The gittern: a short history

Angelic gittern player, from the Cathedral Saint Julien du Mans, France, c. 1300–1325. The gittern was one of the most important plucked fingerboard instruments of the late medieval period. Loved by all levels of society, it was played by royal appointment, in religious service, in taverns, for singing, for dancing, and in duets with the lute. Yet we know of no specific pieces played on this instrument. What we do have are many representations of it being played in a wide variety of contexts and one surviving instrument of the 15th century, and from this we can reconstruct something of the history and repertoire of this widely-loved instrument. This article begins with a video of a troubadour melody played on gittern.

Click picture to play video – opens in new window.
The melody of Kalenda maya May Day – by Raimbaut de Vaqueiras.
Since the rhythm of the music in the manuscript is ambiguous, the melody
is interpreted in two ways. Played on gittern by Ian Pittaway.

What is a gittern?

First we need to be sure of which instrument we mean. In the 16th century, the 4 course renaissance guitar was referred to as the gittern in England and France, and this isn’t that. Much as various websites and even reference books would have you believe otherwise, the medieval gittern which is the subject of this article is not a type of guitar, nor is it related to the guitar. There was also a baroque gittern, which was a type of very small cittern, and this isn’t that, either. The seemingly haphazard same-naming of different instruments and multiple naming of the same instrument in the medieval and renaissance periods can be confusing, and many websites and even reputable books are suitably confused. In the case of the gittern, this isn’t helped by the fact that, until 1977, there was general confusion between the gittern and the citole, thus what we now know as the British Museum citole used to be called, in its previous home, the Warwick Castle gittern. The fog was lifted by Laurence Wright, whose research gave clear grounds for categorising the two instruments in his article, The Medieval Gittern and Citole: A Case of Mistaken Identity, published in The Galpin Society Journal, volume 30, May 1977. (For more detail about sorting through the repeated confusion over medieval and renaissance instrument names, click here.)

Formerly known as the Warwick Castle gittern, the British Museum citole,
now accurately identified, was made 1280–1330. The reason for its survival
is probably its exquisite decoration, and certainly its conversion into a violin
at the request of Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, to give as a gift to Queen
Elizabeth in 1578. (Photograph courtesy of the British Museum.)

So what exactly was the medieval gittern? The gittern was strung with gut, had 2, 3, 4 or 5 courses (single, double or triple strung), the strings almost always attached to hitch pins on the tail of the instrument, rather than tied to the bridge. Its bowl and neck were carved from solid wood, and it was played with a quill plectrum. The sickle-shape pegbox was decorated with a variety of entertaining carvings, such as the head of a man, woman or animal, or an acorn, which you can see in the images on this page.

The increasing popularity of the gittern

Gittern iconography is a valuable source for the variety of its design. The beautifully decorated manuscripts of the Cantigas de Santa Maria, a richly-illustrated paean of praise to the Virgin Mary, were compiled in 1257-1283 during the reign of Alfonso X, King of Castile and other regions in modern day Spain and Portugal. The Cantigas is one of our earliest sources of gittern images (above), showing two gitterns, one being played, the other tuned. According to this representation, (some?) gitterns in Iberia had 3 single strings and D shaped sound holes. As we see below, gitterns in other times and places generally had a single rose, central to the body, much more complex than the simple circular holes above, sometimes with an additional smaller rose near the fingerboard.

Certainly by the 14th and 15th centuries the gittern was an important and popular instrument across Europe, loved by all classes of people. The 14th century French poet, Eustache Deschamps, gives evidence of the gittern’s rise in popularity, writing that “at royal courts everyone wants to play the trumpet, gittern, and rebebe.” (The rebebe was a bowed instrument – more information here under the heading, Origins: the rebab?) Late medieval Italian royal courts recorded the hiring of several gittern masters and Charles V of France’s court in the 14th century owned four gitterns. In his Canterbury Tales, written between 1387 and 1400, Geoffrey Chaucer makes regular reference to the gittern as a popular instrument, associated with the harp, lute and psaltery, with minstrelsy, with taverns and with popular music-making.

From The Pardoner’s Tale

In Flaundres whilom [once] was a compaignye
Of yonge folk, that haunteden [practised] folye,
As riot, hasard [gambling], stywes [brothels], and tavernes,
Wher as with harpes, lutes, and gyternes
They daunce and pleyen at dees [dice], bothe day and nyght,
And eten also and drynken over hir might

In The Miller’s Tale, Absalon the parish clerk knew 20 dances …

and as wel coud he play on a giterne.
In all the town n’as [there never was] brewhous ne [nor] taverne,
that he ne visited with his solas [= solace = entertainment to forget your cares] …
and Absalon his giterne hath y-take,
for paramours [lovers] he thoghte for to wake …
[and thought to wake one paramour in particular, the carpenter’s wife, so early in the morning he sings outside her window]
He singeth in his vois gentil and small …
Ful wel acordaunt to his giterninge.

The gittern and the lute

Lute and gittern duet in a detail from Agnolo Gaddi’s Coronation of the Virgin with six angels, c. 1390.

