Dissertations / Theses on the topic 'Musique et politique – 16e siècle'
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Alazard, Florence. "Art vocal, art de gouverner : la musique, le prince et la cité en Italie du Nord, 1560-1610." Tours, 2000. http://www.theses.fr/2000TOUR2005.
Full textTenne, Pierre. "L’harmonie du Prince. Musique, sacré, pouvoirs dans les cours de Paris et Florence (vers 1560-vers 1610)." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Sorbonne université, 2020. http://www.theses.fr/2020SORUL155.
Full textFollowing an interdisciplinary approach, particularly between History and Musicology, this work deals with the political use of sacred music in the Florentine and Parisian courts from 1560 to 1610. Using the angle of the musical spectacle, we aim to emphasize the apparition of new spectacular forms at these courts in the period, as the humanist writings and the ecclesiastical reforms (particularly provincial synods) testify. These musical spectacles give to the Princes an efficient answer to the political and religious crisis they face, in particular the French kings: it allows them to represent their power without being tied to sacramental constraints inherent in Christian liturgy. Then, we intend to describe how these Princes have taken control over the means of production of such musical spectacles. By the reorganization of chapels and of court music, they set up a secularization of sacred music at the service of princely ceremonies. Such a secularization dwells particularly on the process of professionalization of musicians, at the expense of the clerical magister over sacred music inherited from Middle Ages. Finally, these musical spectacles establish an audience submitted to a new order, breaking away from the one of the assembly of faithfuls still existing in liturgical services. We show how such an audience has been established during the period, with an emphasis on the disciplinary functions of such a musical spectacle and of the aesthetics that goes with it
Jardin, Etienne. "Le conservatoire et la ville : les écoles de musique de Besançon, Caen, Rennes, Roubaix et Saint-Étienne au XIXe siècle." Paris, EHESS, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006EHES0031.
Full textThe present study deals with French conservatoires from the French Revolution to World War One. It is based on the examples of the musical schools of Besançon, Caen, Rennes, Roubaix and Saint-Étienne. The first part establishes the international story of these structures through their inscription within global evolutions on either a national or a European scale. The second part offers a cross analysis of the educative schemes at work within these schools, from the enunciation of politics to be followed (the objectives) and the means chosen to enact them, to reach the reality of the teaching (the results). The third part proposes an approach of the existing link between the evolution of the conservatoires and of the local musical life, of the impact of music schools - and of teachers - upon musical economy
Porret-Dubreuil, Amélie. "Contribution à l'étude de la restauration de la musique à l'église au xixe siècle au prisme de l'expérience de Félix Clément (1822-1885)." Thesis, Lyon, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016LYSES043/document.
Full text19th century church music is a research area that is greatly expanding. The last 15 years of research has Iead to a better understanding of this expansive subject, but much remains to be examined. ln particular, the 19th century French Church Music Restoration Movement has yet to be studied in its own right.Our goal was to demonstrate the breath of the musicological and multidisciplinary research opportunities related to this movement, and Félix Clément emerged as an ideal starting point. Although he was nota principle leader, he was involve in ail areas of the Church Music Restoration Movement that were open to him. Beyond the field of religion, Clément revealed a real insight, through his work as a Iiturgical chant restorer and his different methodological approaches, and understood the entire complexity of the field. Above all else, his experience allows for a deeper understanding of the societal, political, religious and historiographical currents involved in this kind of work. His work opens the door to many research possibilities relating to the study of the restoration of Iiturgical chant in such a way that an entire field is revealed by looking at his activities. Our study attempts to place the work of Clément in their context in order to extract the political and religious relationship and to define the importance and Iegacy of his work
Trancart, Vinciane. "Accords et désaccords. Pratiques et représentations de la guitare à Madrid et en Andalousie de 1883 à 1922." Thesis, Paris 3, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014PA030100/document.
Full textDuring the transition from the nineteenth to the twentieth centuries, when the question of national identity is continuing to develop in Spain, the guitar is repeatedly mentioned as the “national instrument”. This platitude ultimately proves to be a paradoxical symbol of an identity that is still under debate during this period. While stereotypical descriptions caricature the reality by oversimplifying it, on the contrary, guitar practices diversify during the Restoration, because of technical changes in the instrument and the evolution of folk, classical and flamenco music. The composition in 1920 by Manuel de Falla of the first piece for solo guitar (Homenaje a Debussy) and the organization of the First Contest of the Cante Jondo in Granada in 1922 testify to the gradual recognition of the instrument. Yet the proliferation of printed matter, favored by the freedom of the press law (1883), gives rise to numerous literary and visual representations of the guitar that do not accurately reflect these changes. They mostly bring out its popular, Andalusian and even flamenco character, and its ability to impregnate the imagination. Published in periodicals in Madrid or Andalusia, these works influence the reception of the instrument: it is both appreciated by an increasingly wide audience, disregarded for being absent from museums and institutions, and rejected by social and moral standards because of its presence in decried places. Yet, even when this stereotype is disputed, the guitar takes on an original symbolic dimension, rooted in everyday life, which manifests itself through the emotions it provokes
En la bisagra entre los siglos XIX y XX, cuando la cuestión de la identidad nacional se planteaba con intensidad en España, se aludió muchas veces a la guitarra como el “instrumento nacional”. Este lugar común aparece como un símbolo paradójico de una identidad todavía en debate. Mientras que el cliché caricaturiza la realidad simplificándola, las prácticas de la guitarra, por el contrario, se diversificaron durante la Restauración, debido a las transformaciones técnicas del instrumento y a la evolución de la música popular, clásica y flamenca. La composición en 1920 por Manuel de Falla de la primera obra para una guitarra solista (Homenaje a Debussy) y la organización del Primer Concurso de Cante Jondo en Granada en 1922 dan fe del progresivo reconocimiento del instrumento. Sin embargo, la multiplicación de los impresos, favorecida por la Ley de Policía de Imprenta (1883), dio lugar a numerosas representaciones literarias y plásticas de la guitarra que no reflejaban fielmente esas mutaciones, sino que destacaban, sobre todo, su carácter popular, andaluz e incluso flamenco, y su capacidad de impregnar todo el imaginario colectivo español. Publicadas en periódicos andaluces o madrileños, estas obras influyeron en la recepción del instrumento que, apreciado por un público cada vez más amplio, resultaba también desconocido, por su ausencia en museos e instituciones, al mismo tiempo que era rechazado según criterios sociales y morales por su presencia en lugares considerados deshonrosos. No obstante, incluso cuando se critica el estereotipo, la guitarra posee una dimensión simbólica, enraizada en lo cotidiano, que se manifiesta a través de la emoción que suscita
Guilloux, Fabien. "Les frères mineurs et la musique en France : 1550-1700." Tours, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006TOUR2003.
