Pandura

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

Pandura
Pandoura 001.jpg
Modern lithograph of a bas relief from Mantineia (4th century BC), exhibited at National Archaeological Museum of Athens. The image shows a muse playing a pandoura, and the original is the oldest image of a pandoura currently known.
Classification
Related instruments

The pandura[1] (Ancient Greek: πανδοῦρα, pandoura) is an ancient Greek string instrument from the Mediterranean basin.

Lutes have been present in ancient Greece since the 4th century BC.[2]

They were also present in Mesopotamia since the Akkadian era, or the third millennium BCE.[3]

Human pottery figurine, Susa, first half of 2nd millennium BC
File:Luth player Sb7916.jpg
Moulded figurine, Susa. Medo-Elamite period. 14th–12th centuries BC

Greek

Ancient Greek Tanagra figurine, 200 BC

The ancient Greek pandoura was a medium or long-necked lute with a small resonating chamber, used by the ancient Greeks. It commonly had three strings: such an instrument was also known as the trichordon (τρίχορδον, McKinnon 1984:10). Its descendants still survive as the Greek tambouras and bouzouki,[4][5] the North African kuitra, the Eastern Mediterranean saz and the Balkan tamburica and remained popular also in the near east and eastern Europe, too, usually acquiring a third string in the course of time,[6] since the fourth century BCE.

Renato Meucci (1996) suggests that the some Italian Renaissance descendants of Pandura type were called chitarra italiana, mandore or mandola. In the 18th century the pandurina (mandore) was often referred to as mandolino napoletano.

Roman

Under the Romans the pandura was modified: the long neck was preserved but was made wider to take four strings, and the body was either oval or slightly broader at the base, but without the inward curves of the pear-shaped instruments.[7]

Memorial stele for a 16-year-old Roman boy, Lutatia Lupata, showing him playing the Roman variant, the pandurium. C. 2nd Century A.D. Found in May 1956 in Merida, Spain, at the Roman Necropolis, Augusta Emerita. Kept at the Museo Nacional de Arte Romano, Merida, Spain.[8][9][10]

Related instruments

There were also at least two distinct varieties of pandura.[7] One type was pear-shaped, used in Assyria and Persia.[7] In this type the body had graceful inward curves which led up gradually from base to neck.[7] These curves changed at the bottom end off the instrument to a more sloping outline, an elongated triangle with the corners rounded off.[7] The oval type, a favourite instrument of the Egyptians, was also found in ancient Persia and among the Arabs of North Africa.[7]

Regional variations

Caucasus

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

A similar instrument is found in Chechnya and Ingushetia, where it is known as Vainakhs Phondar.

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

In Georgia the panduri is a three-string fretted instrument widely spread in all regions of Eastern Georgia: such as Pshavkhevsureti, Tusheti, Kakheti and Kartli. A similar Georgian instrument is the chonguri.

See also

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

Notes

  1. Not to be confused with pandora, pandore, bandura, a queer-shaped guitar of the 17th century; see: Willi Apel, Harvard Dictionary of Music, Taylor & Francis, 1970, p. 551.
  2. Alexander Lingas, "Musical instruments" in Encycolpedy of Ancient Greece p 385.
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. instruments-museum, Greece
  5. Elizabeth Jeffreys, John Haldon, Robin Cormack, The Oxford Handbook of Byzantine Studies, Oxford University Press, 2008, p.928; confer also Nikos Maliaras, Byzantina mousika organa, EPN 1023, ISΒN 978-960-7554-44-4 and Digenis Akritas, Escorial version, vv. 826-827, ed. and transl. Elizabeth Jeffrey.
  6. The Facts on File Dictionary of Music, Fourth edition
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 Encyclopedia Britannica, 1911, Volume 20
  8. https://m.flickr.com/#/photos/julio-claudians/8098646683/ Flicker based photo of the museum information sign for the stele.
  9. Jonathan Edmondson, Trinidad Nogales, Walter Trillmich, Imagen y memoria: monumentos, funarios, con retratos en la colonia Augusta
  10. Museo Nacional de Arte Romano, Merida, Spain, online page for Lutatia Lupatia stella.

References

External links