The tradition of eastern liturgical chant, encompassing the
Greek-speaking world, developed even before the establishment of the new Roman capital,
Constantinople, in 330 until
its fall in 1453. Byzantine music was influenced by Hellenistic music traditions, classic Greek music as well as religious music traditions of Syriac and Hebrew cultures. The Byzantine system of
octoechos, in which melodies were classified into eight modes, is specifically thought to have been exported from Syria, where it was known in the 6th century, before its legendary creation by Arab monk
John of Damascus of the
Umayyad Caliphate. The term Byzantine music is sometimes associated with the medieval sacred chant of
Christian Churches following the
Constantinopolitan Rite. There is also an identification of "Byzantine music" with "Eastern Christian liturgical chant", which is due to certain monastic reforms, such as the Octoechos reform of the
Quinisext Council (692) and the later reforms of the
Stoudios Monastery under its abbots
Sabas and
Theodore. The
triodion created during the reform of Theodore was also soon translated into Slavonic, which required also the adaption of melodic models to the prosody of the language. Later, after the Patriarchate and Court had returned to Constantinople in 1261, the former cathedral rite was not continued, but replaced by a mixed rite, which used the Byzantine Round notation to integrate the former notations of the former chant books (
Papadike). This notation had developed within the book
sticherarion created by the Stoudios Monastery, but it was used for the books of the cathedral rites written in a period after the
fourth crusade, when the cathedral rite was already abandoned at Constantinople. It is being discussed that in the
Narthex of the
Hagia Sophia an organ was placed for use in secular processions of the Emperor's entourage.
The earliest sources and the tonal system of Byzantine music According to the chant manual "
Hagiopolites" of 16 church tones (
echoi), the author of this treatise introduces a tonal system of 10 echoi. Nevertheless, both schools have in common a
set of 4 octaves ('
, and '), each of them had a '
(authentic mode) with the finalis on the degree V of the mode, and a ' (
plagal mode) with the final note on the degree I. According to Latin theory, the resulting eight tones (
octoechos) had been identified with the seven modes (octave species) and tropes (
tropoi which meant the transposition of these modes). The names of the tropes like "Dorian" etc. had been also used in Greek chant manuals, but the names Lydian and Phrygian for the octaves of and had been sometimes exchanged. The Ancient Greek
harmonikai was a Hellenist reception of the
Pythagorean education programme defined as mathemata ("exercises"). Harmonikai was one of them. Today, chanters of the Christian Orthodox churches identify with the heritage of Byzantine music whose earliest composers are remembered by name since the 5th century. Compositions had been related to them, but they must be reconstructed by notated sources which date centuries later. The melodic neume notation of Byzantine music developed late since the 10th century, with the exception of an earlier
ekphonetic notation, interpunction signs used in
lectionaries, but modal signatures for the eight echoi can already be found in fragments (
papyri) of monastic hymn books (tropologia) dating back to the 6th century. Amid the rise of
Christian civilization within Hellenism, many concepts of knowledge and education survived during the imperial age, when Christianity became the official religion. The
Pythagorean sect and music as part of the four "cyclical exercises" (ἐγκύκλια μαθήματα) that preceded the Latin quadrivium and science today based on mathematics, established mainly among Greeks in southern Italy (at
Taranto and
Crotone). Greek anachoretes of the early Middle Ages did still follow this education. The Calabrian
Cassiodorus founded Vivarium where he translated Greek texts (science, theology and the Bible), and
John of Damascus who learnt Greek from a Calabrian monk Kosmas, a slave in the household of his privileged father at Damascus, mentioned mathematics as part of the speculative philosophy. According to him philosophy was divided into theory (theology, physics, mathematics) and practice (ethics, economy, politics), and the Pythagorean heritage was part of the former, while only the ethic effects of music were relevant in practice. The mathematic science
harmonics was usually not mixed with the concrete topics of a chant manual. Nevertheless, Byzantine music is modal and entirely dependent on the Ancient Greek concept of harmonics. Its tonal system is based on a synthesis with
ancient Greek models, but we have no sources left that explain to us how this synthesis was done.
Carolingian cantors could mix the science of harmonics with a discussion of church tones, named after the ethnic names of the octave species and their transposition tropes, because they invented their own octoechos on the basis of the Byzantine one. But they made no use of earlier Pythagorean concepts that had been fundamental for Byzantine music, including: It is not evident by the sources, when exactly the position of the minor or half tone moved between the and . It seems that the fixed degrees (hestotes) became part of a new concept of the echos as melodic
mode (not simply
octave species), after the echoi had been called by the ethnic names of the tropes.
