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1400s

A Wisdom Archive on 1400s

1400s

A selection of articles related to 1400s

We recommend this article: 1400s - 1, and also this: 1400s - 2.
1400s, 1400s, 1400s - Events and Trends, Law of Attraction, Practising Law of Attraction, Law of Attraction for Prosperity, Law of Attraction for Love, Law of Attraction - Obstacles

ARTICLES RELATED TO 1400s

1400s: Encyclopedia II - Middle English - Pronunciation

Generally, all letters in Middle English words are pronounced. (Silent letters in Modern English come from pronunciation shifts but continued spelling conventions.) Therefore 'knight' is pronounced [knɪçt] (with a pronounced K and a 'gh' as the 'ch' in German 'nicht'), not [naɪt], as in Modern English. Thanne longen folk to goon on pilgrimages And palmeres for to seken straunge strondes To ferne halwes, kowthe in sondry londes; (C ...

See also:

Middle English, Middle English - Literary and Linguistic Cultures, Middle English - History, Middle English - 1000, Middle English - c.1400, Middle English - Construction, Middle English - Key points, Middle English - Nouns, Middle English - Verbs, Middle English - Pronouns, Middle English - Pronunciation, Middle English - Chancery Standard, Middle English - History of the Chancery Standard

Read more here: » Middle English: Encyclopedia II - Middle English - Pronunciation

1400s: Encyclopedia II - Hindi literature - Prominent Figures of Hindi literature

See also: List of Hindi and Urdu authors Sarahapa or Saraha (769-), author of Doha-Kosha Devasena, author of Devasena Shravakachara (933) Shalibhadra, author of Bharateshwar Bahubali Ras (1184) Jagnika, author of Parmal Raso (Chandella period) Chand Bardai (1148-1191), author of Prathviraj Raso Shalibhadra Suri, author of Bhareshshvar-Bahubali Ras in 1184. Ami ...

See also:

Hindi literature, Hindi literature - History, Hindi literature - Adi kaal before 1400 CE, Hindi literature - Bhakti Kaal, Hindi literature - Ritikavya Kaal, Hindi literature - Modern Period after 1800, Hindi literature - Chhayavaadi Movement, Hindi literature - Hindi literature today, Hindi literature - Prominent Figures of Hindi literature

Read more here: » Hindi literature: Encyclopedia II - Hindi literature - Prominent Figures of Hindi literature

1400s: Encyclopedia II - Medieval music - High Medieval music 1150-1300

Medieval music - Ars antiqua. The flowering of the Notre Dame school of polyphony from around 1150 to 1250 corresponded to the equally impressive achievements in Gothic architecture: indeed the center of activity was at the cathedral of Notre Dame itself. Sometimes the music of this period is called the Parisian school, or Parisian organum, and represents the beginning of what is conventionally known as Ars antiqua. This was the period in which rhythmic notation first appeared in western music, mainly a contex ...

See also:

Medieval music, Medieval music - Overview, Medieval music - Style and trends, Medieval music - Instruments, Medieval music - Genres, Medieval music - Theory and notation, Medieval music - Early Medieval music -1150, Medieval music - Early chant traditions, Medieval music - Gregorian chant, Medieval music - Early polyphony: organum, Medieval music - Liturgical drama, Medieval music - Goliards, Medieval music - High Medieval music 1150-1300, Medieval music - Ars antiqua, Medieval music - Troubadors and trouvères, Medieval music - Late Medieval music 1300-1400, Medieval music - France: Ars nova, Medieval music - Italy: Trecento, Medieval music - Germany: Geisslerlieder, Medieval music - Mannerism and Ars subtilior, Medieval music - Transitioning to the Renaissance, Medieval music - Sources and further reading

Read more here: » Medieval music: Encyclopedia II - Medieval music - High Medieval music 1150-1300

1400s: Encyclopedia II - Medieval music - Overview

Medieval music - Style and trends. The general trend in Medieval music is toward complexity in harmony, rhythm, text, and orchestration. At the start of the era, music is monophonic and homorhythmic with a unison sung text and no notated instrumental support. The notation system is weak, and rhythm cannot be specified. The simplicity of chant, with unison voice and natural declamation, is most common. Polyphony and notation develop. Harmony, in consonant intervals of fourths, fifths, and octaves, begins to be see ...

