's
Madonna of the Orange Trees, from 1529 to 1530. Bottom, left of centre, is an infant playing a three-stringed violin. , with angels playing violin, viola and cello The first clear record of a violin-like instrument comes from paintings by
Gaudenzio Ferrari. In his
Madonna of the Orange Tree, painted in 1530, a
cherub is seen playing a bowed instrument which clearly has the hallmarks of violins. A few years later, on a fresco in the cupola of the church of Madonna dei Miracoli in
Saronno, angels play three instruments of the violin family, corresponding to violin, viola and cello. The instruments depicted by Ferrari have bulging front and back plates, strings that feed into peg-boxes with side pegs, and f-holes. They do not have frets. The only real difference between those instruments and the modern violin is that Ferrari's have three strings and a rather more extravagant curved shape. It is not clear exactly who made the first violins, but there is good evidence that they originate from northern Italy, near
Milan. Not only are Ferrari's paintings in that area but also towns like
Brescia and
Cremona then had a great reputation for the craftsmanship of stringed instruments. The earliest documentary evidence for a violin is in the records of the treasury of Savoy, which paid for "trompettes et vyollons de Verceil", that is to say, "trumpets and violins from
Vercelli", the town where Ferrari painted his
Madonna of the Orange Tree. The first extant written use of the Italian term
violino occurs in 1538, when "violini Milanesi" (Milanese violinists) were brought to Nice when negotiating
the conclusion of a war. The violin quickly became very popular, both among street-musicians and the nobility, which is illustrated by the fact that
Charles IX of France commissioned an extensive range of string instruments in the second half of the 16th century. Around 1555, the French court imported a dance band of Italian violinists and in 1573, during one of Catherine de' Medici's celebration "the music was the most melodious one had ever seen and the ballet was accompanied by some thirty violins playing very pleasantly a warlike tune", wrote an observer. The oldest confirmed surviving violin, dated inside, is the "Charles IX" by Andrea Amati, made in Cremona in 1564, but the label is very doubtful. The
Metropolitan Museum of Art has an Amati violin that may be even older, possibly dating to 1558 but just like the Charles IX the date is unconfirmed. One of the most famous and certainly the most pristine is the
Messiah Stradivarius (also known as the 'Salabue') made by
Antonio Stradivari in 1716 and very little played, perhaps almost never and in an
as new state. It is now located in the
Ashmolean Museum of Oxford. == Early makers ==