Instruments within the Byzantine Empire The 9th century
Persian geographer
Ibn Khurradadhbih (d. 911); in his lexicographical discussion of instruments cited the
lyra (lūrā) as the typical instrument of the Byzantines along with the
urghun (
organ),
shilyani (probably a type of
harp or
lyre) and the
salandj (probably a
bagpipe). The first of these, the early bowed stringed instrument known as the
Byzantine lyra, would come to be called the
lira da braccio, in Venice, where it is considered by many to have been the predecessor of the contemporary violin, which later flourished there. The bowed "lyra" is still played in former Byzantine regions, where it is known as the
Politiki lyra (lit. "lyra of the City" i.e.
Constantinople) in Greece, the
Calabrian lira in Southern Italy, and the
Lijerica in
Dalmatia. The second instrument, the
Hydraulis, originated in the
Hellenistic world and was used in the
Hippodrome in Constantinople during races. A
pipe organ with "great leaden pipes" was sent by the emperor
Constantine V to
Pepin the Short King of the
Franks in 757. Pepin's son
Charlemagne requested a similar organ for his chapel in
Aachen in 812, beginning its establishment in Western church music. and the
askaulos (ἀσκαυλός from ἀσκός
askos "
wine-skin"), a bagpipe. These bagpipes, also known as
Dankiyo (from
ancient Greek: To angeion (Τὸ ἀγγεῖον) "the container"), had been played even in Roman times.
Dio Chrysostom wrote in the 1st century of a contemporary sovereign (possibly Nero) who could play a pipe (
tibia, Roman reedpipes similar to Greek aulos) with his mouth as well as by tucking a bladder beneath his armpit. The bagpipes continued to be played throughout the empire's former realms down to the present. (See Balkan
Gaida, Greek
Tsampouna,
Pontic Tulum, Cretan
Askomandoura, Armenian
Parkapzuk,
Zurna and Romanian
Cimpoi.) Other commonly used instruments used in Byzantine Music include the
Kanonaki,
Oud,
Laouto,
rotta,
Santouri,
Toubeleki,
Tambouras,
Defi Tambourine,
Çifteli (which was known as Tamburica in Byzantine times),
Lyre,
Kithara,
Psaltery,
Saz,
Floghera, Pithkiavli,
Kavali, Seistron,
Epigonion (the ancestor of the Santouri),
Varviton (the ancestor of the Oud and a variation of the Kithara),
Crotala,
Bowed Tambouras (similar to
Byzantine Lyra),
Šargija,
Monochord,
Sambuca,
Rhoptron,
Koudounia, perhaps the
Lavta and other instruments used before the 4th Crusade that are no longer played today. These instruments are unknown at this time. In 2021, archaeologists discovered a flute with six holes dated back to the 4th and 5th centuries AD, in the
Zerzevan Castle. The Byzantine music had been heavily influenced by the Pythagorean music theory about the ratios of a single string as these are depicted in the above pictures:
Acclamations at the court and the ceremonial book Secular music existed and accompanied every aspect of life in the empire, including dramatic productions, pantomime, ballets, banquets, political and pagan festivals, Olympic games, and all ceremonies of the imperial court. It was, however, regarded with contempt, and was frequently denounced as profane and lascivious by some Church Fathers. Ms.