Full textThis dissertation takes its place in Cultural History's prospect. Through musicology, but also history, philosophy, theology, canonical law, iconography, liturgy, pastoral and ethnomusicology disciplines too, this dissertation discusses about Franciscans rapports on Music in French culture. It reveals a complex skein of musical's identity in connection with every Franciscan family and it has a part in a better knowledge on musical activity in males' monasteries during Renaissance and Baroque period. This is the first monographic synthesis devoted to the musical Franciscan tradition
López, Morillo Luis. "Les Bourbons sacrés : musica sacra y liturgia de Estado en las cortes de Roma, Madrid y Versalles (1745-1789)." Thesis, Sorbonne université, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018SORUL174.
Full textThis thesis attempts, for the first time, to address a comparative analysis of the role that liturgical music played in the process of building the sacred image of the sovereigns of the Bourbon House of France and Spain as part of the religious ceremonies celebrated in Madrid and Versailles during the last decades of the Ancien Régime, as well as the role that the example of the Pontifical Chapel played in this process. The main purpose of this study was to provide a conceptual framework and analytical model that would allow a global study of sacred music for these ceremonies to be approached from a perspective closer to cultural history than traditional musicology, but always starting from the analysis of the performative aspects that revealed the reciprocal interaction between music and the ceremonial, political and historical context of which it was a part. Along six chapters, we examine the elements that shaped the ceremonies of the State liturgy, conceived at that time as sacred representations: the different scenes in which they took place, the actors, the ceremonial, as well as the functioning of the different styles of singing used to solemnize both the ordinary and extraordinary ceremonies celebrated in Rome, Madrid and Versailles between 1745 and 1789. This included not only sacred music works produced ad hoc by the choirmasters, but also other music, such as plainchant, counterpoint or faux-bourdon, which were sometimes performed by improvisation or memorization as part of this same system of representation
Nadeau, Christian. "Le lien civil : morale publique, obéissance et gouvernement à l'âge classique : Jean Bodin, Pierre Charron et Jean de Silhon." Paris 10, 2000. http://www.theses.fr/2000PA100176.
Full textDuflos, de Saint Amand Donatienne. "Nature et fonction de la notion d'intérêt aux XVIe ET XVIIe siècles." Paris 10, 2008. http://www.theses.fr/2008PA100180.
Full textUntil the XVIth century, the notion of interest is nearly non existent in the representations of the world and of action. From the XVIth century and during all the XVIIth, it enlarges its uses as far as it becomes the notion we can't avoid nor refute nowadays. Through the study of its most important promoters, from Guichardin to Leibniz, and assuming that its introduction provides a solution that enables them to work out new problems they have to face, this work shows that the notion of interest is not a psychological motivation that would lead to the representation of a selfish man nor to the mere introduction of the utilitarian paradigm. The analysis of its uses (whether it's used to solve economic, moral or political problems), of its objects and subjects, of its qualities (either descriptive or normative, either particular or general) and of its ambivalent effects (utility, prejudice), enables to show that its stake is wider, in so far as the modelling of the reality is concerned. Interest works as a principle of action, as a corrective variable. It allows to get the phenomenons under control, to get a phenomenal representation of the relationships between the man and his world around. Its extension leads to an upgrading of tangible world, that gives the representation of value a new start, and appraises them throughout concurrence. Therefore, it takes part in the construction of modernity
Uzer, Vincenette d'. "Politique et religion sous les Tudors à travers les "Homélies"." Paris 3, 1988. http://www.theses.fr/1988PA03A006.
Full textThe homilies are thirty-three sermons of homiletic type published in 1547 and 1563 to be read from the pulpit every sunday according to royal injunction. Their aim : establish the reformation under its particular type of anglicanism, put an end to roman domination and prevent religious strife. Children were required to repeat the homilies to their teachers; shakespeare learnt them as a child and there are many echoes in his work. Their main authors are : cranmer, latimer, jewel, parker, grindal. This thesis sets the homilies in their historical context and in the english homiletic tradition. The various editions are studied as well as the homilies themselves : liturgical, christian life and pastoral, and also the places of worship. They are then shown as describing a given social situation such as right of ownership, of fishing, idleness, almsdeeds. Then comes a study of the links between the homilies and the social and political order to be respected even in your apparel. Lastly the homelies reflect the anglican faith : knowledge of the bible, salvation through faith only without works. The two sacraments : baptism and eucharist and the five sacramentary rites are studied in the homilies and their link with the book of common prayer stressed. Scriptural references and short biographical notices of the authors end the work
Gioanni, Florence. "La société aristocratique française du XVIème [seizième] siècle et la musique : le cas de Marguerite de Valois (1553-1615)." Tours, 1996. http://www.theses.fr/1996TOUR2016.