The gittern was smaller and therefore of a higher pitch than the lute, but we know from Johannes Tinctoris, De inventione et usu musicae, 1481-1483, that they were identically tuned in relative terms. While they may look quite similar, the gittern and lute are distinguishable in three ways:

• The backs of lutes were made of several ribs glued together, with a separate neck; whereas the bowl of the whole gittern, including the neck, was carved from a solid piece of wood.
• The strings on a lute were attached to the bridge, which was glued to the soundboard, whereas gittern strings were attached to hitch pins on the edge of the instrument and passed across the bridge. The bridge may have been glued or ‘floating’, i.e. not glued but kept in place by the pressure of the strings. (As we see below, there were a few exceptions to this general distinction.)
• The pegbox of a lute was bent back from the neck at an obtuse angle, whereas the gittern pegbox was a curving sickle shape.

Lute and gittern playing together from Pere Serra’s Virgin of the Angels, 1480s (detail), a section of an altarpiece now in the National Museum of Art of Cataluña.
4 course lute and 3 course gittern playing together from Pere Serra’s Virgin of the Angels, c. 1385
(two details combined), a section of an altarpiece now in the National Museum of Art of Cataluña.
Gitterns generally had hitch pins on the end to hold the strings, passing over the bridge. There were
exceptions: occasionally gitterns had strings attached to glued bridges, like lutes, as we see above.
Left to right: Firenze (Florence) Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale, Banco rari 38, 1270–1338
(lute above, gittern below); Monasterio de Piedra triptych, Spain, c. 1390; Pala di San Marco
(Triptych of Saint Mark), Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frari, Venice, painted by Bartolomeo Vivarin, 1474.
(As with all pictures, click to see larger in a new window.)

Surviving instruments

Just as iconography shows various sizes of lute, harp, citole, etc., we also see a variety of sizes of gittern. The actual sizes and therefore pitches of the instruments are virtually impossible to ascertain, since the relative size depends on how large we think the player is, and in any case, while much valuable information can be gleaned from art, medieval artists were not aiming for the minutely measured accuracy of a graphic designer.

Still, conclusions can be drawn, and we do have two surviving instruments: one a gittern, the other a kobza (cobza, koboz), the eastern European fretless relative of the gittern, and they appear to correspond to two of the sizes in art. The kobza is the earlier. It fell into a latrine in Elbląg/Elbing, Poland (it’s been part of both Poland and Germany, and so has two names), presumably by accident, since the instrument was dropped intact, with even its strings recovered. It is dated 1350-1450 and has a vibrating string length of 30-33cm, depending on bridge placement. The bridge became detached on impact and was found beside the instrument. (There are two articles on this site about the Elbląg koboz, here and here.) The only surviving western European gittern was made by Hans Oth of Germany, who operated in Nuremburg from 1432 to 1463, with a vibrating string length of 44cm.

Above, the 4 course gittern excavated from a latrine in the city of Elblag / Elbing, southeast of Danzig, Poland, and dated to c. 1350. Also found were a recorder and fidel. Vibrating string length of around 31cm. Below, 5 course gittern by Hans Ott, who made instruments in Nuremburg from 1432 to 1463. This instrument is dated to c. 1450, and is now in Wartburg, Eisenach, Germany. Vibrating string length of 44cm.
Above: The 3 course koboz excavated from a latrine in the city of Elbląg/Elbing, southeast of Danzig,
Poland, dated 1350-1450. Vibrating string length of around 30-33cm, depending on bridge placement.
Below: 5 course gittern by Hans Oth, who made instruments in Nuremburg from 1432 to 1463.
This instrument is therefore usually stated as dating to the mid-point, circa 1450, and is now in
Wartburg Castle, Eisenach, Germany. Vibrating string length 44cm.
Large gittern in the quire vault of Gloucester Cathedral,
1337-50. Photograph by Ian Pittaway.
(As with all pictures, click to see larger in a new window,
click in the new window to further enlarge.)

Large gitterns are rare in surviving images, and indeed Johannes Tinctoris, De inventione et usu musicae, 1481-1483, compared the gittern with the lute, stating that the gittern “is much smaller”. Nevertheless, everything is relative and there are often exceptions to a rule. As we see further down the page, The Ethics Of Aristotle, 1376, shows a gitternist accompanying a singer on a large instrument with a long neck. Is this an effect of typical medieval perspective distortion? My scepticism about the veracity of this image was answered by luthier George Stevens, who referred me to the striking large gittern in the quire vault of Gloucester Cathedral, dated to 1337-50, nearly contemporaneous with the French Ethics Of Aristotle image. George contacted Gloucester Cathedral Archivist, Mrs. Rebecca Phillips, who confirmed that the quire vault has been subject to repairs over time, but that the carvings are original.

Another large gittern can be observed among the misericords of Great Malvern Priory, 15th century, as we see below.

Large gittern on a misericord in Great Malvern Priory, 15th century. Photograph by Ian Pittaway.
(As with all pictures, click to see larger in a new window, click in the new window to further enlarge.)