Rep I 17, f.148r) Another genre that lies between liturgical chant and court ceremonial are the so-called
polychronia (πολυχρονία) and
acclamations (ἀκτολογία). The acclamations were sung to announce the entrance of the Emperor during representative receptions at the court, into the hippodrome or into the cathedral. They can be different from the polychronia, ritual prayers or ektenies for present political rulers and are usually answered by a choir with formulas such as "Lord protect" (κύριε σῶσον) or "Lord have mercy on us/them" (κύριε ἐλέησον). The documented polychronia in books of the cathedral rite allow a geographical and a chronological classification of the manuscript and they are still used during
ektenies of the divine liturgies of national Orthodox ceremonies today. The
hippodrome was used for a traditional feast called
Lupercalia (15 February), and on this occasion the following acclamation was celebrated: The main source about court ceremonies is an incomplete compilation in a 10th-century manuscript that organised parts of a treatise
Περὶ τῆς Βασιλείου Τάξεως ("On imperial ceremonies") ascribed to Emperor
Constantine VII, but in fact compiled by different authors who contributed with additional ceremonies of their period. In its incomplete form chapter 1–37 of book I describe processions and ceremonies on religious festivals (many lesser ones, but especially great feasts such as the
Elevation of the Cross,
Christmas,
Theophany,
Palm Sunday,
Good Friday,
Easter and
Ascension Day and feasts of saints including
St Demetrius,
St Basil etc. often extended over many days), while chapter 38–83 describe secular ceremonies or rites of passage such as coronations, weddings, births, funerals, or the celebration of war triumphs. For the celebration of Theophany the protocol begins to mention several
stichera and their echoi (ch. 3) and who had to sing them: These protocols gave rules for imperial progresses to and from certain churches at Constantinople and the
imperial palace, with fixed stations and rules for ritual actions and acclamations from specified participants (the text of acclamations and processional troparia or
kontakia, but also
heirmoi are mentioned), among them also ministers, senate members, leaders of the "Blues" (Venetoi) and the "Greens" (Prasinoi)—chariot teams during the hippodrome's horse races. They had an important role during court ceremonies. The following chapters (84–95) are taken from a 6th-century manual by
Peter the Patrician. They rather describe administrative ceremonies such as the appointment of certain functionaries (ch. 84,85), investitures of certain offices (86), the reception of ambassadors and the proclamation of the Western Emperor (87,88), the reception of Persian ambassadors (89,90), Anagorevseis of certain Emperors (91–96), the appointment of the senate's
proedros (97). The "palace order" did not only prescribe the way of movements (symbolic or real) including on foot, mounted, by boat, but also the costumes of the celebrants and who has to perform certain acclamations. The emperor often plays the role of Christ and the imperial palace is chosen for religious rituals, so that the ceremonial book brings the sacred and the profane together. Book II seems to be less normative and was obviously not compiled from older sources like book I, which often mentioned outdated imperial offices and ceremonies, it rather describes particular ceremonies as they had been celebrated during particular imperial receptions during the Macedonian renaissance.
The Desert Fathers and urban monasticism , 9th century (
RUS-Mim Ms. D.129, fol. 135) River of Babylon as illustration of Ps. 137:1–3 Two concepts must be understood to appreciate fully the function of music in Byzantine worship and they were related to a new form of urban monasticism, which even formed the representative cathedral rites of the imperial ages, which had to baptise many
catechumens. The first, which retained currency in Greek theological and mystical speculation until the dissolution of the empire, was the belief in the
angelic transmission of sacred chant: the assumption that the early Church united men in the prayer of the angelic choirs. It was partly based on the Hebrew fundament of Christian worship, but in the particular reception of St.
Basil of Caesarea's divine liturgy.
John Chrysostom, since 397 Archbishop of Constantinople, abridged the long formula of Basil's divine liturgy for the local cathedral rite. The notion of angelic chant is certainly older than the
Apocalypse account (
Revelation 4:8–11), for the musical function of angels as conceived in the
Old Testament is brought out clearly by
Isaiah (6:1–4) and
Ezekiel (3:12). Most significant in the fact, outlined in
Exodus 25, that the pattern for the earthly worship of Israel was derived from heaven. The allusion is perpetuated in the writings of the early Fathers, such as
Clement of Rome,
Justin Martyr,
Ignatius of Antioch,
Athenagoras of Athens, John Chrysostom and
Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite. It receives acknowledgement later in the liturgical treatises of Nicolas Kavasilas and Symeon of Thessaloniki. The second, less permanent, concept was that of
koinonia or "communion". This was less permanent because, after the fourth century, when it was analyzed and integrated into a theological system, the bond and "oneness" that united the clergy and the faithful in liturgical worship was less potent. It is, however, one of the key ideas for understanding a number of realities for which we now have different names. With regard to musical performance, this concept of koinonia may be applied to the primitive use of the word choros. It referred, not to a separate group within the congregation entrusted with musical responsibilities, but to the congregation as a whole. St. Ignatius wrote to the Church in Ephesus in the following way: You must every man of you join in a choir so that being harmonious and in concord and taking the keynote of God in unison, you may sing with one voice through Jesus Christ to the Father, so that He may hear you and through your good deeds recognize that you are parts of His Son. A marked feature of liturgical ceremony was the active part taken by the people in its performance, particularly in the recitation or chanting of hymns, responses and psalms. The terms choros, koinonia and ekklesia were used synonymously in the early Byzantine Church. In
Psalms 149 and 150, the
Septuagint translated the
Hebrew word
machol (dance) by the Greek word
choros . As a result, the early Church borrowed this word from classical antiquity as a designation for the congregation, at worship and in song in heaven and on earth both. Concerning the practice of psalm recitation, the recitation by a congregation of educated chanters is already testified by the soloistic recitation of abridged psalms by the end of the 4th century. Later it was called
prokeimenon. Hence, there was an early practice of
simple psalmody, which was used for the recitation of canticles and the psalter, and usually Byzantine psalters have the 15 canticles in an appendix, but the simple psalmody itself was not notated before the 13th century, in dialogue or
papadikai treatises preceding the book sticheraria. κλῖνον, κύριε, τὸ οὖς σου καὶ ἐπάκουσόν μου "on Monday evening" (τῇ β᾽ ἑσπερ) in with a preceding troparion καὶ ἐπάκουσόν μου· δόξα σοι, ὁ Θεός in a liturgical manuscript around 1400 (
GR-An Ms.