Full textThe Valois-Angoulême dynasty really impressed the intellectual, cultural and artistic evolution of France during the renaissance age. But, if artistic activities supported by Catherine of Medici are well known, very few are our informations about the more "modest" aristocratic courts. Indeed, despite many studies concerning the great princes of the second half of the 16th century, we don't have a lot of documents about the importance that they gave to the entertainments. Among many representants of this high aristocracy, Marguerite de Valois, queen of Navarre and France, daughter of Henry II and Catherine of Medici, sister of the last three Valois kings, appears to us as one of the most interesting figure of this circle, to study. From her brilliant education, she largely took part of the majesty of this period. The queen of Navarre status brought her to support her own court and develop her own cultural policy. She received a perfect education: music, painting, literature, philosophy, nothing missed. At the end of her life, her parisian salon was on the firsts of that kind. Therefore, the music was always present into the plays or other festivities that she organized. The handwritten books of her accounting allowed us to find the complete description of her house, year after year, her incomes and spendings until her death or quite. Thanks to this accounts, we can imagine what was then the style of living of a figure of her rank. To get the importance granted to the music by the french aristocrats of this end of the Renaissance; we have subdivided this work into three chapters
Dupraz, Christophe. "Musiques pour luths (1507-1601) : catalogue raisonné et édition moderne du répertoire pour plusieurs luths imprimé à la Renaissance. : Analyse musicale des mises en tablature de modèles polyphoniques." Tours, 2001. http://www.theses.fr/2001TOUR2036.
Full textDelouvé, Fabien. "L'Ethos musical de l'Antiquité à la Renaissance : genèse, développements et mutations d'une notion." Paris 8, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009PA083268.
Full textIf there is one recurring notion in early textual tradition, it is, to be sure, that of ethos, which is closely associated with music. This notion, whose origins are very ancient, was not only widely passed down and developed throughout Antiquity, for example in Plato's Republic, but also throughout the entire Middle Ages, by the transmission of the Greek tradition of knowledge, and indeed it gained in importance during the Renaissance. The aim of this thesis is to trace exhaustively the history of the notion of ethos, inasmuch as a thorough study on ethos has never before been undertaken ; this research is therefore by definition an interdisciplinary survey. The terminus ad quem of this study is the early 17th century, time-frame in which comparisons between the different compositional practices will allow us to determine whether or not the late Renaissance composers took into account the musical ethos as a precompositional element
Guinle, Francis. "Accords parfaits : les rapports entre la musique et le théâtre de l'avènement des Tudors au début de la carrière de Shakespeare, c. 1485-1592." Paris 7, 1986. http://www.theses.fr/1986PA070138.
Full textThe evolution of drama in England in the 16th century is linked to the social, political and religious evolution. Drama evolves from well-established forms and structures. Under the influence of classical drama, the French farce and Italian comedy, it integrates new elements, but also retains the essential components of its own native traditions, adapting them to the new modes and conditions of performance met by the adult professional actors and the children's troupes. The use of the vernacular and the constant presence of music with well-defined functions are permanent aspects of this drama. Through established patterns and conventions, the musical element is closely linked to the structure and themes of the plays. It is analyzed here in its context throughout the repertoire of adult and children's troupes. The concept of a distortion and misappropriation of celestial harmony by the vices of the moral plays constitutes a basic element in the use and function of music, and in particular some forms of songs often associated with servants, pages, and in general low characters in pre-shakespearean court comedies
Sheptovitsky, Levi. "La tablature de luth de Cracovie (CLT) : étude du manuscrit et édition critique." Paris 4, 2003. http://www.theses.fr/2002PA040029.
Full textThe Cracow Lute Tablature (CTL) dated c. 1553-early 17th century, is the earliest and most comprehensive collection of Polish Renaissance lute music. The repertoire of CLT, 57 pieces representing a century's worth of music, consists of intabulations of vocal compositions, dances, fantasias and preludes. CLT is the principal source of the unique Polish pieces. The fundamental goal of this dissertation is the study of this rare and unsufficiently examined manuscript. All pieces of CTL have benne analyzed, catalogued and transcribed in the interpretative transcription wich is reconstruction of the raw musical material found in the tablature which renders the real sound of the polyphonic structure, as sounded on the lute in accordance with a modern concept of meter. Almost all genres are identified, the vocal models, the autorship, titles and printed sources of some of the pieces have been established. CTL was compiled during the most productive period in the history of the Renaissance lute music and reflects changes in the European instrumental music between two epochs the Renaissance and Baroque. CTL proves Polish cultural contacts with other musical centers in Europe, enriches our knowledge of compositional techniques, procedures of ornamentation and arrangement, reflects the general tendencies in Polish solo instrumental music of this period and side by side with the famous Jan of Lublin and the Cracow keyboard tablatures, it is one of the most important sources of Polish Renaissance instrumental music. In many details CTL is a varied, problematical source representing a rich and interresting level of Renaissance musical culture. The present study considerably fill the gap in our knowledge on Polish lute music before appearance of the famous Polish lutenists at the beginning of the 17th century and advance the state of searche into this manuscript
Tin, Louis-Georges. "Tragédie et politique en France au XVIe siècle." Paris 10, 2003. http://www.theses.fr/2003PA100138.
