
‘Inveni David’
This chant is one of the oldest and most popular (Example 10). Its first records appeared in the eighth and at the turn of the eighth and ninth centuries in Mass antiphonaries from Monza and Mt Blandin. Later it was widely adopted in English, French, German, Swiss, and Italian books. In Poland, it was known in all diocesan and religious centres. The melody of ‘Dies sanctificatus’ was adapted to it in European and Polish codices,Footnote 59 with which it appears in the Vatican edition.Footnote 60
In the Pauline codex, the melody of this piece shows the features of the protus mode, whose final is D, the third D–E–F, and the dominant A or F. It is possible to find mode 2 in the Alleluia and a confusion of modes 1 and 2 in the verse. Then we see an authentic mode for the word ‘meo’ and a plagal mode for the rest of the verse. The scribe used the F clef on the third line and the C clef on the fourth line, changing it several times, also in the middle of the melody. However, no flat was recorded.
In the Wawel manuscripts, there is mode 1 in the Alleluia and mode 2 in the verse. In ms. 44 the scribe used the F clef on the fourth line and the C clef on the fifth line. In ms. 45 there is the F clef on the third line and the clef C on the fourth line. In each of the records, the clef changes were made at the beginning of the system, and no flat was recorded in any of them.
‘Iuravit Dominus’
The oldest record of this work comes from the tenth century in St Gall (Example 11). In the same century it was recorded in the Chartres Gradual and the Winchester Troper. In Poland, it appears in many diocesan and religious codices.Footnote 61 It was also included in the Vatican edition.Footnote 62
The Pauline records, as well as ms. 44 and the Alleluia in ms. 45, show the parameters of mode 1. The final sound is D with the dominant A and the final third of D–E–F. In the case of the verse in ms. 45 a question arises as to the ending of the melody of the word ‘Melchisedech’ in the form of D–F–G–E, since the rest of the sound material is almost identical to the ms. 44 notation. If this melisma is the result of a copyist’s error, then we find also mode 1. If this record was not made by mistake, then we perceive mode 3 or 4 with the final E. In the Pauline codex, the scribe used the F clef on the second line, and in the Wawel records the C clef on the fifth line in ms. 44 and on the fourth line in ms. 45. No flat was notated in any of the manuscripts.
‘Amavit eum Dominus’
This work was probably written at the end of the tenth century and was known in England, France, Germany, and Italy (Example 12). In Poland, it occurred especially in monastic sources, later also in diocesan ones. The text functions with three melodies: its own, ‘Beatus vir qui suffert tentationem’, and ‘Iudicabunt sancti’.Footnote 63 The second of these was also included in the Vatican edition.Footnote 64
In the monastic manuscript, the melody of the verse shows the features of mode 8. The final is G repeated three times, the third G–A–B, and the dominant C. In the case of the Alleluia, there is an obvious copyist’s error where the part ends with the sound C. If there had been a D at this point, then it would be mode 1. The scribe used the F clef on the second line. However, he did not record a flat.The Wawel records represent mode 1. The final is D, the dominant A, and the third D–E–F. The copyist used the F clef on the third line. He did not write a flat.
‘Beatus vir qui suffert tentationem’
This piece comes from the tenth century (Example 13). It was recorded in the St Gall Cantatorium, the Einsiedeln Gradual, and the Winchester Troper. Later it spread to England, France, Germany, and Italy. In Poland, the text was performed with two melodies: its own and one unidentified.Footnote 65 The first of them was included in the Vatican edition.Footnote 66
In the Pauline codex, the Alleluia shows the features of mode 2 with transposition. The melody of the verse is characterized by mode 8, in which the final is G, the dominant C, and the final third G–A–B. Such a conclusion can be drawn on the basis of the ending of the verse melody in the form of the sound G, repeated twice. The difference in modes and a deviation of the melody beyond its basic scope indicate a departure from the classical rules of modality. The scribe used the F clef on the second line without notating a flat.
In the Wawel records, the melody was written in mode 1, with the final D, extended by a dot in ms. 44, the dominant A, and the final third D–E–F. In ms. 44, the copyist used the C clef on the fifth line, and in ms. 45 the F clef on the third line.