2061, fol. 4r) A famous example, whose existence is attested as early as the 4th century, is the
Easter Vespers hymn,
Phos Hilaron ("O Resplendent Light"). Perhaps the earliest set of troparia of known authorship are those of the
monk Auxentios (first half of the 5th century), attested in his biography but not preserved in any later Byzantine order of service. Another,
O Monogenes Yios ("Only Begotten Son"), ascribed to the emperor
Justinian I (527–565), followed the doxology of the second antiphonon at the beginning of the
Divine Liturgy.
Romanos the Melodist, the kontakion, and the Hagia Sophia (–556) with a kontakion roll outside Hagia Sophia The development of large scale hymnographic forms begins in the fifth century with the rise of the
kontakion, a long and elaborate metrical sermon, reputedly of Syriac origin, which finds its acme in the work of St.
Romanos the Melodist (6th century). This dramatic
homily which could treat various subjects, theological and hagiographical ones as well as imperial propaganda, comprises some 20 to 30 stanzas (oikoi "houses") and was sung in a rather simple style with emphasise on the understanding of the recent texts. The earliest notated versions in Slavic ''kondakar's
(12th century) and Greek kontakaria-psaltika
(13th century), however, are in a more elaborate style (also rubrified idiomela), and were probably sung since the ninth century, when kontakia
were reduced to the prooimion
(introductory verse) and first oikos'' (stanza). Romanos' own recitation of all the numerous
oikoi must have been much simpler, but the most interesting question of the genre are the different functions that
kontakia once had. Romanos' original melodies were not delivered by notated sources dating back to the 6th century, the earliest notated source is the Tipografsky Ustav written about 1100. Its gestic notation was different from Middle Byzantine notation used in Italian and Athonite Kontakaria of the 13th century, where the gestic signs (cheironomiai) became integrated as "great signs". During the period of psaltic art (14th and 15th centuries), the interest of kalophonic elaboration was focussed on one particular kontakion which was still celebrated: the
Akathist hymn. An exception was
John Kladas who contributed also with kalophonic settings of other kontakia of the repertoire. Some of them had a clear liturgical assignation, others not, so that they can only be understood from the background of the later book of ceremonies. Some of Romanos creations can be even regarded as political propaganda in connection with the new and very fast reconstruction of the famous
Hagia Sophia by
Isidore of Miletus and
Anthemius of Tralles. A quarter of Constantinople had been burnt down during a
civil war. Justinian had ordered a massacre at the
hippodrome, because his imperial antagonists who were affiliated to the former dynasty, had been organised as a chariot team. Thus, he had place for the creation of a huge park with a new cathedral in it, which was larger than any church built before as Hagia Sophia. He needed a kind of mass propaganda to justify the imperial violence against the public. In the kontakion "On earthquakes and conflagration" (H. 54), Romanos interpreted the Nika riot as a divine punishment, which followed in 532 earlier ones including earthquakes (526–529) and a famine (530): According to Johannes Koder the kontakion was celebrated the first time during Lenten period in 537, about ten months before the official inauguration of the new built Hagia Sophia on 27 December. with elements added later to the crossing in order to stabilise the dome construction
Changes in architecture and liturgy, and the introduction of the cherubikon at Veliko Tarnovo (Bulgaria) During the second half of the sixth century, there was a change in
Byzantine sacred architecture, because the altar used for the preparation of the
eucharist had been removed from the
bema. It was placed in a separated room called "
prothesis" (πρόθεσις). The separation of the prothesis where the bread was consecrated during a separated service called
proskomide, required a procession of the gifts at the beginning of the second eucharist part of the
divine liturgy. The troparion "Οἱ τὰ χερουβεὶμ", which was sung during the procession, was often ascribed to Emperor
Justin II, but the changes in sacred architecture were definitely traced back to his time by archaeologists. Concerning the
Hagia Sophia, which was constructed earlier, the procession was obviously within the church. It seems that the
cherubikon was a prototype of the Western chant genre
offertory. With this change came also the dramaturgy of the three doors in a choir screen before the
bema (sanctuary). They were closed and opened during the ceremony. Outside Constantinople these choir or icon screens of marble were later replaced by
iconostaseis.