See also:

Medieval music, Medieval music - Overview, Medieval music - Style and trends, Medieval music - Instruments, Medieval music - Genres, Medieval music - Theory and notation, Medieval music - Early Medieval music -1150, Medieval music - Early chant traditions, Medieval music - Gregorian chant, Medieval music - Early polyphony: organum, Medieval music - Liturgical drama, Medieval music - Goliards, Medieval music - High Medieval music 1150-1300, Medieval music - Ars antiqua, Medieval music - Troubadors and trouvères, Medieval music - Late Medieval music 1300-1400, Medieval music - France: Ars nova, Medieval music - Italy: Trecento, Medieval music - Germany: Geisslerlieder, Medieval music - Mannerism and Ars subtilior, Medieval music - Transitioning to the Renaissance, Medieval music - Sources and further reading

Read more here: » Medieval music: Encyclopedia II - Medieval music - Overview

1400s: Encyclopedia II - Medieval music - Early Medieval music -1150

Medieval music - Early chant traditions. Chant (or plainsong) is a monophonic sacred form which represents the earliest known music of the Christian church. The Jewish Synagogue tradition of singing psalms was a strong influence on Christian chanting. Chant developed separately in several European centers. The most important were Rome, Spain, Gaul, Milan, and Ireland. These chants were all developed to support the regional liturgies used when celebrating the Mass there. Each area developed its own chants a ...

See also:

Medieval music, Medieval music - Overview, Medieval music - Style and trends, Medieval music - Instruments, Medieval music - Genres, Medieval music - Theory and notation, Medieval music - Early Medieval music -1150, Medieval music - Early chant traditions, Medieval music - Gregorian chant, Medieval music - Early polyphony: organum, Medieval music - Liturgical drama, Medieval music - Goliards, Medieval music - High Medieval music 1150-1300, Medieval music - Ars antiqua, Medieval music - Troubadors and trouvères, Medieval music - Late Medieval music 1300-1400, Medieval music - France: Ars nova, Medieval music - Italy: Trecento, Medieval music - Germany: Geisslerlieder, Medieval music - Mannerism and Ars subtilior, Medieval music - Transitioning to the Renaissance, Medieval music - Sources and further reading

Read more here: » Medieval music: Encyclopedia II - Medieval music - Early Medieval music -1150

1400s: Encyclopedia II - Middle English - Construction

Middle English - Key points. With its simplified case-ending system, Middle English is closer to modern English than its pre-Conquest equivalent. Middle English - Nouns. Despite losing the slightly more complex system of inflexional endings, Middle English retains two separate noun-ending patterns from Old English. Compare, for example, the early Modern English words engel (angel) and nome (name): The strong -s plural form has survived into Modern English, while the weak -n form is rare (oxen, children, brethren). < ...

See also:

Middle English, Middle English - Literary and Linguistic Cultures, Middle English - History, Middle English - 1000, Middle English - c.1400, Middle English - Construction, Middle English - Key points, Middle English - Nouns, Middle English - Verbs, Middle English - Pronouns, Middle English - Pronunciation, Middle English - Chancery Standard, Middle English - History of the Chancery Standard

Read more here: » Middle English: Encyclopedia II - Middle English - Construction

1400s: Encyclopedia II - History of Yoga - Bhagavad Gita

The protracted discussions of the ultimate, infinite Self, or Atman, and realization of Brahman, are the true legacy of the Upanishads, and the first principal Yoga text is the Bhagavad Gita ("The Lord's Song"), also known as Gitopanishad. The Bhagavad Gita elaborates in detail on Bhakti Yoga, Jnana Yoga and Karma Yoga. ...

See also:

History of Yoga, History of Yoga - Pre-Vedic ca. 6000 - 3000 BCE [?], History of Yoga - Vedic ca. 2000-1500 BCE, History of Yoga - Upanishadic ca. 800-100 BCE, History of Yoga - Bhagavad Gita, History of Yoga - Classical - Patanjali's 'Yoga Sutras' ca. 200 CE, History of Yoga - Yoga-bhasya 450 - 850 CE, History of Yoga - Hatha Yoga Pradipika 1350 - 1400 CE, History of Yoga - Today, History of Yoga - Modern growth of yoga in the West

Read more here: » History of Yoga: Encyclopedia II - History of Yoga - Bhagavad Gita

1400s: Encyclopedia II - Ashanti Confederacy - People

The Ashanti (also Asante) are a major ethnic group from Africa who speak a dialect of Akan. Prior to European colonization, the Ashanti Confederacy was a major state, particularly during the period from 1570 to 1900. Ashanti wealth was based on the region's substantial deposits of gold which was mined to create intricate works of art. Also from the gold was the legend of the Golden Stool An attempt by British Gold Coast governor Frederick Hodgson in 1900 to take the Golden Stool led to an uprising ...

