Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 The Moravians and Their Music
- 2 Moravian Worship: The Why of Moravian Music
- 3 Hymnody of the Moravian Church
- 4 Moravian Sacred Vocal Music
- 5 The Organ in Moravian Church Music
- 6 The Role and Development of Brass Music in the Moravian Church
- 7 The Collegia Musica: Music of the Community
- 8 Music in Moravian Boarding Schools through the Early Nineteenth Century
- 9 The Piano among the Moravians in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries: Music, Instruction, and Construction
- 10 Moravian Music: Questions of Identity and Purpose
- Appendix 1 Biographical Sketches
- Appendix 2 A Moravian Musical Timeline
- Bibliography
- List of Contributors
- Index
- Eastman Studies in Music
Appendix 2 - A Moravian Musical Timeline
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 March 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 The Moravians and Their Music
- 2 Moravian Worship: The Why of Moravian Music
- 3 Hymnody of the Moravian Church
- 4 Moravian Sacred Vocal Music
- 5 The Organ in Moravian Church Music
- 6 The Role and Development of Brass Music in the Moravian Church
- 7 The Collegia Musica: Music of the Community
- 8 Music in Moravian Boarding Schools through the Early Nineteenth Century
- 9 The Piano among the Moravians in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries: Music, Instruction, and Construction
- 10 Moravian Music: Questions of Identity and Purpose
- Appendix 1 Biographical Sketches
- Appendix 2 A Moravian Musical Timeline
- Bibliography
- List of Contributors
- Index
- Eastman Studies in Music
Summary
1372 (ca.) Jan Hus born (d. 1415)
1393 Jan Hus receives bachelor's degree
1396 Jan Hus receives master's degree
1398 Jan Hus appointed to the faculty of the University of Prague (Charles University)
1402 Jan Hus installed as preacher at Bethlehem Chapel, Prague
1412 Jan Hus begins voluntary exile after pope threatens interdict against city of Prague
1415 Jan Hus martyred July 6
1457 (or 1458) Unity of Brethren founded; first congregation in Kunvald with Utraquist pastor Michal
1458 (ca.) Lukáš of Prague born (d. 1528)
1467 Matej of Kunwald, Eliáš of Chřenovice, and Tu°ma Přeloucský ordained as Brethren's first priests at Lhotka, near Rychnov; MateËj is chosen as senior (bishop)
1480 (ca.) Michael Weisse born (d. 1534)
1481 Lukáš of Prague joins Unity
1485/90 Jan Roh born (d. 1547)
1500 Jan Augusta born (d. 1572)
1501 Czech hymnal produced (not by Unitas Fratrum), contains eleven of Lukáš's hymns
1505 Czech-language Unity hymnal, probably edited by Lukáš and his brother Jan Černy; reported to have contained some four hundred hymns; no surviving copy known
1517 Michael Weisse accepted into Unitas Fratrum
1518 Jan Roh ordained
1518 Lukáš becomes head of Unity
1519 Czech hymnal, edited by Lukáš; no surviving copy known
1521 Czech collection of funeral hymns, edited by Lukáš
1523 Jan Blahoslav born (d. 1571)
1524 Jan Augusta joins Unitas Fratrum
1528 Lukáš dies
1531 Ein new Gesengbuchlen, first German-language Unitas Fratrum hymnal, edited by Michael Weisse; has Zwinglian tendencies; contains 157 hymns; reprinted at least four times over next ten years (see 1544 below)
1532 Jan Augusta elected bishop
1532, 1535 Unity's confessions of faith drawn up by Jan Roh
1534 Michael Weisse dies
1536 Jíří Strejc born (also known as Georg Vetter; d. 1599)
1541 Czech hymnal, edited by Jan Roh; 482 hymns, 300 melodies; about one-quarter of the hymns are by Lukáš; one copy known to exist
1544 German hymnal, Jan Roh revision of Weisse 1531; three known surviving copies (one at Moravian Music Foundation); reprinted/reissued at last twelve times over sixty-five-year period
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- The Music of the Moravian Church in America , pp. 290 - 304Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2009