Repertoire

We have no music for the gittern, or for virtually any other specific medieval instrument, but we do have clear indications of its repertoire from iconography. The fact that it duetted with and was tuned the same as the lute, but at a higher pitch, shows that it shared some of the lute’s repertoire. If the earliest surviving lute repertoire from the late 15th century is a guide, then the gittern’s repertoire was also a mixture of secular love songs, religious music, dance music and ricercares (semi-improvised pieces upon a musical theme). We know from iconography that the gittern was played in religious and royal service, for accompanying singing, for dancing and for tumbling (acrobatics). The fact that it was played by royal appointment must have meant that its repertoire included serious, artful and skilled music.

The many uses of a gittern.
Left: Religious use, as seen on the Apostles’ Door, Valencia Cathedral, Spain, 14th century.
Right: Royal service, a detail from Simone Martini’s fresco on the life of Saint Martin,
Cappella di San Martino, Assisi, Italy, 1312-18.
A gittern played to accompany a singer, from The Ethics Of Aristotle, translated from
 Latin to French by Nicole Oresme in 1376 by order of King Charles V of France.
A gittern accompanying dancing and tumbling (left) and singing (right),
a miniature from Roman de la Rose (Romance of the Rose), France, c. 1230–1275. 
A gittern played for dancing, from the margin of a Flemish manuscript, 1338-44 (MS. Bodl. 264, f. 97v). © Bodleian Library, University of Oxford, reproduced under Creative Commons licence CC-BY-NC 4.0).

Courses

According to the iconography, there was not a single standard way of stringing a gittern. While there was no strict standardisation, there is a high degree of consistency within diversity, as was true of other medieval instruments, such as the medieval fiddle or vielle, with its variety of stringing and tunings.

My course/string formula for the following iconographical survey shows number of courses = number of strings on 1st course + number of strings on 2nd course + etc., followed by the year and source. For example, 3c = 1+2+2 means there are 3 courses, a single 1st course and double 2nd and 3rd courses.

The survey of 12 representative images is in chronological order. All images are described left to right.

As with all pictures, click to see larger in a new window, click in the new window to further enlarge.

3c = 1+1+1 (or possibly 2c = 1+2) – 1257–83. Cantigas da Santa Maria (Real Biblioteca del Monasterio de San Lorenzo de El Escorial, Madrid, RBME Cat b-I-2, folio 104r), Iberia (modern Spain/Portugal).

4c = 3+2+2+2 – 1330. Master Juan Oliver, Cathédrale de Pampelune, Spain.

2c = 3+2? – c. 1325–75. Liber astrologiae, The Netherlands (British Library Sloane 3983, folio 13r). This is ambiguous, but 2 courses are possibly confirmed by the Bayeux Cathedral crypt and the early 15th century French translation of Giovanni Boccaccio, De Mulieribus Claris (both below), which are also ambiguous.

3c = 1+3+3 – 14th century. Apostles’ Door, Valencia Cathedral, Spain.

3c = 2+2+2 – 1344. Guariento di Arpo, Coronation of the Virgin altarpiece, Italy (now in the Norton Simon Art Foundation, Pasadena, USA).

2c = 2+2 – c. 1412-99. Bayeux Cathedral crypt, France. The Bayeux Cathedral crypt instrument is difficult to interpret. Poorly depicted, it appears to be 2 courses, 2+2, but it may be a 4 string gittern or a 4 string lute.

2c = 2+1 or 3c = 1+1+1? – early 15th century. French translation of Giovanni Boccaccio, De Mulieribus Claris, originally 1374. Both this and the previous instrument appear to be fretless, in which case they are kobzas.

4c = 2+2+2+2 – 1312–18. Simone Martini, Saint Martin is knighted, Italy.

3c = 2+2+2 – c. 1385. Pere Serra, Virgin of the Angels, Catalonia.

3c = 1+2+2 – c. 1450. Window in Saint Mary Magdalene Church, Newark, England.

5c = 2+2+2+2+2 – between 1432 and 1463. Gittern by Hans Oth (or Ott), Wartburg, Eisenach, Germany.

5c = 2+2+2+2+2 – 1460-1490. Master of the Lyversberger Passion, Germany.

One unusually detailed image (below) is worth a closer look for what it may tell us about stringing, tuning, and timbre: Simone Martini, Saint Martin is knighted, Cappella di San Martino (Saint Martin’s Chapel), San Francesco, Assisi, Italy, 1312–18. We see 4 courses, each a paired thin and thick string, indicating octave stringing throughout, and the two strands of the tied double frets are deliberately separated. The octave stringing raises the tantalisingly unanswerable question: was that just this gittern, or gitterns within a region, or just in Italy, or within a particular timeframe, or all gitterns with double courses? We have no way of knowing. The double frets have a distinct gap between the strands, large enough to play a separate note. This may therefore have provided both flats and sharps in Pythagorean tuning. An alternative explanation is to create a buzzing sound like a bray harp. All this is addressed in a detailed article about this particular instrument, which will appear on this website later in 2024.