See also:

Ashanti Confederacy, Ashanti Confederacy - People, Ashanti Confederacy - Geography, Ashanti Confederacy - History, Ashanti Confederacy - Origins 1400s-1600’s, Ashanti Confederacy - Government, Ashanti Confederacy - European Colonisation, Ashanti Confederacy - Independence

Read more here: » Ashanti Confederacy: Encyclopedia II - Ashanti Confederacy - People

1400s: Encyclopedia II - History of Yoga - Pre-Vedic ca. 6000 - 3000 BCE [?]

Older findings are believed by some to show that "yoga" existed in some form well before the establishment of vedas in the Indian subcontinent: A triangular amulet seal uncovered at the Mohenjo-daro archaeological excavation site depicts a male figure sitting cross-legged on a low platform, with arms outstretched. His head is crowned with the horns of a water buffalo. He is surrounded by animals (a fish, an alligator and a snake) and diverse symbols. The likeness on the seal and understandings of the surrounding culture have led ...

See also:

History of Yoga, History of Yoga - Pre-Vedic ca. 6000 - 3000 BCE [?], History of Yoga - Vedic ca. 2000-1500 BCE, History of Yoga - Upanishadic ca. 800-100 BCE, History of Yoga - Bhagavad Gita, History of Yoga - Classical - Patanjali's 'Yoga Sutras' ca. 200 CE, History of Yoga - Yoga-bhasya 450 - 850 CE, History of Yoga - Hatha Yoga Pradipika 1350 - 1400 CE, History of Yoga - Today, History of Yoga - Modern growth of yoga in the West

Read more here: » History of Yoga: Encyclopedia II - History of Yoga - Pre-Vedic ca. 6000 - 3000 BCE [?]

1400s: Encyclopedia II - History of Yoga - Vedic ca. 2000-1500 BCE

Yoga was first clearly expounded in the Vedic shastras (Hindu religious texts). Those that estimate Yoga's age to be four thousand years see the history of Yoga from this point. David Frawley, a Vedic scholar, writes: "Yoga can be traced back to the Rig Veda itself, the oldest Hindu text which speaks about yoking our mind and insight to the Sun of Truth. Great teachers of early Yoga include the names of many famou ...

See also:

History of Yoga, History of Yoga - Pre-Vedic ca. 6000 - 3000 BCE [?], History of Yoga - Vedic ca. 2000-1500 BCE, History of Yoga - Upanishadic ca. 800-100 BCE, History of Yoga - Bhagavad Gita, History of Yoga - Classical - Patanjali's 'Yoga Sutras' ca. 200 CE, History of Yoga - Yoga-bhasya 450 - 850 CE, History of Yoga - Hatha Yoga Pradipika 1350 - 1400 CE, History of Yoga - Today, History of Yoga - Modern growth of yoga in the West

Read more here: » History of Yoga: Encyclopedia II - History of Yoga - Vedic ca. 2000-1500 BCE

1400s: Encyclopedia II - History of Yoga - Upanishadic ca. 800-100 BCE

Explicit examples of the concept and terminology of yoga appear in the Upanishads (primarily thirteen principal texts of the Vedanta, that are the culmination of all Vedic philosophy). [2] In the Maitrayaniya Upanishad (ca. 200-300 BCE) yoga surfaces as: "Shadanga-Yoga - The uniting discipline of the six limbs (shad-anga), as expounded in the Maitrayaniya-Upanishad: (1) breath control (pranayama), (2) sensory inhibition (pratyahara ...