‘Beatus vir qui timet Dominum’
This work was listed in codices as early as the eighth and ninth centuries (Example 14). In the following century, it was recorded in the St Gall Cantatorium and Einsiedeln Gradual, and then spread through western Europe. In Poland, it was known in many diocesan and religious centres.Footnote 67 It was also included in the Vatican edition.Footnote 68
The monastic Alleluia shows the features of mode 3 with the final E. If, however, such an ending is a copyist’s mistake and this part should have been finalized with D, then this would be mode 1 and an underlined dominant A. A comparison of this melody with the previous Pauline notations showed that the first 14 notes are identical to the Alleluia ‘Pretiosa in conspectu Domini’ (6) in mode 6. The rest was added and finished with E. Thus, we observe a great deal of modal volatility at this point and possible confusion of modes. The melody of the verse shows the features of mode 6, with the final F and dominant A.
Each of the Wawel records represents mode 5 with the final F and dominant C. The transcription of the works illustrates the difference in the height of the verse registers between the Pauline and Wawel versions, representing essentially the same tritus mode.
In the monastic record, the scribe used the F clef on the second line, while the Wawel records the C clef on the third or fourth line. In ms. 45, a flat was also notated, which does not appear in the other codices.
‘Iustus germinabit’
This work was first recorded in the tenth century in English, French, and Swiss manuscripts (Example 15). It was transmitted by the codices of Ripoll, Chartres, Laon, Winchester, Einsiedeln, and St Gall. In the next century, it spread throughout western Europe. In Poland, it was performed in all diocesan and religious traditions.Footnote 69 The work was also included in the Vatican edition.Footnote 70
Each of the Alleluia records shows the features of mode 1, whose final is D, the dominant A, and the third D–E–F. A modal differentiation is shown by the melodies of the verse. In the Pauline record there is the plagal protus, while in the Wawel records mode 6 with the final F and the dominant A. In the Pauline book, the scribe used the F clef on the second line, and in the Wawel codices, the C clef on the fifth and fourth line. The first of the manuscripts does not contain a flat, which occurs once in ms. 44 and twice in ms. 45.
In each of the manuscripts, the Alleluia begins with C4 and ends with D4. The sound material used in the Pauline notation is largely identical to that of the Wawel codices. The difference is basically the melisma on the syllable ‘a’, which in the Pauline message is much shorter than in the others.
‘Iustus ut palma’
This piece was recorded in the ninth century in Corbie, Compiègne, and Saint-Denis (Example 16). In the next century it spread to England, France, and Switzerland, and in the eleventh century throughout the whole of western Europe. In Poland, it was known in all diocesan and religious centres.Footnote 71 The chant was also included in the Vatican edition.Footnote 72
Each of the Alleluia chants shows the features of mode 1, whose final sound is D, the dominant A, and the third D–E–F. The melody of the verse in each of the records shows the features of mode 8 with the final G and the dominant D. In the Pauline notation, the scribe used the F clef on the second and third line. In ms. 44, the F clef was used on the third line and the C clef on the fifth line, as well as on the fourth line in ms. 45. No flat was notated in any of the manuscripts.
‘Adducentur regi’
This piece is one of the oldest in liturgical collections (Example 17). It first appeared with a neumatic notation in Einsiedeln and Sankt Gallen in the tenth century, but was known before without melody. Later it spread to France, Italy, and Germany. In Poland, from the thirteenth century, it gradually appeared in all diocesan and religious centres that kept their own manuscripts. The text was notated with two melodies: its own and ‘Iusti epulentur’.Footnote 73 The first one was included in the Vatican edition.Footnote 74
All the records show considerable modal differentiation. The Pauline notation of the Alleluia and the Wawel notations of the verse are characterized by the tetrardus mode in both the authentic and plagal form with the final G and the dominant D or C, respectively. We are therefore dealing with modal confusion. The Wawel manuscripts were transposed. The verse in the Pauline notation is characterized by the protus mode with the final D. One can state the authentic variation with the dominant A or the plagal variation with the dominant F. The Alleluia in the Wawel manuscripts was recorded in mode 3 with the final E, the dominant B or D, and the third E–F–G.