We see from this survey that:

• Gitterns could be strung in single, double or triple courses, sometimes mixed. Iconography shows that single- and double-strung gitterns both continued into the 15th century, as we see on the gittern of 3 single strings in Coronation of the Virgin by Fra Angelico, painted 1434-1435 (right).
• A mixture of single, double or triple string courses were in use from the 14th century, the triple string course appearing on any of one or more courses, including the top course; with the single string appearing either on the top or the bottom course.
• In the 14th century (and at other times?), some gitterns may have been tuned in octave courses, and there may have been bray gitterns, or gitterns with double frets pulled apart so as to be able to play more accurately in Pythagorean tuning.
• Into the 15th century, 2(?), 3 and 4 course gitterns were played contemporaneously, the 2 course gittern (if that is a correct interpretation) becoming obselete in the early 15th century.
• The first evidence of the 5 course gittern is the surviving instrument by Hans Oth, not earlier than 1432 and not later than 1463.
• The arrival of the 5 course gittern did not supersede 3 and 4 course gitterns.

What we make of this variety of stringing in terms of playing styles can only be speculative. The existence of the triple-string course is intriguing: was this 3 unison strings, 2 lower octaves and an upper octave, or 2 upper octaves and a lower octave? This may have depended on the course. It may be that a 3 string course was always in unisons on the first course, but possibly in octaves for lower pitches; or it may have been that octaves on any triple course, including the first, were there to enlarge the sound and introduce an element of re-entrant tuning. We lack evidence either way: the iconography is too imprecise and writers are silent on the issue.

Tuning

The tuning of the citole and gittern, as shown in the Berkeley Theory Manuscript, written before 1361.

There is only one piece of surviving evidence for 4 course gittern tuning, in a puzzlingly neglected source. The Berkeley Theory Manuscript was probably written by Johannes Vaillant, a 14th century Parisian music teacher, who died in 1361. His manuscript is a compendium of music theory, including drawings and tunings for the citole, gittern, harp and psaltery. The drawing of a gittern gives a tuning of (high to low) c” f’ b e, which is most odd, and is clearly wrong, since it is contradicted by the text. The citole is shown with a tuning of c” g’ d’ c’, followed by the comment that the gittern tuning is the same, but with the 4th course loosened to a fourth below the adjacent course, clearly giving a tuning of c” g’ d’ a. How was the mistake made on the drawing? If the c” f’ b e tuning is reversed then we have a tuning entirely in fourths, as described in the text, if we also flatten the b and e. It appears that the author knew the gittern was tuned in fourths but became confused: in the drawing, he forgot that in the text he had written c” g’ d’ c’ for the citole and therefore the tuning c” g’ d’ a for the gittern; calculated the gittern tuning in fourths from the top c” as if it was bottom c’, giving a tuning of ebbbf’ c’, but then omitted to write the flats and again reversed the tuning, writing it backwards on the drawing. Reading the text alone makes gittern tuning unequivocally clear.

Since we do not know exactly what size of instrument the Berkeley Theory Manuscript author had in mind, and both citoles and gitterns came in a variety of sizes, it is possible that the citole tuning was an octave below that stated above, making it c’ g d c, and the gittern tuning likewise an octave below at c’ g d A. It is possible that intermediate size instruments between these octaves would have had a relative tuning at a different pitch, so the important point is that, at whatever pitch, the 4 course instrument was tuned entirely in fourths, as presumably were 2 and 3 course gitterns.

This changed with the addition of a 5th course on the gittern, as it did on the related lute. In the early 15th century, the lute gained a 5th course to give it a wider range. The evidence from manuscript witnesses indicates that some added the extra course at a higher pitch, some at a lower pitch. By the time Johannes Tinctoris wrote his De inventione et usu musicae (The invention and use of music), 1481–83, the gittern had also gained a 5th course, as we also see on the earlier Oth gittern, 1432–63, and the lute occasionally now had a 6th course, as we see in Italian paintings from 1475. Tinctoris stated that the gittern had “the same tuning and method of playing as the lute, though it is much smaller”. The tuning of 5 and 6 course lutes was fourths, except for an interval of a major third between courses 3 and 4, which was to be standard renaissance lute tuning. This, then, is also how the 5 course gittern came to be tuned.

However, we cannot say with certainty that the ‘new’ interval of a third between two of the courses was introduced at the same time as the 5th course. It is possible that the 5 course lute and gittern continued to be tuned in fourths before the advent of the new tuning. A 4 course lute tuned g’ d’ a e would have a 5th course of B if it remained in fourths, and a 4 course gittern tuned c” g’ d’ a would have a 5th course of e, both of which are serviceable and argue theoretically in favour of the continuation of tuning in fourths when the 5th course was added, as indeed happened with the Arabian oud in the 15th century. However, as different sizes of lute became popular in the renaissance, we’d have a smaller 4 course lute tuned a’ e’ b f#, with a 5th course of c#. In an unequal temperament, with sharps and flats being different notes, having two courses tuned to accidentals would be problematic. Raising the 4th and 5th course by one semitone not only resolves this problem, it gives the standard renaissance tuning a’ e’ b g d, or its relative equivalent at a different pitch.  