Full textThe rebirth of tragedy in Renaissance France is linked to two phenomena: first, humanists eager to discover the writings of Antiquity; second, civil wars leading to the widespread impression that the kingdom's entire political life was itself a tragedy. Thus, new dramatists felt that in dealing with the past, they also dealt with the present. The political engagement of French tragedies in the 16th century is quite conspicuous, but after the Wars of Religion, the plays tend to express a sort of political consensus: they become less radical and are slowly replaced by pastoral, elegiac or courtly tragedies. On the whole this reflection is a contribution to the history of French Tragedy. It restores some of the elements missing from histories of the genre (tragedy during medieval times, during and after the Wars of Religion) and explains the political implications of the various Jewish, Greek, Roman or French tragedies written during the Renaissance
Mouline, Nabil. "Le califat imaginaire d'Ahmad al-Mansûr : légitimité, pouvoir et diplomatie au Maroc." Paris 4, 2008. http://www.theses.fr/2008PA040012.
Full textAhmad al Mansûr's reign distinguished itself by a strong will to building a powerful empire with stable ideological and institutional structures. The sultan-sharîf had got a triptych plan : to legitimate his power within Morocco, to break away from the foreign influence, notably the Ottoman one, and to pursue an imperialist policy in the Sahara and the Sudan. To go througt with this plan, the Moroccan monarch borrowed the caliphate ideology wich is a sort of universal monarchy. In actually, the sultan-sharîf had something to reform administration and financial and military structures, and sometimes to revolutionize the system creating new institutions copied out of Iberian and Ottoman patterns. Finally, Ahmad Al-Mansûr showed pragmatism pursuing an active, proactive and reative foreign policy and using his alliances to carry out his plan
Gal, Stéphane. "Politique, société et religion à Grenoble pendant la Ligue : (vers 1574-vers 1591)." Grenoble 2, 2000. http://www.theses.fr/2000GRE2A002.
Full textRivière, Jean-Marc. "L'espace politique républicain à Florence de 1494 à 1527 : réforme des institutions et constitution d'une élite de gouvernement." Paris 8, 2005. http://www.theses.fr/2005PA082634.
Full textThe Republican regime set up in Florence in December 1494 modified the corpus of citizens who acceded to city government. Our study, based on a large prosopographic research, emphasizes the characteristics of Florentine political personnel from December 1494 to May 1527, when an elite of government was formed and the assembly of the Consulte e Pratiche was brought into the limelight. The return of the Medici in September 1512 resulted from a deep crisis of legitimacy, which affected the whole organization of institutions. Thus, a new gap appeared between supporters and opponents of Medicean influence on leadership and deeply modified the role of political personnel
Villard, Renaud. "Du bien commun au mal nécessaire : tyrannies, assassinats politiques et souveraineté en Italie, vers 1470-vers 1600." Paris 4, 2004. http://www.theses.fr/2004PA040093.
Full textThis research concerns the wave of political assassinations in early modern Italy, wave which has been associated to the debate on tyrannicide: an idea of the tyrant spreds, seeing him as man of the inversion of values, of the physical and spiritual destruction of the community. This idea meets with a response from the spiritual and political instability: the conspirator, by killing this tyrant and by mutilated his body, intends to uncover the hidden monster, in order to enable the return of political and religious harmony. This frequency of real or imaginary conspiracies leads the sovereigns to amend their authority. The prince, thanks to a discourse on necessary obediance, thanks to the use of dissimulations, thanks to his accepted capacity of illegitime violence, establishes himself as a principle of power, separated from his body's materiality - this has the effect of weakening political murders which were supported first this uncovering of the prince's body
Risler, Alexis. "Luth et luthistes en France au tournant du XVIIe siècle (1571-1623)." Thesis, Université Laval, 2014. http://www.theses.ulaval.ca/2014/30513/30513.pdf.
Full textWhile many lute books have been published in France in the mid-sixteenth century, only four were printed in Paris from 1571 to 1623. These few sources reflect major changes in the language of the lutenists, but are isolated from one another and disconnected from the brilliant French lute school that blooms from the 1620s and 1630s. In order to reduce this perceived rupture during the 1571-1623 period and draw a continuous path in the development of French lute repertoire, this study proposes to locate the lutenists’ activities in a broader artistic and socio-historical context. The dissertation is divided into three parts: the place of the instrument in musical printing; its connection with dance as a choreographic art form; and the social context in which the lutenists evolved.
Korzilius, Pierre. "Soutien public et programmation de musique contemporaine en France, en Allemagne, au Royaume-Uni et aux Etats-Unis." Paris, EHESS, 2001. http://www.theses.fr/2001EHES0100.
Full textZyssman, Elisabeth. "De l'ordre politique au XVIe siècle : l'humanisme chrétien à l'épreuve de la Réforme." Paris 10, 2002. http://www.theses.fr/2002PA100143.
Full text[Texte en anglais] the purpose of this work is to examine the way in which XVIth century thinkers with various backgrounds have come to reflect on political order and to define it. Through a review of nine great figures of the period - Machiavelli, Erasmus, More, Luther, Müntzer, Calvin, La Boétie, Bodin and Montaigne -, the object is to set out and analyse the stakes, the operating conditions and the main characteristics of the political order (inside the state, not international), which was conceived at the dawn of modern times, before the Reform, by the Reform and by thinkers confronted with the Reform. Did they, in the XVIth century, dream of setting up a radically new order, improving the established order, or just keeping it, if not restoring it ? Who was supposed to be responsible for the disorders recorded, and who was expected to restore order ? Statesmen ? the elite ? the people ? Did order depend on the reform of institutions, military and police dispositions, or the regeneration of men? In the century of Humanism, what was the placegiven to the representations and the passions of men (the governors and the governed alike), when reflecting on the causes of disorder and on the ways of preventing it or coping with it. . .
Laschon, Fanny. "Gouverneurs et gouvernement en Bretagne au XVIe siècle (1492-1589)." Rennes 1, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006REN1G008.
