The Cretan lyra is closely related to the bowed Byzantine lyra, the ancestor of many European bowed instruments. The 9th-century
Persian geographer
Ibn Khurradadhbih (d. 911), in his lexicographical discussion of instruments, cited the lyra as a typical instrument of the Byzantines along with the
urghun (
organ),
shilyani (probably a type of
harp or
lyre) and the
salandj (probably a
bagpipe) (Margaret J. Kartomi, 1990). The Byzantine lyra spread westward through Europe with uncertain evolution; a notable example is the Italian
lira da braccio, a 15th-century bowed instrument and possibly the predecessor of the modern
violin. Bowed instruments similar to the Cretan lyra and direct descendants of the Byzantine lyra have continued to be played in many post-Byzantine regions until the present day with small changes, for example the
Gadulka in
Bulgaria, the bowed
Calabrian lira in
Italy and the
Classical Kemenche (Turkish:
Armudî kemençe, Greek: Πολίτικη λύρα) in
Istanbul, Turkey. With regard to the period of introduction of the bowed instrument in the island, there are four schools of thought: • The Byzantine lyra was introduced after 961 AD, when the island was reconquered from Arabs by the
Byzantine Empire under the command of
Nikephoros Phokas. At that time, noble families from Constantinople were sent to settle on Crete to inject new life and replenish the Greek population, who introduced many Byzantine traditions from Constantinople. • The lyra was introduced from the islands of the
Dodecanese, and
entered the island through the eastern town of
Sitia (where it was most popular), which is the neighbor of
Kassos and
Karpathos; this must have happened by the 12th century. • The lyra was gradually introduced into the island's traditions as a popular element of the
Byzantine music and tradition, in a similar manner that lyra was introduced in other regions (e.g. the
Lira da braccio and Calabrian
lira in Italy and the
Gadulka in Bulgaria). Over the centuries and especially during the island's
Venetian era, the
violin exerted its influence on the
music of Crete both under the organological and musical aspect, bringing about profound changes in the instrument's
repertory, tunning,
organology, musical language and performance practice. ==Types==