The end of the gittern

The gitterns in the detail on the left from a painting by the Master of the Lyversberger Passion,
Germany, 1460-1490, have strings attached to glued bridges rather than hitch pins.
On the right is another example of a such a gittern, carved in wood in France, 1450–1500;
and a third is below, painted by Bartolomeo Vivarini in 1474, a detail from the Pala di San Marco
(Triptych of Saint Mark), Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frari, Venice (also seen above).
Since these examples are from the twilight of the gittern, when the lute was eclipsing it,
the fixed bridge may represent a desire to make the gittern more lute-like in its last days.
(As with all pictures, click to see it larger in a new window.)

The gittern was played into the last third of the 15th century and retained its high status in some places, as we see in the depictions above from Germany and France and right from Italy. However, Johannes Tinctoris testified in 1481-1483 that by then the gittern was “used most rarely” in the Low Countries “because of the thinness of its sound”, and the lute was now beginning to be played in a new way, with the fingertips. The fingertip method displaced quill technique on lutes almost entirely by around 1500, though some lutenists did play with quills into the early 16th century. This reflected a radical change in music-making, from the quill playing of either a single line, or a melody with a drone, or polyphony on adjacent courses, to complex and delicate polyphony and counterpoint on any course now possible with the freedom of independently playing fingers.

Gittern players did not make the transition from quill to fingers and the fuller sound of the lute was favoured, thus the declining popularity of the gittern in the latter part of the 15th century gave way to the rise of the lute in this new style. The changeover was complete by 1500: there would be no more royally appointed gittern masters, as that role in the 16th century was bestowed upon royally appointed lutenists in the courts of Europe.

Was this the end of the gittern? Yes and no. The gittern as such was no more after c. 1500, but there are good grounds for believing it continued in a modified form, as the renaissance and baroque mandore.

 

© Ian Pittaway. Not to be reproduced in any form without permission. All rights reserved.

21 thoughts on “The gittern: a short history

  • 15th October 2016 at 5:48 pm
    Permalink

    I made an attempt to write the mandore article on Wikipedi and to improve the gittern. I can’t say I am satisfied with the articles, but editorial limitations dictated I put in only what could be properly sourced. I was blown away by the beauty of your articles on the gittern and mandore. I just wanted to say that I have a new favorite place to read online.

    Reply
  • 16th October 2016 at 4:15 pm
    Permalink

    Jack, thank you so much – that’s very much appreciated. I agree that the mandore and gittern articles on Wiki, better now, have been hopelessly confused in the past, the sorts of articles that need starting again rather than rewriting, including the sorts of entirely erroneous statements that one could see someone would logically make if they didn’t know the subject properly. Thank you for the compliment and please keep up the good work. My best wishes. Ian

    Reply
  • 22nd October 2016 at 4:51 pm
    Permalink

    Ian, the history is fascinating, thank you. However this question is from a player, not an historian. Some years ago Paul Baker, who pointed me in your direction, made me a large 5 course gittern. After some debate I had it tuned ddaad’d’g’g’a’a”. It works, but my other string instrument is guitar and I have never become a fan of dad’g’a’ (and swapping between two string tunings and my wind instruments confuses my poor brain). I am about to restring and would like to get as close to conventional guitar tuning as I can. Assuming I keep the three middle pairs as they are, do you think it would work if I went for a lower e and an upper b’, i.e. ead’g’b’? Or are there any other possibilities? I pose the question without first trying it because nylgut strings are neither easily available nor cheap.
    My apologies to any purists who read this, but my understanding is that medieval musicians had a pretty cavalier attitude towards tuning.

    Reply
  • 23rd October 2016 at 8:11 pm
    Permalink

    Hello, Gordon.

    The dd aa d’d’ g’g’ a’a” tuning (is that final a” correct?) is close to the one I developed through experimentation – dd’ aa d’d’ g’g’ a’a’ – before I discovered that 5 course gitterns were in lute tuning, as indeed were 4 course gitterns, the difference being that 4 courses were entirely in fourths and 5 courses also had a third, as you’ll see below.

    You can, of course, tune a gittern in any way you want, but I can’t recommend this for a historical instrument. Your suggestion of e a d’ g’ b’ – guitar tuning – is close to lute tuning, as we know 5 course gitterns were tuned. Your historical choice on 5 course gittern would be between putting the third between courses 2 and 3 or between the more usual 3 and 4. On Paul Baker’s larger Ott size gittern with 5 courses, the pitches make more sense, I think, dropped a tone below your suggestion, i.e. d g b’ e’ a’, with the third between courses 3 and 4 and the rest in fourths. It’s likely that the bottom course, possibly the bottom 2 courses, was tuned on octaves.

    Nylgut strings are not especially expensive and are easily available from https://bridgewoodandneitzert.london/ who can also advise on gauges if you give them the vibrating string length. Decent strings are a good investment. I’ve almost never had a nylgut string break or go untrue. Those that have – very rarely – are the thinnest strings, which won’t apply in this gittern tuning. For thicker strings, such as the 5th course in this case, I would avoid overwounds at all costs, which neither look right nor make the right sound. Instead, go for the Savarez KF synthetic gut basses, which are excellent, and couple it with an octave string.