Full textDuring the sixteenth century the fate of French monarchy and of Brittany is simultaneously at stake. Whereas the king is reinforcing his sovereignty over his territory, Brittany is experiencing the first effects of royal domination. At that time is juridical status is changing from the independence of a dukedom to the autonomy of a royal province. Over this period the governor of Brittany appears as a essential personage. As the representative of the king and the suprem authority in Brittany he makes the king's sovereignty triumph over his territory while striving to conciliate it with the particularisms of the province. The governor becomes the intermediary between the king and his new subjects, the architect of the integration of Brittany into France but also one autonomous force able to influence the progress of history
Pallini-Martin, Agnès. "Réseaux florentins, négoce et politique à Lyon autour de 1500 : Giuliano da Gagliano et la compagnie Salviati." Paris, EHESS, 2013. http://www.theses.fr/2013EHES0022.
Full textOur work offers a comparison and an analysis in parallel with account books of Florentine market bankers in Lyon, at the end of the Middle Ages: Giuliano da Gagliano, a market banker working for the Medici account and the Alamanno & Jacopo Salviati company. The account books, kept in the Italian archives, allow us to conduct an analysis of marketing practices and the internal runnings of companies, and offer another point of view other than that of the French sources of the presence and the role of the Florentines in Lyon. Our study also brings to light the Florentine companies’ strategy matters, which are very different from each other, and their political and commercial networks for an unknow period. Giuliano da Gagliano is a merchant who works for other companies such as that of Medici and Bartolini and which lead the more political and commercial activities. As for the Salviati company, it is a large-scale marketing company which finds, in Lyon, the necessary implantation for a specialist company in the imports-exports field. Finally, our work replaces their family journeys and their political and commercial choices in the Florentine political context, which are clear in the mode of composition of the Salviati archives
Lee, Naesun. "Les formules cadentielles dans les psaumes Huguenots : formation horizontale et conséquences verticales." Paris 4, 1996. http://www.theses.fr/1996PA040013.
Full textOne fundamental question of this thesis is the following: which are the analytical phenomena which enable us to affirm that the 16th century is a period of transition? How can we measure the level of tonality and modality? The object of our study is to examine the different cadential formulas of the psalms. While classifying we will show the horizontal form and the vertical result. This leads us to the second point of our research which is the identification of the character of the musical esthetic in the 16th century
Noailly, Jean-Michel. "Claude Goudimel, Adrian Le Roy et les CL psaumes, Paris 1562-1567." Saint-Etienne, 1988. http://www.theses.fr/1988STET2006.
Full textThe late rediscovery (1983) of "Pseaumes de David. . . A quatre parties » par Cl. Goudimel. Nouvellement mis en tablature sur le Leut par Adrian Le Roy-Paris, Le Roy-Ballard, 1567" has enabled us to study the melodies of calvinist psalms in three aspects. Part I is a modal analysis of these melodies coming after a description of the stages of their composition. Part II deals with Claude Goudimel's activity, suggests a method to analyze harmonizations "nota contra nota" and applies it to those of psalms made by Goudimel. Part III presents printer-lute-player : Adrian Le Roy, psalms "set in tablatures" for the lute and the influence of Goudimel's harmonizations on Le Roy's tablatures. This study tackles problems of musical typography : mutual influences of printers while composing the 1562 monodic psalter ; Le Roy's role in page-setting the lute tablatures and the musical alterations entailed. Those reflections on typography are to be found in the form of appendices gathered in a second volume presenting also a list of musical characters used in Paris in the sixteenth century as well as part of the material in Le Roy and Ballard's workshop. Tables, indexes and documents related to the huguenot psalter, its harmonizations, both in four parts "nota contra notam" and for the lute, complete this volume. The third volume gives the modern transcription of Le Roy's psalms of 1567. The principles of transcription respect the norms of the "corpus des luthistes français"
Montes, Beatriz. "Histoire du conservatoire royal de musique de Madrid (1830-1874) : les enjeux politiques et socio-culturels d'une institution européenne." Tours, 2002. http://www.theses.fr/2002TOUR2008.
Full textGrellety-Bosviel, Olivier. "Edition musicale et librairie parisiennes au XVIe siècle : le cas des messes polyphoniques (1532-1568)." Paris, EPHE, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011EPHE4017.
Full textOur thesis aims at clarifying the technical, economic and social conditions of Parisian musical printing production during the sixteenth century. It lies within the framework of de Febvre and Martin’s L’Apparition du livre [The Appearance of the Book] and of numerous works consecutive to this fundamental work. In accordance with this historiographic tradition, a commercial history of Parisian music printing is proposed. All of the Parisian music printers are taken into consideration in order to present synchronically the various aspects of musical edition. Based on the bibliographies of well-preserved editions but also of archival sources, the characterization of the production of printed music allows the emergence of not only some invariants, but at least of some rather precise overall economic conditions concerning the modes of production. The monographic framework of our study is based on the various functions concerning the Parisian book trade. Hence the question posed throughout this entire study: can these same logics be applied to both general and musical editions? This interrogation directed the thought process in a comparative sense. It was also necessary to examine more precisely Nicolas Du Chemin’s firm, which produced a more or less equivalent number of titles of musical and general editions. Finally, the entire history of the multiple logics of which the book is the convergence point required a study of the internal organization of the printed material. The study of bibliographic material implied by this archeology of books has been focused on the polyphonic masses. It is based on the establishment of 58 bibliographical and catalogical notes describing nearly 246 of the 300 copies inventoried in RISM. These publications demonstrate the various printing processes used by Parisian music editions, but also place these last ones within the orthotypographical debates during the years 1540-1560
Judde, de Larivière Claire. "Entre bien public et intérêts privés : les pratiques économiques des patriciens vénitiens à la fin du Moyen-Âge." Toulouse 2, 2002. http://www.theses.fr/2002TOU20050.
