1390s in music

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Other topics in 1390s:

Music timeline

Events

This is a list of notable events in music that took place in the 1390s.

  • 1390
    • The monastery at Durham appoints John Stele to teach the Benedictine monks and eight secular boys to play the organs and to sing "triple song" (possibly faburden).[1]
  • 1391
  • 1392
    • 25 November – Eustache Deschamps completes L’Art de dictier et de fere chancons, balades, virelais et rondeaulx.[5]
    • exact date unknown – A group of merchants in Birmingham establish the Gild of the Holy Cross, which appointed priests to sing at the parish church, St Martin in the Bull Ring, as well as an organist whom they housed near to the church.[6]
  • 1393
    • exact date unknown – The French singer and composer Bosquet (Johannes de Bosco, Jean du Bois) receives a papal grant as a musician to Duke Louis II of Anjou.[7]
  • 1394
    • early in the year – The canons of Notre-Dame de Paris successfully solicit 200 francs from Charles VI for rebuilding the cathedral organ, after the original had fallen into disrepair.[8]
  • 1395
    • exact date unknown – Johannes Tapissier makes a second visit to Avignon in the entourage of Philip the Bold.[4]
  • 1397
    • exact date unknown – Earliest reference to a clavecembalum (in this case meaning a clavichord), in a letter from a Paduan lawyer Lambertacci, attributing its invention to Magister Armanus de Alemania.[9]
  • 1399
    • exact date unknown – Johannes Tapissier visits Flanders in the entourage of Philip the Bold.[4]

Works

Births

Guillaume Dufay (left), with Gilles Binchois, circa 1440s

Deaths

References

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