examining an instrument Bowed instruments include:
cello,
crwth,
double bass,
erhu,
fiddle,
hudok,
morin khuur,
nyckelharpa,
hurdy-gurdy,
rabab,
rebec,
sarangi,
viol (
viola da gamba),
viola,
viola da braccio,
viola d'amore, and
violin. The purported inventor of the violin is
Andrea Amati. Amati was originally a lute maker, but turned to the new instrument form of violin in the mid-16th century. He was the progenitor of the Amati family of luthiers active in Cremona, Italy until the 18th century. Andrea Amati had two sons. His eldest was
Antonio Amati (
circa 1537–1607), and the younger,
Girolamo Amati (
circa 1561–1630). Girolamo is better known as Hieronymus, and together with his brother, produced many violins with labels inside the instrument reading "A&H". Antonio died having no known offspring, but Hieronymus became a father. His son Nicolò (1596–1684) was himself a master luthier who had several apprentices of note, including
Antonio Stradivari (probably), Andrea
Guarneri, Bartolomeo Pasta, Jacob Railich, Giovanni Battista Rogeri, Matthias
Klotz, and possibly
Jacob Stainer and
Francesco Rugeri. It is even possible
Bartolomeo Cristofori, later inventor of the piano, apprenticed under him (although census data does not support this, which paints this as a possible myth).
Gasparo Duiffopruggar of
Füssen, Germany, was once incorrectly credited as the inventor of the violin. He was likely a maker, but no documentation survives, and no instruments survive that experts unequivocally know are his.
Gasparo da Salò of
Brescia (Italy) was another early luthier of the violin family. About 80 of his instruments survive, and around 100 documents that relate to his work. He was also a double bass player and son and nephew of two violin players: Francesco and Agosti, respectively. Da Salò made many instruments and exported to France and Spain, and probably to England. He had at least five apprentices: his son Francesco, a helper named Battista, Alexander of Marsiglia, Giacomo Lafranchini and
Giovanni Paolo Maggini. Maggini inherited da Salò's business in Brescia.
Valentino Siani worked with Maggini. In 1620, Maggini moved to Florence.
By century 17th Luthiers born in the mid-17th century include
Giovanni Grancino,
Vincenzo Rugeri,
Carlo Giuseppe Testore, and his sons
Carlo Antonio Testore and
Paolo Antonio Testore, all from
Milan. From
Venice the luthiers
Matteo Goffriller,
Domenico Montagnana,
Sanctus Seraphin, and
Carlo Annibale Tononi were principals in the Venetian school of violin making (although the latter began his career in
Bologna).
Carlo Bergonzi (luthier) purchased Antonio Stradivari's shop a few years after the master's death.
David Tecchler, who was born in Austria, later worked in both Venice and
Rome.
18th Luthiers from the early 18th century include
Nicolò Gagliano of
Naples, Italy,
Carlo Ferdinando Landolfi of Milan, and
Giovanni Battista Guadagnini, who roamed throughout Italy during his lifetime. From Austria originally,
Leopold Widhalm later established himself in
Nürnberg, Germany. The Jérôme-Thibouville-Lamy firm started making wind instruments around 1730 at
La Couture-Boussey, then moved to Mirecourt around 1760 and started making violins, guitars, mandolins, and musical accessories.
19th The early 19th-century luthiers of the
Mirecourt school of violin making in France were the
Vuillaume family,
Charles Jean Baptiste Collin-Mezin, and Collin-Mezin's son,
Charles Collin-Mezin, Jr., Honore Derazey, Nicolas Lupot, Charles Macoutel,
Charles Mennégand, and Pierre Silvestre. Nicola Utili (also known as Nicola da Castel Bolognese) (Ravenna, Italy, 1888–1962), beside traditional lute works, experimented the making of "pear-shaped" violins. == See also ==