Full textFrom the end of the 15th century, commercial shipping, one of the key activities of the Venatian patricians during the Middle Ages, experienced major changes. The merchant galleys system, rooted in a close collaboration between the State and the patriciate, was abandoned in favour of private vessels. This work attempts to explain the origins and the mechanisms of this development, paying special attention to the economic agents of the patriciate and their activities. It studies their economic practises in the fields of commercial shipping, banking, industry and landed investments, and seeks to establish an understanding of the patricians' role in the complex economic evolutions of the Late Middle Ages. The latter, which were also intimately connected with contemporary social and political transformations, expose the profound changes which affected the State, the patriciate and their various interrelationships
Feuillie, Jacques. "Les messes de Josquin Desprez et leur exécution." Tours, 2000. http://www.theses.fr/2000TOUR2044.
Full textCarrió, Cataldi Leonardo Ariel. "Temps, science et empire : conceptions du temps au XVIe siècle dans les monarchies ibériques." Paris, EHESS, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015EHES0136.
Full textWhat conceptual background and knowledge has enabled mankind to understand and organize its temporal experience allowing it to settle into the world, to find its place socially and physically and, from there to act in and on the world? By using what instruments and holding what books on its hands? In what kind of historical relationship to nature? My thesis explores these questions from a historical point of view and from an analytical perspective based on the history of sciences, techniques and knowledge, taking as a basis the study of a wide range of sources (nautical treatises, cosmographies, computistical treatises, maps and instruments), that were produced and in circulation during the 16th century in the Iberian monarchies. I put forward the working hypothesis that conceptions of time were plural and that the development of cosmography which was partly linked to the imperial expansion of the Iberian monarchies provided a privileged base from which to explore the world spatially and temporally. I propose to analyse the historical sources by examining different conceptions of time, rooted in the conceptual backgrounds of arithmetic, astrology and Christian spirituality, that coexist intertwined in what we can call a knot of time. My dissertation is divided into five sections, and explores these questions in two main parts. Whereas the first three sections set the general framework, analysing a large range of sources and spaces, the two last sections are focused on Jeronimo de Chaves (1523-1574), the first person to occupy the chair of cosmography at the House of Trade (Casa de la Contracion), in Seville in 1552
Wolff, Hoffmann Anne. "Le chant commun des Réformes européennes et l'hymnodie anglaise de 1535 à 1610 : sources continentales des mélodies, interactions et réception insulaire." Paris 10, 2013. http://www.theses.fr/2013PA100216.
Full textCongregational singing in the vernacular has long been favoured by various religious persuasions to express their faith. In 16th century Europe, this musical genre became the prerogative of the Reformation; it developed in several hymnological centres, simultaneously or successively, often interactively. Through various channels, the tunes composed on the continent reached the British Isles, fostering as early as 1535 the spread of the ideas of the Reformation on English soil, as well as the designing of Psalters which were later used in the national church. The purpose of this study is threefold: Firstly, it aims at identifying the continental tunes which were printed in English-language songbooks in the 16th and in the early 17th centuries, secondly at tracing their itineraries from the year and place of composition to the integration into the songbooks; thirdly, it will lead to assess the use of the tunes in the liturgy of the Church of England and their impact on people’s minds and on their musical practice. While analysing historical and hymnological contexts, I will try on the one hand to draft a typology of the songs, i. E. Each piece’s specific origin and form –Lutheran chorales, Reformed metrical psalms, Moravian canticles, Medieval hymns, secular melodies– and their usage –liturgical, para-liturgical, domestic, collective or individual–, on the other hand to explain which tunes were able to stand the brunt of time while others failed to –namely to define the criteria of a tune's durability. By examining the tunes in relationship with the texts they were sung on, I will conjecture the input of congregational singing into English hymnody
Matamoros, Ponce Fernando. "Religion et politique dans la pensée coloniale : prophétie et millénarisme dans la légitimation de la conquête : Colomb, Cortés, Sahagún et Mendieta." Paris, EHESS, 2001. http://www.theses.fr/2001EHES0027.
Full textLiserre, Battista. "Politique et littérature à Florence au XVIe siècle : les Jardins Rucellai." Thesis, Aix-Marseille, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018AIXM0543.
Full textThis work is born of an awareness. Studies of literary critics on Oricellari gardens (Orti Oricellari) are of relative interest. Most often, the academy and the relations between its members are mentioned only superficially in the chapters or paragraphs of the books devoted to Machiavelli. For this reason, we have tried, with our thesis, to lay the foundations for a first global monograph. To this end, we have combined, in one single work, all the episodes that occurred in the garden of Via della Scala between 1502 and 1522. Our research includes a detailed study of the main philosophical, literary, historical and political themes discussed during the year. Assembly of Orti. For example, it is in the gardens "Oricellari" that the concept of modern politics was born as we hear it today, when Bernardo Rucellai, founder and initiator of the first literary meetings, publicly read his story of the invasion from Italy by France under Charles VIII: the first modern treaty of political history. Bernardo's work, De Bello Italico, is characteristic of his lucid analysis of the psychological motivations of the protagonists, their desires and their ambitions, in order to deduce the causes of their defeats. The keys to reading in Rucellai's analyzes were truly unprecedented at that time, but after all, politics was still considered practical and not metaphysical, and it was in Florence of the Medici that the concept of "modern balance of power politics "was theorized for the first time
Louvat-Molozay, Bénédicte. "Poétique de l'introduction musicale : le statut de la musique dans le théâtre français entre 1550 et 1680." Paris 4, 1996. http://www.theses.fr/1996PA040400.
