Monday, 22 July 2013

Messe De Nostre Dame. Guillaume De Machaut (1300 - 1377). Cistercian Abbey of Le Thoronet, Var, France.


Text and Illustrations from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia,
unless otherwise stated.

Note: Messe De Nostre Dame is correct. 14th-Century French said "Nostre Dame",
unlike modern-day French, which says "Notre Dame".


File:Cloître de l'abbaye cistercienne du Thoronet (Var).jpg


English: Cloister of the Cistercian Abbey of Le Thoronet, Var, France.
Français: Cloître de l'abbaye du Thoronet, Var, France.
Photo: 14 June 2005.
Author: Alain Bourque (http://www.flickr.com/people/zboula/).
(Wikimedia Commons)

Le Thoronet Abbey (French: L'abbaye du Thoronet) is a former Cistercian Abbey, built in the Late-12th-Century and Early-13th-Century, now restored as a museum. It is sited between the towns of Draguignan and Brignoles in the Var Départment of Provence, in South-East France. It is one of the three Cistercian Abbeys in Provence, along with the Sénanque Abbey and Silvacane Abbey, that, together, are known as "the Three Sisters of Provence."

Le Thoronet Abbey is one of the best examples of the spirit of the Cistercian Order. Even the acoustics of the Church imposed a certain discipline upon the Monks. Because of the stone walls, which created a long echo, the Monks were forced to sing slowly and perfectly together. The Abbey is fundamentally connected to its site, and is an exceptional example of spirituality and philosophy transformed into architecture. It is distinguished, like other Cistercian Abbeys, by its purity, harmony, and lack of decoration or ornament.


File:Guillaume de Machaut-Oeuvres.jpg


A page from a manuscript of the poet and composer, Guillaume de Machaut
showing the three-part Rondeau Dame, mon cuer en vous remaint 
Picture from library of Congress web page [1].
Original manuscript in the Bibliothèque Nationale de France, fons français, 1586.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Guillaume de Machaut (sometimes spelled Machault) (circa 1300 – April, 1377) was a Mediaeval French poet and composer. He is one of the earliest composers on whom significant biographical information is available. According to Daniel Leech-Wilkinson, Machaut was "the last great poet who was also a composer". Well into the 15th-Century, Machaut's poetry was greatly admired and imitated by other poets, including Geoffrey Chaucer.

Machaut composed in a wide range of styles and forms. He is a part of the musical movement known as the ars nova. Machaut helped develop the motet and secular song forms (particularly the lai and the formes fixesrondeau, virelai and ballade). Machaut wrote the Messe de Nostre Dame, the earliest known complete setting of the Ordinary of the Mass attributable to a single composer.




Messe de Nostre Dame.
Guillaume de Machaut
(1300 - 1377).
Performed at the Cistercian Abbey
of Le Thoronet (Var, France)
Available on YouTube at


Guillaume de Machaut was born circa 1300 and educated in the region around Rheims. Though his surname most likely derives from the nearby town of Machault, 30 km East of Rheims in the Ardennes region, most scholars believe his birthplace was, in fact, Rheims.


File:Thoronet Cloister and Tower.JPG


Cloister and Tower of Le Thoronet Abbey, 
Provence, France.
Photo: December 2007.
Source: Own work.
Author: SiefkinDR.
(Wikimedia Commons)


He was employed as secretary to John I, Count of Luxembourg and King of Bohemia, from 1323 to 1346 and also became a Canon (1337). He often accompanied King John on his various trips, many of them military expeditions around Europe (including Prague). He was named the Canon of Verdun in 1330, Arras in 1332, and Rheims in 1337. By 1340, Machaut was living in Rheims, having relinquished his other Canonic posts at the request of Pope Benedict XII.


File:Le Thoronet cloître 56.JPG


English: Cloisters of Le Thoronet Abbey, Var, France.
Deutsch: Ehemaliges Zisterzienserkloster Le Thoronet im Département Var 
in der französischen Region Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, Kreuzgang.
Photo: 19 September 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: GFreihalter.
(Wikimedia Commons)


In 1346, King John was killed fighting at the Battle of Crécy, and Machaut, who was famous and much in demand, entered the service of various other aristocrats and rulers, including King John's daughter Bonne (who died of the Black Death in 1349), her sons Jean de Berry and Charles (later Charles V, Duke of Normandy), and others, such as Charles II of Navarre.


File:Abbaye du Thoronet.jpg


The Chapter House, Le Thoronet Abbey, Var, France, 
where the Monks met daily.
This building is classé au titre des Monuments Historiques. It is indexed 
in the Base Mérimée, a database of architectural heritage 
maintained by the French Ministry of Culture
under the reference PA00081747.
Photo: 31 July 2012.
Source: Own work.
Author: Katty Castellat.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Machaut survived the Black Death that devastated Europe and spent his later years living in Rheims composing and supervising the creation of his complete-works manuscripts. His poem Le voir dit (probably 1361–1365) purports to recount a late love affair with a 19-year-old girl, Péronne d'Armentières, although the accuracy of the work as autobiography is contested. When he died in 1377, other composers such as François Andrieu wrote elegies lamenting his death.


File:Machaut 1.jpg


Machaut (at right) receiving Nature and three of her children. 
From an illuminated Parisian manuscript of the 1350s.
Guillaume de Machaut as shown in a French miniature of the 14th-Century, 
"An allegorical scene in which Nature offers Machaut 
three of her children - Sense, Rhetoric, and Music."
image itself from http://w3.rz-berlin.mpg.de/cmp/machaut_pic.html [does not work]
(Wikimedia Commons)


2 comments:

  1. Thank you for inserting the video of Messe du Notre Dame. Believe it or not the Rad Trad has never attended the old Assumption Mass, Gaudeamus Omnes. My parish used to do it until a few years ago but switched to the Signum Magnum Mass for whatever reason. It is a very beautiful Introit and the droning adds to the gravity present in medieval chant!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Delighted, The Rad Trad, that you enjoyed the old Assumption Mass.

    Indeed, Gaudeamus Omnes is a wonderful Introit and it does encapsulate, I think, the Gravitas, inherent in Mediaeval Chant, which I find of great beauty.

    I shall have to have a look at the Signum Magnum Mass and, perhaps, compare.

    As always, Thank you for your Comment.

    ReplyDelete