During the
Middle Ages the word "sambuca" was applied to: • a stringed instrument, about which little can be discovered • a
hurdy-gurdy, a hand-cranked stringed musical instrument from the Middle Ages, sometimes called a
sambuca or
sambuca rotata • a wind instrument made from the wood of the
elder tree (
sambūcus). In an old
glossary article on (flute), the sambuca is said to be a kind of flute: {{verse translation|lang=la
Isidore of Seville describes it in his
Etymologiae as: {{verse translation|lang=la In a glossary by Papias of Lombardy (
c. 1053), first printed at
Milan in 1476, the sambuca is described as a
cithara, which in that century was generally glossed "
harp": {{verse translation|lang=la|Sambuca, cytherae rusticae. In
Tristan und Isolde (bars 7563-72) when the knight is enumerating to King Marke all the instruments upon which he can play, the
sambiut is the last mentioned: A
Latin–
French glossary has the equivalence
Psalterium = . During the later Middle Ages was often translated "
sackbut" in the vocabularies, whether merely from the phonetic similarity of the two words has not yet been established. The great Boulogne
Psalter (11th Century) contains many fanciful instruments which are evidently intended to illustrate the equally vague and fanciful descriptions of instruments in the apocryphal letter of
Saint Jerome, ("
to Dardanus"). Among these is a , which resembles a somewhat primitive sackbut without the
bell joint. In the 19th Century it was reproduced by
Edmond de Coussemaker,
Charles de la Croix and
Eugène Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc, and has given rise to endless discussions without leading to any satisfactory solution.
Fabio Colonna created the pentecontachordon, a keyboard instrument which he called a sambuca. ==References==