Full textThis dissertation aims at articulating a theoretical reflection on the status of music in French theatre with an analysis of the practices of musical insertion in drama from the renaissance to the creation of the Comédie-Francaise. Because it depends on the definition of theatre as a spectacle and concerns all dramatic genres, the question of music is marginalized by the theoreticians. The second part of this study propounds therefore a poetics of musical introduction in relation to a poetics of the dramatic genres : in the renaissance and throughout the first third of the seventeenth century, the presence of music in humanist tragedies, protestant drama and dramatic pastorals is linked to the conception of a lyrical theatre, which postulates a kind of union between theatre and poetry. From the 1630s, music is submitted to the requirements of action. The second half of the seventeenth century is then characterized by a reflection on the conditions of possibility for a theatre in music to exist, and by a resistance to the Italian model: against it, the “tragédie à machines” and the “comédie-ballet” offer a model of total spectacle, which favors alternation over simultaneity. The dramatic pastoral evolves towards an operatic pastoral, while sacred drama and the comedy remain faithful to the pattern of theatre with music
Chatelain, Claire. "La famille Miron : parentés, politique et promotion sociale (XVIe-XVIIe siècles)." Paris, EHESS, 2001. http://www.theses.fr/2001EHES0074.
Full textRouchon, Olivier. "Citoyens, sujets, nobles : les familles de l'aristocratie pisane a l'epoque des premiers grands-ducs de toscane." Paris, EHESS, 1997. http://www.theses.fr/1997EHES0010.
Full textThis work examines the pisan elite in the sixteenth century after the fall of the florentine republic and the establishment of the medicean duchy. The ruling group who possesses the full exercise of citizenship takes an active participation in the local magistracies as priors or reformators. Under the first three grand dukes, cosimo i (1537-1574), francesco i (1574-1587) and ferdinando i (1587-1609), this elite is faced with the increasing requirements of ducal administration : control over the priors' activities, supervision over the luoghi pii, strict laws on tax-exemptions. Nonetheless, the pisan notables succeed in keeping good relations with cosimo i, who has promised his personal protection to the fedelissima citta di pisa. He restores the university of pisa, encourages trade and manufactures, reorganises the magistracy of the ufficio dei fossi. Political relations between florence and pisa are much more difficult under francesco i because of the economic crisis of the 1580's. The third grand-duke ferdinando, who returns to the style of cosimo, pays more attention to provincial elites. In the last decades of the xvith century, the main pisan families lay claim to recognition as a noble group. The transformation of citizens into nobles gradually occurs through the end of the xvith and the beginning of the xviith century. Pisan notables become more sensitive to noble status their family life. Shifting investments from business to land, most families extend their property in thecontado pisano. The admission in the order of saint stephen and the order of malta appears as the best way to reach nobility. By exhibiting proofs of nobility such as genealogies, family trees, chronicles, coats of arms, every noble pisan family tries to gain the honor of becoming a knight. When the grand duke stays in pisa, pisan notables now appear as nobles, admitted to court and providing for such festivities as the gioco del ponte
Moreira, Paulo Estudante Dias. "Les pratiques instrumentales dans la musique sacrée portugaise dans son contexte ibérique : XVIe et XVIIe siècles : le ms. 1 du fond Manuel Joaquim (Coimbra)." Paris 4, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2007PA040137.
Full textThis dissertation undertakes the study of the instrumental performance practice of four major Portuguese religious centres, the cathedrals of Braga, Coimbra and Évora along with the Santa Cruz monastery, at Coimbra. These institutions give us enough information as to understand the instrumentalists admission, organization and repertoire at the religious centres. All this information, most of it previously unknown, is taken through an Iberian perspective in order to give us a first sketch of what may have been the ministriles participation during the XVIth- and XVIIth-century Peninsula’s liturgy. Moreover, this work discloses a new Portuguese XVIIth-century instrumental music source
Kermele, Nejma. "Don Francisco de Toledo et la réforme du Pérou." Bordeaux 3, 2000. https://extranet.u-bordeaux-montaigne.fr/memoires/diffusion.php?nnt=2000BOR30006.
Full textMartin-Ulrich, Claudie. "La persona de la princesse au XVIe siècle : personnage littéraire et politique." Grenoble 3, 1997. http://www.theses.fr/1997GRE39051.
Full textOlard, Ludivine. "Offices et pouvoir : le déclassement du patriarcat vénitien (fin 15e-début 16e siècle)." Toulouse 2, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009TOU20060.
Full textBy the end of the Middle Ages, the Venetian people had to deal with lots of problems. The State had to face an unknown public debt and maintain public order. Then, it was hurted by tensions into the leading group and from some foreign princes, especially in christian Europe, stressed to distroy the influence and political power of the Serenis-sima, on the Mediterranean area. They also thought to assume its dominion. Those Venetian nobles, now too numerous, were subjected to a fall in status (déclassement) which process had been started at the end of the XIIIth Century, by the partisans of a conservative oligarchy, very jealous of its domination. It’s around the definition of this social class (first part), born to rule the City (second part), that the destiny of a majority of patricians happened at the beginning of the XVIth Century. As actors than victims of this refoundation (third part), the Venetian nobles tried not to fall into the traps set by the ones who looked for exclusion – and then, abandon – of a majority of nobles, to their destiny of decaduti. To fight against those tendencies, they reinforced and developed their familiar and friendly relationships (fourth part)
Bourquin, Laurent. "Noblesse seconde et pouvoir en Champagne aux seizième et dix-septième siècles." Le Mans, 1992. http://www.theses.fr/1992LEMA0001.