See also:

History of Yoga, History of Yoga - Pre-Vedic ca. 6000 - 3000 BCE [?], History of Yoga - Vedic ca. 2000-1500 BCE, History of Yoga - Upanishadic ca. 800-100 BCE, History of Yoga - Bhagavad Gita, History of Yoga - Classical - Patanjali's 'Yoga Sutras' ca. 200 CE, History of Yoga - Yoga-bhasya 450 - 850 CE, History of Yoga - Hatha Yoga Pradipika 1350 - 1400 CE, History of Yoga - Today, History of Yoga - Modern growth of yoga in the West

Read more here: » History of Yoga: Encyclopedia II - History of Yoga - Upanishadic ca. 800-100 BCE

1400s: Encyclopedia II - History of Yoga - Classical - Patanjali's 'Yoga Sutras' ca. 200 CE

{main|Yoga Sutras of Patanjali} After the Bhagavad Gita, the next seminal work on Yoga is the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali. The Yoga Sutras are a compilation of Yogic thought that is largely Raja Yogic in nature, it was codified some time between the 2nd century BC and the 3rd century by Patanjali, and prescribes adherence to "eight limbs" (the sum of which constitute "Ashtanga Yoga") to quiet one's mind and merge with the infinite. These eight limbs not only systematized conventional moral principles espoused by the Gita, but eluc ...

See also:

History of Yoga, History of Yoga - Pre-Vedic ca. 6000 - 3000 BCE [?], History of Yoga - Vedic ca. 2000-1500 BCE, History of Yoga - Upanishadic ca. 800-100 BCE, History of Yoga - Bhagavad Gita, History of Yoga - Classical - Patanjali's 'Yoga Sutras' ca. 200 CE, History of Yoga - Yoga-bhasya 450 - 850 CE, History of Yoga - Hatha Yoga Pradipika 1350 - 1400 CE, History of Yoga - Today, History of Yoga - Modern growth of yoga in the West

Read more here: » History of Yoga: Encyclopedia II - History of Yoga - Classical - Patanjali's 'Yoga Sutras' ca. 200 CE

1400s: Encyclopedia II - History of Yoga - Yoga-bhasya 450 - 850 CE

The Yoga-bhasya, Veda Vyasa's commentary on the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali could have been written as early as 450 CE. Professor J. H. Woods, places the date of the Yoga-bhasya between 650 CE to 850 CE. Trevor Leggett places the date closer to 600 CE based on a commentary to the Yoga-bhasya published in Sanskrit in 1952 in the Madras Government Oriental Series #94 by Polakam Sri Rama Sastri and S. R. Krishnamurti Sastri. Evidence strongly suggests that this s ...

See also:

History of Yoga, History of Yoga - Pre-Vedic ca. 6000 - 3000 BCE [?], History of Yoga - Vedic ca. 2000-1500 BCE, History of Yoga - Upanishadic ca. 800-100 BCE, History of Yoga - Bhagavad Gita, History of Yoga - Classical - Patanjali's 'Yoga Sutras' ca. 200 CE, History of Yoga - Yoga-bhasya 450 - 850 CE, History of Yoga - Hatha Yoga Pradipika 1350 - 1400 CE, History of Yoga - Today, History of Yoga - Modern growth of yoga in the West

Read more here: » History of Yoga: Encyclopedia II - History of Yoga - Yoga-bhasya 450 - 850 CE

1400s: Encyclopedia II - History of Yoga - Today

In the West, hatha yoga has become wildly popular as a purely physical exercise regimen divorced of its original purpose. Currently, it is estimated that about 30 million Americans practice hatha yoga. But in the Indian subcontinent the traditional practice is still to be found. The guru-shishya (teacher-student) relationship that exists without need for sanction from non-religious institutions, and which gave rise to all the great yogins who made way into international consciousness in the 20th century, has been maintained in In ...

See also:

History of Yoga, History of Yoga - Pre-Vedic ca. 6000 - 3000 BCE [?], History of Yoga - Vedic ca. 2000-1500 BCE, History of Yoga - Upanishadic ca. 800-100 BCE, History of Yoga - Bhagavad Gita, History of Yoga - Classical - Patanjali's 'Yoga Sutras' ca. 200 CE, History of Yoga - Yoga-bhasya 450 - 850 CE, History of Yoga - Hatha Yoga Pradipika 1350 - 1400 CE, History of Yoga - Today, History of Yoga - Modern growth of yoga in the West

Read more here: » History of Yoga: Encyclopedia II - History of Yoga - Today

1400s: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Morocco - Arab Conquest and the Idrisids 703-1146

It was the Berber Jewess Dahiyah, or Damia, known as Kahinah, who aroused her people in the Aures, the eastern spurs of the Atlas, to a last although fruitless resistance to the Arab general Hasan ibn Nu'man, and herself died in 703. As in the Hellenic lands of Christendom, so also in Mauritania, Judaism involuntarily prepared the way for Islam; and the conversion of the Berbers to Islam took place so much the more easily. Many Jewish tribes of the Berbers also ...

