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SINGING AND DEVOTION IN THE SIXTEENTH-CENTURY LOW COUNTRIES

Review products

EricJas, Piety and Polyphony in Sixteenth-Century Holland: The Choirbooks of St Peter’s Church, Leiden. Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 2018. xvi + 414 pp. ISBN 978-1-783-27326-3.

ErinLambert, Singing the Resurrection: Body, Community, and Belief in Reformation Europe. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018. xii + 222 pp. ISBN 978-0-190-66164-9.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 September 2019

Matthew Laube*
Affiliation:
Birkbeck, University of London

Abstract

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Type
Review Article
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2019 

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References

1 Strohm, R., Music in Late Medieval Bruges (Oxford, 1985).Google Scholar

2 Here I adopt the terms ‘Low Countries’, ‘Netherlands’ and ‘Netherlandish’ to refer to the geographical areas which at present include parts of Belgium, northern France, Luxembourg and the Netherlands. For a similar use of this terminology, see Pollmann, J., Catholic Identity and the Revolt of the Netherlands, 1520–1635 (Oxford, 2011), p. xvii.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

3 Strohm, Late Medieval Bruges, pp. v and 2.

4 Dillon, E., The Sense of Sound: Musical Meaning in France, 1260–1330 (New York, 2012).Google Scholar

5 Pollmann, Catholic Identity, ch. 1.

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10 Ibid., p. 193.

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14 For a parallel argument about iconoclasts’ physical reaction to sacrament houses, see van Bruaene, A., ‘Embodied Piety: Sacrament Houses and Iconoclasm in the Sixteenth-Century Low Countries’, BMGN – Low Countries Historical Review, 131/1 (2016), pp. 3658.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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16 For precise numbers of Anabaptists prosecuted in Leiden, see Geraerts, J., ‘The Prosecution of Anabaptists in Holland, 1530–66’, Mennonite Quarterly Review, 86 (2012), pp. 548.Google Scholar

17 Trocmé-Latter, D., The Singing of the Strasbourg Protestants, 1523–1541 (Farnham, 2015)Google Scholar; Leaver, R., The Whole Church Sings: Congregational Singing in Luther’s Wittenberg (Grand Rapids, MI, 2017).Google Scholar

18 For instance, Walsham, Alexandra, Providence in Early Modern England (Oxford, 1999).Google Scholar

19 Strohm, Late Medieval Bruges, p. 3.

20 Arnold, J., ‘Catholic Reformations: A Medieval Perspective’, in Bamji, A., Janssen, G. H., and Laven, M. (eds.), The Ashgate Research Companion to the Counter-Reformation(Farnham, 2013), p. 420.Google Scholar

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22 Champion, M., The Fullness of Time: Temporalities of the Fifteenth-Century Low Countries (Chicago, 2017).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

23 On the social dynamics of the mining community in Mansfeld, see Roper, L., Martin Luther: Renegade and Prophet (London, 2016), pp. 1734.Google Scholar