From Rome, the institution spread to other parts of the Church. When the pope visited France with his court, the Frankish King
Pepin the Short could not help but admire the customs of Roman liturgy. Pepin realized that these customs could help to ensure religious unity throughout his territories and thus strengthen their political unity. The King therefore adopted the Roman liturgy and mixed it with the Gallican chant repertory. The overall structure of the Roman chant was accepted by the Gallican musicians, but they covered it with a completely different style of ornamentation. The fusion of Roman and Gallican chant evolved into what we now know as
Gregorian chant.
Charlemagne, the son of Pepin, was also impressed by the superiority of the Roman chanters. He begged
Pope Adrian I to assign him two cantors of the Gregorian school. Peter and Romanus were sent out to Francia in 789. Unfortunately, Romanus fell sick and remained behind, but Peter was able to make it to Metz and established a school of Gregorian chant. Nonetheless, the Schola Cantorum played a significant role in the transmission of Roman chant to the
Carolingian court of
Charlemagne. Several schools were also established in England shortly after the fusion of Roman and Gallican chant. Between the years 876 and 1073, the prior of the Schola is recorded to have performed a curious dance with clearly
pagan origins known as
Cornomania, on the Saturday following
Easter, on the
Lateran Square in
Rome. He would wear a wreath with horns on his head, swing a rattle with bells, scatter
laurel leaves, and cry out in an unknown language,
"Iaritan, iaritan, iariariasti; raphayn, iercoin, iariariasti". Several institutions today have modeled themselves after the medieval Schola, including
Schola Cantorum Basiliensis of Basel and the
Schola Cantorum de Paris. They aim to interpret classical, old popular, sacred, and of course Gregorian music with absolute purity of style and tone. ==See also==