Kithara

The kithara, or Latinized cithara (Greek: κιθάρα, romanized: kithára, Latin: cithara), was an ancient Greek musical instrument in the yoke lutes family. It was a seven-stringed professional version of the lyre, which was regarded as a rustic, or folk instrument, appropriate for teaching music to beginners. As opposed to the simpler lyre, the cithara was primarily used by professional musicians, called kitharodes. In modern Greek, the word kithara has come to mean "guitar", a word which etymologically stems from kithara.[1]

Woman with cithara (right) and sambuca (left). Roman fresco from Pompeii, 1st century CE (National Archaeological Museum, Naples).

Origin and uses

The cithara originated from Minoan-Mycenaean swan-neck lyres developed and used during the Aegean Bronze Age.[2] Scholars such as M.L. West, Martha Maas, and Jane M. Snyder have made connections between the cithara and stringed instruments from ancient Anatolia.[3][4]

Whereas the basic lyra was widely used as a teaching instrument in boys’ schools, the cithara was a virtuoso's instrument and generally known as requiring a great deal of skill.[5] The cithara was played primarily to accompany dance, epic recitations, rhapsodies, odes, and lyric songs.[4] It was also played solo at the receptions, banquets, national games, and trials of skill. Aristotle said that these string instruments were not for educational purposes but for pleasure only.[5] It was played by strumming the strings with a stiff plectrum made of dried leather, held in the right hand with elbow outstretched and palm bent inwards. The strings with undesired notes were damped with the straightened fingers of the left hand.[4]

Construction

The cithara had a deep, wooden sounding box composed of two resonating tables, either flat or slightly arched, connected by ribs or sides of equal width. At the top, its strings were knotted around the crossbar or yoke (zugon) or to rings threaded over the bar, or wound around pegs. The other ends of the strings were secured to a tail-piece after passing over a flat bridge, or the tail-piece and bridge were combined.[4][6]

Most vase paintings show citharas with seven strings, in agreement with ancient authors, but those same authors also mention that occasionally an especially skillful kitharode would use more than the conventional seven strings.[4]

Apollo as a kitharode

Apollo kitharoidos (Apollo holding a cithara and wearing the customary kitharōdos’ robes) and musagetes (leading the Muses). Marble, Roman artwork, 2nd century CE.

The cithara is said to have been the invention of Apollo, the god of music.[7] Apollo is often depicted playing a cithara instead of a lyre, often dressed in a kitharode’s formal robes. Kitharoidos, or Citharoedus, is an epithet given to Apollo, which means "lyre-singer" or "one who sings to the lyre".

An Apollo Citharoedus or Apollo Citharede, is the term for a type of statue or other image of Apollo with a cithara. Among the best-known examples is the Apollo Citharoedus at the Vatican Museums, a 2nd-century CE colossal marble statue by an unknown Roman sculptor.[4]

Famous cithara players

Utrecht Psalter image of cithara or lyre
Rotta played differently
Two sketches of string instrument players (citharas, lyres or rottas?) from the Utrecht Psalter, drawn by an Anglo-Saxon artist in Reims, c.850 CE.

Other instruments called "cithara"

In the Middle Ages, cythara was also used generically for stringed instruments, including lyres, but also including lute-like instruments.[9][lower-alpha 1][10][lower-alpha 2] The use of the name throughout the Middle Ages looked back to the original Greek cithara, and its abilities to sway people's emotions.[9]

Biblical references

An instrument called the kinnor is mentioned a number of times in the Bible, generally translated into English as "harp" or "psaltery", but historically rendered as "cithara". Psalm 42 in the Latin Vulgate (Psalm 43 in other versions), says,

"Confitebor tibi in cithara, Deus, Deus meus,"[11]

which is translated in the Douay-Rheims version as

"To thee, O God my God, I will give praise upon the harp."[12]

The King James version renders this verse as

"Yea, upon the harp will I praise thee, O God my God."[13]

The cithara is also mentioned in other places in the Latin Vulgate version of the Bible, including Genesis 4:21, 1 Kings (1 Samuel) 16:16, 1 Paralipomenon (1 Chronicles) 25:3, Job 30:31, Psalms 32:2, Psalms 56:9, Psalms 70:22, Psalms 80:3, Psalms 91:4, Psalms 97:5, Psalms 107:3, Psalms 146:7, Psalms 150:3, Isaiah 5:12, Isaiah 16:11, 1 Machabees 3:45, and 1 Corinthians 14:7.[14]

The kaithros mentioned in the Book of Daniel may have been the same instrument.[15]

See also

Footnotes

  1. "Cithara was the Latin name for the Greek kithara, a lyre-like instrument. It was often used as a generic term for 'plucked stringed instrument' by writers discussing a variety of instruments in medieval and Renaissance times, but when a player used this name for his instrument, [...] he was probably making a claim that his instrument was the one that had the magic to readily manipulate the listener's emotional states as the original kithara (with a similar large plectrum) had a reputation of doing to the ancient Greeks."[9]
  2. "There is evidence of citharae shaped like a lute, that is with a neck and an elongated body, even before the twelfth century: the Golden Psalter of St. Gall depicts King David wielding an instrument that has a broad neck, a circular pegbox (without pegs depicted), and three strings, and whose total length is three times as long as its body, which is of a circular shape. This instrument resembles a lute more than a cithara, but it is associated with David. Further evidence appears in The Stuttgart Psalter [...] This psalter contains several images of an instrument having a long neck and a narrow body with parallel sides, sloping shoulders, and a pear-shaped pegbox. In the text, next to all these miniatures, the instrument is called a cithara."[10]

References

  1. Harper, Douglas (2001–2022). "guitar". Online Etymology Dictionary.
  2. Vorreiter (1975), p. 94: "[T]he swan-neck lyres were the predecessors of the sacred kitharai of later times, i.e. the 6th to 3rd centuries B.C., in the Hellenic world."
  3. Maas & Snyder 1989, p. 185.
  4. West (1992).
  5. Aristotle. Politics. 1341a.: Aristotle calls the cithara an organon technikon.
  6. Maas & Snyder (1989).
  7. Pausanias. Description of Greece. 5.14.8.
  8. "phi". Suda. 761.
  9. Segerman (1999), pp. 79–80
  10. Ciabattoni (2010), pp. 60–61
  11. "Latin Vulgate Bible, Psalms Chapter 42". www.drbo.org.
  12. "Douay-Rheims Bible, Psalms Chapter 42". drbo.org.
  13. "Psalms Chapter 43 KJV". www.kingjamesbibleonline.org.
  14. "Biblia Sacra Vulgata" [Latin Vulgate Bible]. drbo.org (in Latin).
  15. "Kaithros". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. 2001. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0.

Sources

Further reading

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