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Psaltery

A psaltery, or sawtry, an archaic form, is a fretboard-less box zither and is considered the archetype of the zither and dulcimer. Plucked keyboard instruments such as the harpsichord were also inspired by it. Its resonance box is usually trapezoidal, rectangular or in the form of a "pig's head" and often richly decorated.

Etymology
The psaltery of Ancient Greece () was a harp-like stringed instrument. The word psaltery derives from the Ancient Greek (), 'stringed instrument, psaltery, harp' and that from the verb (), "to touch sharply, to pluck, pull, twitch" and in the case of the strings of musical instruments, "to play a stringed instrument with the fingers, and not with the plectrum." The psaltery was originally made from wood, and relied on natural acoustics for sound production. In the King James Bible psaltery, and its plural, psalteries, are used to translate several words from the Hebrew Bible whose meaning is now unknown. ==Characteristics==
Characteristics
While the Greek instruments were harps, psaltery came to mean instruments that were strung across a resonating wood box. The box-zither psalteries may have a Phoenician origin. and dulcimer, though some forms of the latter are not plucked, but struck with hammers. ==Medieval and Renaissance psalteries==
Medieval and Renaissance psalteries
From the 12th through the 15th centuries, psalteries are widely seen in manuscripts, paintings and sculpture throughout Europe. Examples found in one reference book, the Groves New Encyclopedia of Musical Instruments, show examples in paintings from the 9th century Carolingian Empire Benedictine Psalter, in 13th-century Spain (in the Cantigas de Santa Maria), in Bohemia in the 14th century, in Italy in the 14th century, and Germany in the 15th century. Shapes included "triangular (rotte), trapezoidal, semitrapezoidal, wing shaped, or harp shaped". The psalterion decacordum was shaped like a square and had ten strings strung vertically. Stings could run in courses, as viewed in the middle-ages artwork. ==Modern psaltery==
Modern psaltery
While psalteries had largely died out in Europe by the 19th century, the salterio remained common in Mexico well into the twentieth century and is still played in some regional styles. The hammered dulcimer and related instruments, such as the santur, cimbalom, yangqin, and khim, appear very similar to psalteries, and it is often hard to tell which one historical images represent. They differ in that the player strikes the strings with small hammers rather than plucking them. As a result, they have much higher string tension and heavier frames. In the 19th century, several related zithers came into use, notably the guitar zither and the autoharp. In the 20th century, the bowed psaltery came into wide use. It is set up in a triangular format so that the end portion of each string can be bowed. == Gallery ==
Gallery
File:Walraversijde94.jpg|Psaltery in the shape called a "pig's head" psaltery, a very common psaltery shape in manuscripts. File:Gorleston Psalter psaltery player.png|Gorleston-on-Sea, England. Psaltery player from the Gorleston Psalter, c. 1310–1326. File:AlaBohemicaPsaltery.jpg|(Kingdom of Bohemia, 14th century). Picture of an unusual type of psaltery, found in Central Europe. Labeled "Bohemian wing" psaltery in Grove Dictionary of Musical Instruments. File:18th century psaltery.jpg|18th century Spanish psaltery. Trapezoidal psaltery. File:Benedictine Psalter - King playing a psalter.jpg|Carolingian Empire. Page from the Benedictine Psalter (842–850). David playing a four-sided psaltery, psalterium quadratum or psalterium decochordum. File:Musician with psaltery from the Psalterium cum Canticis ('Werdener Psalter') Berlin, Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin – Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Ms. theol. lat. fol. 561.jpg|1020–1050, Germany. Musician with psaltery from Werdener Psalter. File:María3.jpg|Spain. Three shapes of psalteries (bottom row) from the Cantigas de Santa Maria, Códice Rico. File:Hans Memling - Christ with Singing and Music-Making Angels - Psaltery player.jpg|Germany, 15th century. Angel playing a pig's head psaltery. File:La-Chaise-Dieu JPG0 (1).JPG|France File:Elder of the Apocalyps MET medcast603.jpg|France. 1145–1155. Elder of the Apocalypse File:Bayeux (14) Cathédrale Crypte Ange musicien 11.JPG|France, Notre Dame Cathedral File:CatedralDeBurgosP1130665.jpg|Spain. Burgos Cathedral. File:Cancioneiro da Ajuda, folio 59, musicians with psaltery and clappers.jpg|Spain, 13th century. Cancioneiro da Ajuda, folio 59, musicians with psaltery and clappers File:Cappella Palatina-ceiling-ISL15002.jpg|Triangular psaltery, Palatine Chapel, ca. 1140 A.D. File:Woman playing psaltery, Tobias Stimmer.jpg|Woman playing psaltery, circa 1570 A.D. File:Psaltery notes, Museum Musicum Theoretico-Practicum page 72.jpg|Psaltery notes, Museum musicum theoreticalo practicum page 72 File:Cantigas de Santa Maria, Musician's Codex, page Bl-2 062V.jpg|1280 A.D. Rotte. Cantigas de Santa Maria File:Cantigas de Santa Maria, Musician's Codex, page Bl-2 096V.jpg|1280 A.D. Cantigas de Santa Maria File:Cantigas de Santa Maria, Musician's Codex, page Bl-2 089R.jpg|1280 A.D. Cantigas de Santa Maria. File:Cantigas de Santa Maria, Musician's Codex, page Bl-2 071V.jpg|1280 A.D. Cantigas de Santa Maria. File:David MET DT1498.jpg|Circa 1408–1410, Italy. David playing a psaltery, painting by Lorenzo Monaco. ==See also==
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