    I wouldn’t say it’s true that medieval musicians had a cavalier attitude towards tuning. From what we know, plucked instruments had standard tunings, based around various formations of fourths, fifths and octaves, depending on the particular instrument, and a range of scordatura, non-standard alternatives for particular pieces.

    If, like me, you’ve never been able to successfully slice a quill into a plectrum, I would highly recommend using an oud risha, which are available from several places, including Ebay. They provide just the right amount of flexibility and produce much better sounds from my gittern than either a whole quill or a guitar plectrum ever did in my earlier days of gittern experimentation.

    All the best with the stringing.

    Ian

    Reply
    • 23rd October 2016 at 9:46 pm
      Permalink

      Ian,

      I confess that my ddaad’d’g’g’a’a’ tuning was based on yours. I was then a little wary of strings in octave – at that time my only experience of non-standard guitar tuning was to drop the bottom string to d to play the Sarabande. I have an old guitar that owes me nothing so I’ll tune that dgb’e’a’ and see where we go from there. It will be single strings and will sound different but it will give me some idea of how the tuning falls under my fingers.

      It is a long time since I bought any nylgut, they do seem to last forever and I probably did it the hard way getting them from Italy. I’ll use the people you suggest. Quills are not a problem. My neighbour is a falconer and keeps me supplied with Eagle quills. However, when playing for my own pleasure I have been using a soft guitar pick, so I’ll get an oud risha. Cavalier attitude to tuning was badly phrased – my thought was that instruments were evolving and were locally made with corresponding local variations.
      Thank you for your response. It was very useful. The next few weeks should be interesting.

      Reply
  • 24th October 2016 at 4:52 pm
    Permalink

    My pleasure, Gordon. Yes, getting nylgut from Italy can be a long wait! I’m glad to be of service. If there are any further questions along the way, please do ask.

    All the best.

    Ian

    Reply
  • 24th October 2016 at 6:49 pm
    Permalink

    Going well so far – that tuning is much more natural for someone who started as a classical guitarist. Thanks

    G

    Reply
  • 26th October 2016 at 11:34 am
    Permalink

    That’s great, Gordon. You’ll probably find that the interval relationship between the third course and those either side – the equivalent of taking a guitar string from g to f# – makes some figures in 15th century music (as this is a 15th century tuning) much more logical to play.

    Reply
  • 14th July 2018 at 7:11 pm
    Permalink

    In, thank you for this article. My musical training began as a vocalist, specifically with in the early music traditions. I am a bass/baritone. As the years progressed I picked up instruments as well but not within the early music genre. Now after almost 20 years of playing fretted instruments, most notably the mandolin and it’s cousins, I am thinking of returning to early music as an instrumentalist as well as a vocalist. Is it inconceivable to tune a gittern like one would tune a five course mandolin beginning with the c? cc-gg-dd-a’a’-e’e’?

    In the article and in some of the above comments you mention we can tune a gittern any way we choose. And yet…

    …your thoughts?

    Reply
    • 16th July 2018 at 6:43 pm
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      Hello, Tripp.

      How you tune the gittern depends on what you intend it to do. You could tune it in fifths like a mandolin but then it would be a mandolin-gittern hybrid and wouldn’t work like a gittern. There are two schools with early instruments: (i) how do I get this instrument to do what I want, knowing what I am already familiar with?; and (ii) what does the evidence suggest medieval players did, and what can I learn from this unfamiliar information? Your question suggests the first school, modern people playing early music in a modern way, and I am in the second, trying to base playing practice on the available evidence. There is great value in going with the evidence about tuning (as in the article above), which will take you far beyond what you already know about the mandolin, on an instrument that was played before mandolins were thought of.

      All the best.

      Ian

      Reply
      • 18th August 2018 at 1:57 am
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        And you sold me on the latter. I was tinkering on a four-course instrument today and the ancient tuning is really intriguing. I spend most of my musical life playing and sing Christian liturgical musics. As an instrument to a company voices, it’s actually quite subtle and lovely.

        Reply
  • 9th January 2019 at 9:21 pm
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    Dear Ian,
    In my opinion you’re right with regard to the instrument from Elblag. It does resemble more the Arabic qanbus (gambus) than the gittern stricto sensu. And the qanbus is a likely descendant of the Turkic kobuz (kobiz). At the same time the qanbus is a very plausible ancestor of the gittern especially if compared with the mandora (gittern) ?? from the Metropolitan Museum of Art. On the other hand the Elblag instrument seems to have descended from the Turkic kobuz directly without any intermediation. Thus the gittern and the koboz (?) do resemble very much each other.

    Reply
  • 11th January 2019 at 9:07 pm
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    Hello, Iaroslav.