In the Pauline codex, the copyist used the F clef on the second line and the C clef on the third line. However, he did not record a flat. On the other hand, in the Wawel records, the copyist used the C clef on the third or second line, and also recorded a flat.
‘Specie tua’
The oldest record of this verse comes from the eighth or ninth century and was recorded in the Mass antiphonary in Rheinau (Example 18). Another one was made in the ninth century in the codices of Mont Blandin, Compiègne, Corbie, Senlis, and Saint-Denis. In the following centuries it spread to England, France, Germany, Switzerland, and Italy. In Poland, it was popular in many diocesan and religious centres. In all manuscripts it appears with the melody ‘Ostende nobis’.Footnote 75 In this version, the work was also included in the Vatican edition.Footnote 76
In each of the manuscripts mode 7 is used. The final is G, the dominant D, and the final third G–A–B. The final is repeated in both Pauline variants, and extended by a dot in ms. 44.
The Pauline record contains the F clef on the second line and the C clef on the third line. The Wawel manuscripts comprise the C clef on the third and fourth lines. There is no flat in any of the notations.
‘Haec est virgo sapiens’
This piece was known in the eleventh century in France and Italy (Example 19). At that time, it was not yet included in German and English manuscripts. It was performed in Poland in diocesan and religious centres with four melodies: one of Italian origin, one of French origin, ‘Mirabilis Dominus’, and one unidentified.Footnote 77 The first one was also included in the Vatican edition.Footnote 78
The Pauline Alleluia contains features of modes 7 and 8, while the verse contains mode 8. The final is G twice repeated, the dominant C, and the third G–A–B. The scribe used the F clef on the second line, but did not notate a flat.
In the Wawel records, the Alleluia and verse were written in mode 3. The final is E, the dominant B or C, and the third E–F–G. There are also features of mode 4. In ms. 44, the copyist used the F and C clefs on the third and fourth lines, and in ms. 45, he used the F clef on the third line. No flat was recorded.
‘O quam pulchra’
This piece was recorded for the first time in the eleventh century in Italy (Example 20). At that time, it was only available in manuscripts there. Later it was taken over by the Franciscans. In Poland, it was known in diocesan and religious centres with two melodies: its own and ‘Ostende nobis’.Footnote 79 The first one was included in the Vatican edition.Footnote 80
The Pauline Alleluia was written in mode 3 or 4 with the final E repeated twice and the dominant B or A, respectively. The verse shows the features of modes 1 and 2 with the final D repeated twice and the dominant A or F, respectively. The scribe used the F clef on the second line, but did not record a flat.
The Wawel records represent mode 8. The final is G, the dominant C, and the third G–A–B. In both Wawel manuscripts, the scribe used the C clef on the fourth line and did not write a flat.
‘Propter veritatem’
The piece was known in many medieval diocesan and religious centres in western Europe (Example 21). It is a later adaptation of the alleluiatic verse ‘Dominus regnavit’ from the form ‘missa in aurora’ on the feast of the Nativity.Footnote 81 In the liturgical calendar, its destiny was defined as ‘commune Beatae Mariae Virginis’ or ‘pro sanctis mulieribus’, while in the Pauline manuscript it was ‘pro una martyre non virgine’ and ‘de nec virgine nec martyre’.Footnote 82 It was found unchanged in the SolesmesFootnote 83 and VaticanFootnote 84 editions. The words ‘Propter veritatem et mansuetudinem et iustitiam, et deducet te mirabiliter dextera tua’ (‘Let your right hand work miracles for faith and justice’) are a paraphrase of the biblical text (cf. Psalms 45. 4). This piece, as the Alleluia commune sanctorum chant, appears only in the Pauline codex, therefore it will not be compared here with other versions.
The Alleluia was recorded in mode 6 with the final F repeated twice and the dominant A. The verse, in accordance with the original, was written in mode 2. The final is D repeated twice, the dominant F, and the third D–E–F. Unlike some Pauline compositions, this work clearly shows the indicated modal features. The scribe used the F clef on the second and third lines, but did not notate a flat.