See also:

History of the Jews in Morocco, History of the Jews in Morocco - Under the Romans, History of the Jews in Morocco - Arab Conquest and the Idrisids 703-1146, History of the Jews in Morocco - Under the Almohads 1146-1400s, History of the Jews in Morocco - The Merinds and the Saadites, History of the Jews in Morocco - Under Al-Raschid and Ismail, History of the Jews in Morocco - In the eighteenth century, History of the Jews in Morocco - In the nineteenth century, History of the Jews in Morocco - Montefiore's journey to Morocco, History of the Jews in Morocco - Modern times, History of the Jews in Morocco - Notes

Read more here: » History of the Jews in Morocco: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Morocco - Arab Conquest and the Idrisids 703-1146

1400s: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Morocco - The Merinds and the Saadites

After the Almohads, the Merinds ruled in Morocco until they were overthrown by the Saadites in the 15th century. During the murderous scenes which were enacted in 1391 in Seville and were repeated in a large part of Spain and then across the sea in Majorca, the Spanish Jews were glad to seize the first opportunity to emigrate to North Africa in order to escape the persucution in Spain. A hundred years later, when the Jews were driven out of Spain in 1492 and Portugal in 1496, the sudden inroad upon Morocco and the whole of north Africa was r ...

See also:

History of the Jews in Morocco, History of the Jews in Morocco - Under the Romans, History of the Jews in Morocco - Arab Conquest and the Idrisids 703-1146, History of the Jews in Morocco - Under the Almohads 1146-1400s, History of the Jews in Morocco - The Merinds and the Saadites, History of the Jews in Morocco - Under Al-Raschid and Ismail, History of the Jews in Morocco - In the eighteenth century, History of the Jews in Morocco - In the nineteenth century, History of the Jews in Morocco - Montefiore's journey to Morocco, History of the Jews in Morocco - Modern times, History of the Jews in Morocco - Notes

Read more here: » History of the Jews in Morocco: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Morocco - The Merinds and the Saadites

1400s: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Morocco - In the eighteenth century

The condition of the Jewish community was unchanged under Mohammed III (1757-89), who distinguished himself by his attempt to introduce European culture into his kingdom. His eldest son, Moulay Ali, governor of Fez, courageously opposed his father's suggestion to impose a tax upon that city in favor of his other brothers, which tax was to be paid by the Jewish community. He stated that the Jews of Fez were already so poor that they were unable to bear the present tax and that he was not willing to increase still further their excessive miser ...

See also:

History of the Jews in Morocco, History of the Jews in Morocco - Under the Romans, History of the Jews in Morocco - Arab Conquest and the Idrisids 703-1146, History of the Jews in Morocco - Under the Almohads 1146-1400s, History of the Jews in Morocco - The Merinds and the Saadites, History of the Jews in Morocco - Under Al-Raschid and Ismail, History of the Jews in Morocco - In the eighteenth century, History of the Jews in Morocco - In the nineteenth century, History of the Jews in Morocco - Montefiore's journey to Morocco, History of the Jews in Morocco - Modern times, History of the Jews in Morocco - Notes

Read more here: » History of the Jews in Morocco: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Morocco - In the eighteenth century

1400s: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Morocco - In the nineteenth century

The 19th century, which brought emancipation to the Jews of most lands, left those of Morocco on the whole in their old state of sad monotony and stagnation. Every new war in which Morocco became involved in that century with any foreign country sacrificed the Jews of one district or another of the sultanate to the general depression and discontent which an unsuccessful war usually calls forth in political and commercial life. The war with France in 1844 brought new misery and ill treatment upon the Moroccan Jews, especially upon those of Mo ...

See also:

History of the Jews in Morocco, History of the Jews in Morocco - Under the Romans, History of the Jews in Morocco - Arab Conquest and the Idrisids 703-1146, History of the Jews in Morocco - Under the Almohads 1146-1400s, History of the Jews in Morocco - The Merinds and the Saadites, History of the Jews in Morocco - Under Al-Raschid and Ismail, History of the Jews in Morocco - In the eighteenth century, History of the Jews in Morocco - In the nineteenth century, History of the Jews in Morocco - Montefiore's journey to Morocco, History of the Jews in Morocco - Modern times, History of the Jews in Morocco - Notes

Read more here: » History of the Jews in Morocco: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Morocco - In the nineteenth century

1400s: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Morocco - Modern times

In 1948, approximately 265,000 Jews lived in Morocco. Between 5,000 and 8,000 live there now, mostly in Casablanca, but also in Fez and other cities. In June 1948, soon after Israel was established and in the midst of the first Arab-Israeli war, riots against Jews broke out in Oujda and Djerada, killing 44 Jews. In 1948-9, 18,000 Jews left the country for Israel. After this, Jewish emigration continued (to Israel and elsewhere), but slowed to a few thousand a year. Through the early fifties, Zionist organizations encouraged emigration, particularly in the poorer south of the country, see ...