    There is an article to come on the Elblag koboz / kobza – it’s been a long time intended but hasn’t yet risen to the top of the list. The koboz was certainly played in eastern Europe (and western Europe, too, as my article will show). I don’t have any evidence in medieval or renaissance Europe for the other instruments you mention, qanbus and kobuz. Of course, there are some similarities between them, but I am quickly giving up the idea of families of instruments unless there is real evidence of lineage. Often relationships are stated by authors based on design or name which is impossible to prove and based on conjecture. So the qanbus, koboz and gittern may be related in an ancestral line, but they may have arisen quite independently in different places. Either way, the statement requires evidence which, as far as I know, is lacking. I don’t think anyone knows what the one-off instrument in the Metropolitan Museum is! I have seen iconography that resembles it, but it appears to be a particularly rare specimen, at least in surviving records.

    All the best.

    Ian

    Reply
  • 12th January 2019 at 5:52 pm
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    Dear Ian,

    Thank you very much for the reply. I perceive your approach, although, in this case, it invites some questions. In order to avoid, at least, a part of them I’ll wait for the article announced.

    Best regards, sincerely yours
    Iaroslav Iashchuk, Kyiv, Ukraine

    P.S. 1) The Great Hungarian Plain became many times the last asylum of nomadic people from the East. In the historical epoch the first were Iazyges in 44 B.C. and the last ones Cumans (Polovtsians) and Jasz people in the 13th century. 2) The role of Yemenis in the Islam power expansion was crucial. They were everywhere from Talas on the East to Spain on the West, both on land and sea (the first Arabic fleet in Mediterranean was built in Alexandria just by Yemenis).

    Reply
    • 16th March 2019 at 10:44 am
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      Thanks Ian, this is all very interesting and I think I’ll try tuning my guitar to C D G C

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      • 17th March 2019 at 11:42 am
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        Hello, Baz. Do you mean your guitar or your citole? The citole in this tuning works extraordinarily well, and makes playing in the dorian, mixolydian and ionian modes a doddle. The French estampies of c. 1300, in particular, just fall under the fingers in this tuning.

        All the best.

        Ian

        Reply
  • 21st January 2021 at 9:13 pm
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    Dear Ian.

    First of all, thank You for the articles at Early Music Muse, they are really great sources of knowledge.

    I would like to ask You for some advice concerning the positioning of the frets of the gittern:

    I assume Pythagorean pre-1400 “Eb x G#” tuning, as described in http://www.medieval.org/emfaq/harmony/pyth4.html#2.2 , and gittern with chromatic fretboard.

    Then let’s have for instance the D and G strings. To get the proper tuning, on the first fret on the D string there should be Eb, so a minor semitone higher, whereas on the first fret on the G string should be G#, which is a major semitone higher. Therefore we have a conflict, because the fret should be at two distinct distances from the nut at one time.

    From what I’ve found (in the context of lutes), there are following options how to solve this problem:

    1) Use tastini as auxiliary frets under some strings (not applicable to tied frets).
    2) Use angled frets, not perpendicular to the strings.
    3) Use “double” frets (noticed in Your article too), so one is able to play all sharps and flats.
    4) Simply decide between minor and major semitone and put one fret just at the “minor”, or just at the “major” position. For some of the strings it will be at the correct position, for some not. And just live with it.
    5) Somewhat depart from the Pythagorean tuning and put one fret somewhere between the “minor” and “major” position.

    What would be Your opinion on this issue?

    Thank You for the answer.

    Radek

    Reply
    • 22nd January 2021 at 10:44 pm
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      Hello, Radek. Thank you for your appreciative comment and your excellent question. Here are my thoughts.

      Pythagorean tuning can only be theoretical on a fretted instrument, for exactly the reason you state: all courses played on a particular fret must have the same semitone spacing as the others, so compromises in the tuning system simply must be made. I don’t know of any evidence for tastini or angled frets in the medieval period, but the evidence base on this matter is vanishingly small, so nothing can be stated with certainty.

      Paintings and other iconography can be really helpful to build up a picture of how an instrument was played, but such images are not detailed or reliable enough for such a precise question as tuning by fret positions: artists are not draftsmen. As I state in the article above, there is a potential clue in the prised-apart double frets of the Martini gittern, which may have been for the purpose of creating alternative semitone spacings. The painting suggests it was a deliberate act, but it is the only depiction I know of that shows this manner of fretting. Was this an individual player’s idea, or widespread practice only shown clearly here? Or were the prised-apart double frets there for some other reason – the only one that seems credible to me is to make the instrument bray? The evidence, alas, is lacking, as far as I know.

      We are left, then, with the clues of surviving instruments, extremely few in number from the medieval period, and those that survive cannot give us an answer. Since the Oth gittern had tied frets, we cannot know where those frets were originally placed. Since the British Museum citole was converted into a violin in the 16th century, we have lost the original fingerboard with fixed frets. Had the frets survived, they would have been such a treasure, the only extant evidence of medieval fingerboard tuning, but even so it would have told us only about that one citole: we could not assume other instruments or even other citoles made the same set of fretted tuning compromises.