* * *
Summarizing the research conducted so far, we can conclude by noting an especially large modal differentiation that in many works is manifested by different Alleluia and verse modes, mixing the features of different modes and sounds outside the basic range of the melody. This state indicates a departure from the classical rules of Gregorian modality.
The architectural structure of each chant is determined by its two parts: Alleluia and verse, in which certain design features can be found. The verses can be divided into two fragments, containing from five to twenty-three syllables each; for example, ‘Hic est sacerdos – quem coronavit Dominus’ and ‘Corpora sanctorum sepulta sunt in pace – nomina eorum vivent in generatione et generationem’. Such a construction, supported by its modal properties, corresponds to the prosody of the text. This relation between a verbal text and a melody, emphasized in Gregorian works, is a specific link through which a composer passes from the sphere of natural speech into the sphere of musical art.Footnote 85
In several cases (Examples 3, 4, 5, 7, and 12), the ending formula of Alleluia or verse contains a repeated final sound, which may testify to the role of modal properties in the architecture of the melody. Such an ending can function as a so-called Gallic cadence,Footnote 86 which consists of reaching the final sound from the bottom similar to a subtonal ending with the simultaneous repetition of the note.Footnote 87
In terms of intervals, in all the manuscripts the simplest and most common are the whole-tone and semitone distances. The next in terms of frequency are the minor and major thirds. The melodies constructed on the basis of these intervals show fluidity and support the prosody of the text.Footnote 88 The presence of thirds and larger intervals, such as fourths and fifths, in all records makes the melodies more varied and breaks the stepwise smoothness of the melodic line. The ambitus remains usually in relation to the modal properties of the chants.
The style of the melodies in all records can be defined roughly as almost entirely melismatic in the Alleluia and melismatic-neumatic or neumatic-melismatic in the verses. This state is reflected by the predominant presence of one-, two-, and four-note neumes. Therefore, all alleluiatic verses in each manuscript represent the basic interval characteristics of the Gregorian chant.
Provenance of the Pauline Gradual
After analysing the Gregorian repertoire, knowledge about the scriptoria in which such books were written may also contribute to answering the stated problem. In the sixteenth century, the diocesan and Dominican centres in Cracow and the Benedictine scriptorium in Tyniec were especially important handwriting places in southern Poland. Such an activity was also intense due to a large number of other places where books were rewritten by professors, masters, bachelors, and students.Footnote 89 Moreover, the arrival of the Pauline fathers from Jasna Góra at the Cracow church on Skałka in 1472, at the request of the chronicler Jan Długosz, and the foundation of a monastery thereFootnote 90 could contribute to the cooperation of the order with local scriptoria and taking over to some extent the repertoire of local books.
Previous studies have shown the similarity of the chants of ordinarium missae in the Pauline manuscript and ms. 45, as well as other Wawel graduals,Footnote 91 and the analogy of this repertoire to the content of the Jan Olbracht Gradual.Footnote 92 Similar conclusions apply to the chants de tempore, which were largely drawn from the tradition of the Wawel Cathedral and the codices of the Franciscan family.Footnote 93 In the case of the chants of proprium sanctorum and commune sanctorum, they also coincide with the repertoire of the Franciscan family and the Wawel liturgy.Footnote 94
Our research has shown that out of twenty-one melodies, five of them are almost identical in all manuscripts: ‘Iusti epulentur’ (8), ‘Iuravit Dominus’ (11), ‘Iustus germinabit’ (15), ‘Iustus ut palma’ (16), and ‘Specie tua’ (18). For these chants, we can assume that the Pauline records were modelled on the Wawel notations, especially ms. 44 and ms. 45. Particularly with regard to the Jan Olbracht Gradual as a book of a royal foundation, it is reasonable to say that it was the source of the liturgical repertoire for later codices. At the same time, it should be added that despite the almost identical melody, there are some differences in the text between the records of ‘Iusti epulentur’ and ‘Iustus ut palma’. In the case of the second of the works, we can assume Benedictine-Tyniec and Norbertine influences.Footnote 95
The melodies of the other verses in the Pauline codex are so significantly different from the Wawel records that it would be unjustified to claim that they were copied by a scribe of the monastic manuscript. In addition, several chants show differences in both melody and lyrics. In the case of the verse ‘Hic est sacerdos’, the compatibility of the words of the Pauline version with the records of the Franciscan family suggests that the Pauline copyist could have borrowed at least the text from them.