See also:

History of the Jews in Morocco, History of the Jews in Morocco - Under the Romans, History of the Jews in Morocco - Arab Conquest and the Idrisids 703-1146, History of the Jews in Morocco - Under the Almohads 1146-1400s, History of the Jews in Morocco - The Merinds and the Saadites, History of the Jews in Morocco - Under Al-Raschid and Ismail, History of the Jews in Morocco - In the eighteenth century, History of the Jews in Morocco - In the nineteenth century, History of the Jews in Morocco - Montefiore's journey to Morocco, History of the Jews in Morocco - Modern times, History of the Jews in Morocco - Notes

Read more here: » History of the Jews in Morocco: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Morocco - Modern times

1400s: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Morocco - Under the Romans

When the Jews began to spread over the Roman empire after the dissolution of the Jewish state in 70, many of them doubtless settled in Mauritania. These settlers engaged in agriculture, cattle-raising, and trades. They were divided into bodies akin to tribes, governed by their respective heads, and had to pay the Romans a capitation-tax of 2 shekels. Under the dominion of the Romans and after 429 of the Vandals the Mauritanian Jews increased and prospered to such a degree that Church councils of Africa found it necessary to take a sta ...

See also:

History of the Jews in Morocco, History of the Jews in Morocco - Under the Romans, History of the Jews in Morocco - Arab Conquest and the Idrisids 703-1146, History of the Jews in Morocco - Under the Almohads 1146-1400s, History of the Jews in Morocco - The Merinds and the Saadites, History of the Jews in Morocco - Under Al-Raschid and Ismail, History of the Jews in Morocco - In the eighteenth century, History of the Jews in Morocco - In the nineteenth century, History of the Jews in Morocco - Montefiore's journey to Morocco, History of the Jews in Morocco - Modern times, History of the Jews in Morocco - Notes

Read more here: » History of the Jews in Morocco: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Morocco - Under the Romans

1400s: Encyclopedia II - Renaissance music - Late Renaissance music 1534 - 1600

In Venice, from about 1534 until around 1600, an impressive polychoral style developed, which gave Europe some of the grandest, most sonorous music composed up until that time, with multiple choirs of singers, brass and strings in different spatial locations in the Basilica San Marco di Venezia (see Venetian School). These multiple revolutions spread over Europe in the next several decades, beginning in Germany and then moving to Spain, France and England somewhat later, d ...

See also:

Renaissance music, Renaissance music - Overview, Renaissance music - Style and trends, Renaissance music - Genres, Renaissance music - Theory and notation, Renaissance music - Early Renaissance music 1400 - 1467, Renaissance music - Middle Renaissance music 1467 - 1534, Renaissance music - Late Renaissance music 1534 - 1600, Renaissance music - Mannerism, Renaissance music - Transition to the Baroque, Renaissance music - Sources and further reading

Read more here: » Renaissance music: Encyclopedia II - Renaissance music - Late Renaissance music 1534 - 1600

1400s: Encyclopedia II - Renaissance music - Overview

Renaissance music - Style and trends. French Renaissance German Renaissance English Renaissance The increasing reliance on the interval of the third as a consonance is one of the most pronounced features of early Renaissance European art music (in the Middle Ages, thirds had been considered dissonances: see interval). Polyphony, in use since the 12th century, became increasingly elaborate with highly independent voices throughout the 14th century: the be ...

See also:

Renaissance music, Renaissance music - Overview, Renaissance music - Style and trends, Renaissance music - Genres, Renaissance music - Theory and notation, Renaissance music - Early Renaissance music 1400 - 1467, Renaissance music - Middle Renaissance music 1467 - 1534, Renaissance music - Late Renaissance music 1534 - 1600, Renaissance music - Mannerism, Renaissance music - Transition to the Baroque, Renaissance music - Sources and further reading

Read more here: » Renaissance music: Encyclopedia II - Renaissance music - Overview




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