      We do have clear evidence of fretted tuning compromises on the Francis Palmer orpharion of 1617, the details of which are here: http://www.cittern.theaterofmusic.com/old/palmer.html The fingerboard is a mixture of 1/4, 1/5, 1/6 and 1/8 comma meantone and equal temperament. I have played several copies of the Palmer orpharion and can report that the Palmer fret placement works beautifully and produces a pleasing sound. This 17th century instrument can’t tell us anything specific about the fretted tuning of a 13th or 14th century instrument, of course, but it does demonstrate that a fretted instrument can made a large number of compromises to a tuning system and arrive at a perfectly workable set of fret positions including, in principle, a system based on Pythagorean tuning that is not purely Pythagorean.

      I wish I could give a more definite answer, Radek, and I’d really value your thoughts.

      With my best wishes.

      Ian

      Reply
  • 17th April 2023 at 10:29 am
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    Hi, first of all let me thank you for these comprehensive and detailed writeups on early instruments. There is simply no better resource available online and these are fantastic references for hobbyist with limited time or access to primary sources or expensive or out of print academic journals or books.

    Now for my question. Regarding stringing and tuning and the possibility of octave pairs on a single course, do we know much about how medieval musicians understood octave equivalency? Considering possible tunings for small medieval and renaissance plucked instruments and the limitations of string making technology at the time, it strikes me that it would possibly be difficult to string upper courses in with a fine and high enough tension string to reach an upper octave. It seems quite likely to me that if octave courses were used they would be most practical on the lower courses. There is precedent for this in later instruments. But given medieval music is primarily melody based, playing melodies across courses that are partly unison and partly octave strung can have an odd effect when a melody descending from a unison strung upper course or single treble string seems to pop back up when it crosses to a lower course with an octave tune strings.

    I’m curious to hear your thoughts on this and whether this would have sounded odd at all to medieval musicians or what we might know about their perceptions of octaves and the importance or role of register in melody.

    Reply
    • 17th April 2023 at 10:13 pm
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      Hello, Ryan.

      Thank you for your appreciation and for an interesting question.

      A string of a given length has an absolute breaking pitch beyond which it will not go, regardless of the string material, which is a more pressing concern for upper octave stringing on higher-pitched courses than medieval string technology, about which we know very little. Your question raises three points.

      First, the evidence for octave stringing.

      The earliest evidence I’m aware of for octave stringing is on the vielle, as I describe in this article: https://earlymusicmuse.com/lifting-the-veil-on-the-vielle/ Jerome of Moravia, Tractatus de Musica, c. 1280, describes 3 fiddle tunings, 2 of which seem to have had a double course in octaves (the ‘seem to have had’ is explained in the article, but is pretty certain).

      The next evidence is the painting by Simone Martini in Cappella di San Martino, Italy, 1312–18, of an entirely octave-strung gittern described in the article above. Martini’s painting is unusual in gittern iconography in giving such a clear depiction of stringing. A much more detailed analysis of that gittern is coming in a dedicated article later this year, which will be the third of three on the question of the reliability of medieval music iconography.

      Second, the purpose of octave stringing.

      As this article https://earlymusicmuse.com/lutethumbnailhistory/ describes, Johannes Tinctoris, De inventione et usu musicae, c. 1481–87, describes the function of octave stringing on lutes as the brightening of thick dull bass strings. This could be interpreted as the purpose of the higher octave on the double course of Jerome’s first and second tunings, as it is paired with the lowest note. However, if this is our interpretation we’d need to explain why the third tuning, which has the same lowest note, doesn’t have this upper octave. An alternative explanation is that medieval octave stringing creates organum. As this article https://earlymusicmuse.com/performingmedievalmusic2of3/ describes, parallel octaves were a recognised form of medieval organum, so the production of parallel octaves that comes from octave stringing was well within medieval music theory. Not so in the renaissance, which is why octave stringing was phased out on the lute and was never a feature of the vihuela, as described in this article: https://earlymusicmuse.com/vihuela-and-viola-da-mano/

      Third, which strings were in octave pairs.

      Usually not all of them. Certainly on the lute, the 4th course down was in octaves, for two reasons: it was required only on the thicker, duller strings, and in any case octaves on the 3rd course up would go beyond breaking point. When I first started playing the lute, I remember the jolt of hearing sudden octave leaps when moving from the 3rd unison course to the 4th octave course. Two things changed: over time and with more skill, we can have more control over how much that upper octave is emphasised; and the ear gets more used to it.

      The Martini gittern is particularly interesting. The paired thick and thin strings gives us a tuning of c’/c” g/g’ d/d’ A/a, taking the Berkeley theory manuscript as the basis. This presents us with a puzzle. Given the small size of the gittern, we might assume the Martini instrument had a basic tuning of c” g’ d’ a, with paired strings at the lower octave. However, this *would* be an assumption, as we could just as easily argue the basic tuning of the gittern generally was c’ g d A, and the paired octaves of the Martini gittern were an octave higher, as the Berkeley manuscript gives the names of notes but does not make clear which octave they are in. The basic tuning of c” g’ d’ a seems more likely, but incontrovertible evidence is lacking, nor do we know if all double course gitterns were in octaves, or only Italian gitterns, or indeed only the gittern painted by Martini.

      I hope this goes some way to answering your question. Please do reply if there’s more to discuss.

      All the best.

      Ian

      Reply

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