The Pauline records, which are clearly different from the Wawel notations, may show a resemblance to those contained in the Franciscan codices or remain rare or even unique.Footnote 96 It is also possible that they contain Dominican or Augustinian influences, as these traditions penetrated into Pauline customs even before the Council of Trent.Footnote 97
The melodies that are different from the Wawel manuscripts may show similarity to the Esztergom liturgical tradition due to the local origin of the Pauline rite. Dioceses and orders, adopting the notation and repertoire of their native liturgical branches, developed their own variants, which at the same time did not violate the ecclesial unity. Such a practice also existed in the Order of Saint Paul the First Hermit, in both Hungary and other countries.Footnote 98 Paulines, who were always attached to the Esztergom customs, drew from their source at the notation level, making their own stylization. It is therefore possible that they also referred to the Esztergom traditions in terms of the repertoire, until the change of the rite in 1600 and the adoption of Roman liturgical books.Footnote 99 This hypothesis is supported by the fact that the Pauline Gradual was written in 1596.
After comparing the alleluiatic verses of the Pauline manuscript and the graduals of the Wawel Cathedral, in response to the problem posed by Dr Marta Popowska, we can very cautiously state that the archetypes of the five compositions were the Wawel codices. With regard to the titles ‘Iusti epulentur’, ‘Iuravit Dominus’, ‘Iustus germinabit’, and ‘Specie tua’, the alternative is also justified that the patterns could have been the manuscripts of the Franciscan family, because these verses appear in them with the same version of the melody. In the case of ‘Iustus ut palma’, we do not assume such an alternative because in the Pauline incipit of this verse is the neume torculus, which is identical to that commonly found in diocesan codices, and thus the Wawel ones. The Franciscan records contain clivis, often with a doubled first note.Footnote 100
Our research also verified the statement of Popowska that only the verse ‘Iustus ut palma’ appears with the same melody in the Pauline manuscript, as well as in the Wawel and Franciscan books.Footnote 101 Meanwhile, there are five identical melodies, at least to the Wawel records of ms. 44 and ms. 45. Therefore, our findings are in line with the research conducted so far, which showed a partial influence of the Wawel diocesan codices on the shaping of the liturgical repertoire of the Pauline Gradual.
To clarify the question of the archetypes of the remaining commune sanctorum alleluiatic verses, these should be compared with the versions and variants in the codices of the broadly understood Franciscan family, and even the Dominican family, because traces of this tradition are also found in the records of the Pauline liturgy. Another problem worth clarifying is the recordings of the verses ‘Te martyrum’ and ‘Propter veritatem’, which have not been compared. Both of these works appear in the Pauline Gradual, but they are not in the Wawel records. Jerzy Pikulik did not mention the latter one in his study of the alleluiatic repertoire about saints. The first of the verses occurs in the gradual of the collegiate church in Sandomierz, ms. 1677 from around 1460, the Włocławek Gradual, ms. 1 de sanctis from 1531, the Gniezno Gradual ms. 3 from the fifteenth century, and some others. Since these verses do not appear in the Wawel codices, further comparative works could reveal another source of the repertoire of the Pauline manuscript.Footnote 102
In conclusion, we are dealing with post-Georgian chants, which essentially arose in Europe after the ninth century. It is possible that they represent the still unexplained problem of modulation and additional modal categories, that is, modi medii or the four so-called modi circumaeqales. This phenomenon was described in the theoretical treatise ‘Commemoratio brevis de tonis et psalmis modulandis’ from the tenth century and consists in the occurrence of features of different modes at different stages of the course of the same melody.Footnote 103
This research does not exhaust the possibilities of studying the provenance of the Pauline Gradual or its alleluiatic chants. The conclusions expressed here are based on a greater or lesser probability and do not give absolute certainty as to the solution of the problem under consideration. The work, however, constitutes another contribution in the area of research on the repertoire of Polish graduals and contributes to some extent to clarifying the issue of the origin of the Pauline book.