The instrument on display at the
Zorn Collections in the village of
Mora in
Dalarna,
Sweden—hence its name—has an inscription on the back of the apparent year "1526", though it is unlikely to have been made that early. A Swedish scholar, Per-Ulf Allmo, has suggested that the instrument (and another in the same style) were likely built in
Särna, northern
Dalarna, more likely around 1680, with
Praetorius as inspiration, and with no close affinity with the nyckelharpa tradition of northern
Uppland, the stronghold of the instrument. The
soundbox has an hourglass shape and looks very much like the illustration of a nyckelharpa in Praetorius's
Syntagma Musicum III of 1620 (where it is called ). It has a straight
bridge (as opposed to the arched,
cello-like bridge of the nyckelharpa), one melody string, two drone strings, and one row of keys, while lacking the 10-12 underlying
sympathetic strings of the nyckelharpa—which has three or four primary melody strings and features up to 25 wooden keys. ==References==