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  1. 5 giu 2024 · Philippe de Vitry (born Oct. 31, 1291, Paris, Fr.—died June 9, 1361, Meaux) was a French prelate, music theorist, poet, and composer. Vitry studied at the Sorbonne and was ordained a deacon at an early age. His earliest-known employment was as secretary to Charles IV.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. 31 mag 2024 · Born in Paris, de Vitry wrote important motets (multi-part vocal pieces) and introduced isorhythms (repeating rhythmic patterns). He was one of the first composers with a unique writing style and was also a respected theorist, poet, and cleric.

    • 10 min
  3. 4 giu 2024 · Entre estas últimas se encuentran cinco motetes de uno de los más célebres autores medievales: Philippe de Vitry (1291-1361). No se sabe mucho de los orígenes de de Vitry. Se cree —por el tratamiento de “magister” que recibía— que pudo estudiar en la Universidad de París.

  4. 19 giu 2024 · Important medieval European theorists include Hucbald, Guido of Arezzo, Johannes Cotto, Franco of Cologne, Philippe de Vitry. Many medieval music manuscripts of Europe were anonymous, and later compilers such as Martin Gerbert and Edmond de Coussemaker assigned names to unknown authors, such as 'Anonymous IV'.

  5. 10 giu 2024 · Ce concert idéal mêlant classiques et nouveautés de l’époque rassemble surtout des œuvres italiennes, « mais les Alpes ne pouvaient empêcher l’importation de grandes œuvres de compositeurs comme Guillaume de Machaut et Philippe de Vitry » et il était courant de mettre en musique des textes en italien, en latin et en ...

  6. 30 mag 2024 · It is suggested that Servant/O Philippe may be dated to soon after Garrit/In nova and may be the work of Philippe de Vitry.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Old_FrenchOld French - Wikipedia

    6 giorni fa · Rather than a unified language, Old French was a group of Romance dialects, mutually intelligible yet diverse. These dialects came to be collectively known as the langues d'oïl, contrasting with the langues d'oc, the emerging Occitano-Romance languages of Occitania, now the south of France.