Full textThe secondary nobility of champagne is defined by a group of families who are able to provide the king of france with the local influence and the military competences he needs to face the strategic necessities in this frontier province. Its members exercise for the sovereign a whole range of local powers and, at the same time, manage to enter his personal network of clients. During the wars of religion and the regency of marie de medicis, this group grows and safeguards state authority against great nobility revolted. On and after 1635, it structures the troups intended to fight against the spanish armies and to contain the expansion of the fronde in the province. In 1659, at the end of this conflict, the secondary nobility is weakened : champagne has been ruined by the war the threats of invasion have durably went away. To make their carriers, theses nobles are obliged to leave their local powers, to go and wage war eastward, in order to maintain monarchical favours
Laurent, Sylvène. "Un pouvoir en images : les usages de la représentation royale sous Philippe II d'Espagne." Paris 4, 1999. http://www.theses.fr/1999PA040114.
Full textDelahaye, Séverine. "La voix d'Orphée, de la musique dans la poésie du siècle d'or espagnol : Garcilaso de la Vega, Luis de León, Jean de la Croix, Góngora." Paris 3, 2000. http://www.theses.fr/2000PA030164.
Full textOlmos, Angel Manuel. "La transmission orale de la polyphonie en France et en Espagne pendant le XVème et XVIème siècles : essai d'interprétations philogiques de la notation de la musique en langue vernaculaire." Paris 4, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006PA040078.
Full textThis dissertation analyzes the influence of oral transmission in French and Spanish vernacular song dating from the middle of the 15th century to the beginning of the 16th century. A systematic notational and semiotic comparison has been applied over all concordances in ten manuscripts from both countries. The conclusion is that the differences found in that comparison can be categorized in cases that can be explained in an oral transmission environment
Kroubo, Dagnini Jérémie. "Histoire emblématique des musiques populaires jamaïcaines au XXe siècle : folklore, politique, spiritualité." Bordeaux 3, 2010. http://www.theses.fr/2010BOR30016.
Full textThis Ph. D. Dissertation presents the long socio-historico-political (slave trade; colonialism; Christianity’s influence; migration phenomena; creolization of Jamaican society; rural depopulation; urbanization of rural populations; Americanization of Jamaican society; postcolonial politics etc. ) and cultural (Rasta religion; influence of African, Afro-Caribbean, Afro-American and European musical styles; sound systems; evolution of technology etc. ) process which has contributed to the birth and development of Jamaican popular musical genres in the 20th century. Thus, this study traces the history of mento, ska, rocksteady, reggae, dub, dub poetry, toasting and dancehall, the main popular musical genres which appeared in Jamaica in the 20th century, systematically and deeply analyzing the socio-historico-politico-cultural background which has acted on the creative processes. Furthermore, this research work examines the way these musical styles have impacted on worldwide societies, especially those of Europe, the USA and Africa
Houllemare, Marie. "Politiques de la parole : le Parlement de Paris au XVIe siècle." Paris 4, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2007PA040059.
Full textIn the Sixteenth-Century, the Parliament of Paris was considered as the main sovereign court of the realm and used to fulfill both a legislative and a judicial mission. It had to register royal edicts and could remonstrate against or amending royal legislation with which it disagreed. As a sovereign law court, it serves as a benchmark for the assessment of jurisprudence throughout the kingdom. Its independence and its efficiency drew admiration. However, from François Ier onwards, French kings had been trying to challenge its authority, while promoting other institutions. How did the lawyers manage to maintain, and even to strengthen, the Parliament legitimacy, while its state role was declining under the increasing domination of the royal administration ? The sovereign court actually grounded its authority on the dialogue between the king, the magistrates and the attorneys. Hence the studying of their respective speeches in the Parliament is highly valuable. They displayed various sorts of political models : the Parliament was alternatively depicted as a theatre, a temple of justice or a forum. From these numerous representations, one could argue that the Parliament, whose main task was to maintain social harmony, had successfully arrogated for itself a real, share in the ritual staging of the Early Modern State
Micallef, Fabrice. "L' Europe des possibles : crises et compétitions politiques pendant les "Affaires de Provence" (vers 1580-1610)." Paris 1, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012PA010574.
Full textThoraval, Fanch. "Curarum dulce lenimen. Du document musical au monument dévotionnel : Innocentius Dammonis et le Laude libro primo, Venezia, 1508." Thesis, Paris 4, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012PA040254.
Full textThe Laude libro primo is a well known document which has retained scholarship's attention since the beginning of the last century. Quite exceptionally for a collection of polyphonic laude of that period, it contains a repertoire composed by a single musician, a regular canon whose belonging to the congregation of San Salvatore is the only biographical known fact. The compositions by Innocentius Dammonis have been considered a typical product of the musical devotional culture from north-eastern Italy that was intended either for the use of the congregation's members or for that of some venetian confraternities. The observation of the musical, theological and literary culture recorded in this document allows to shed a new light on these laude. The distinction between the responsibility of the printer and the author for its editorial conception makes it possible to understand by which means these laude were intended to be presented. An onomastical study has given some evidence that this musician, who lived in various monasteries of the congregation, was probably born in northern Europe. The Laude libro primo appears to be the product of an individual project, the congregation of San Salvatore being partly its intellectual background, rather than the expression of a local (venetian) tradition. This observation suggests another approach to the canon's compositional choices that are sometimes unusual in that kind of repertoire. They don't seem to be the result of the opposition art/popular music (or its corollary complex/simple) which is the most used analytical framework for the study of polyphonic laude. On the contrary, they appear to serve a devotional project carried out by a specialist (a cleric) who mixes moral arguments with bucolic and petrarchan references