Antonin, a Russian monk and pilgrim of
Novgorod, described the procession of choirs during Orthros and the divine liturgy, when he visited Constantinople in December 1200: When they sing Lauds at Hagia Sophia, they sing first in the narthex before the royal doors; then they enter to sing in the middle of the church; then the gates of Paradise are opened and they sing a third time before the altar. On Sundays and feastdays the Patriarch assists at Lauds and at the Liturgy; at this time he blesses the singers from gallery, and ceasing to sing, they proclaim the polychronia; then they begin to sing again as harmoniously and as sweetly as the angels, and they sing in this fashion until the Liturgy. After Lauds they put off their vestments and go out to receive the blessing of the Patriarch; then the preliminary lessons are read in the ambo; when these are over the Liturgy begins, and at the end of the service the chief priest recites the so-called prayer of the ambo within the sanctuary while the second priest recites in the church, beyond the ambo; when they have finished the prayer, both bless the people. Vespers are said in the same fashion, beginning at an early hour. ("another one") which is composed in a of (
D-Bk P. 21319)
Monastic reforms in Constantinople and Jerusalem By the end of the seventh century with the
reform of 692, the kontakion, Romanos' genre was overshadowed by a certain monastic type of
homiletic hymn, the
canon and its prominent role it played within the cathedral rite of the Patriarchate of Jerusalem. Essentially, the canon, as it is known since 8th century, is a hymnodic complex composed of nine odes that were originally related, at least in content, to the nine Biblical
canticles and to which they were related by means of corresponding poetic allusion or textual quotation (see the
section about the biblical odes). Out of the custom of canticle recitation, monastic reformers at Constantinople, Jerusalem and Mount Sinai developed a new homiletic genre whose verses in the complex ode meter were composed over a melodic model: the
heirmos. During the 7th century kanons at the Patriarchate of Jerusalem still consisted of the two or three odes throughout the year cycle, and often combined different
echoi. The form common today of nine or eight odes was introduced by composers within the school of
Andrew of Crete at
Mar Saba. The nine
odes of the
kanon were dissimilar by their metrum. Consequently, an entire
heirmos comprises nine independent melodies (eight, because the second
ode was often omitted outside Lenten period), which are united musically by the same echos and its melos, and sometimes even textually by references to the general theme of the liturgical occasion—especially in
aposticha (ἀpόστιχα) composed over a given
heirmos, but dedicated to a particular day of the
menaion. Until the 11th century, the common book of hymns was the tropologion and it had no other musical notation than a modal signature and combined different hymn genres like
troparion,
sticheron, and
canon. The earliest tropologion was already composed by
Severus of Antioch,
Paul of Edessa and Ioannes Psaltes at the Patriarchate of Antioch between 512 and 518. Their
tropologion has only survived in Syriac translation and revised by
Jacob of Edessa. The tropologion was continued by
Sophronius, Patriarch of Jerusalem, but especially by Andrew of Crete's contemporary
Germanus I, Patriarch of Constantinople who represented as a gifted hymnographer not only an own school, but he became also very eager to realise the purpose of this reform since 705, although its authority was questioned by iconoclast antagonists and only established in 787. After the octoechos reform of the Quinisext Council in 692, monks at Mar Saba continued the hymn project under Andrew's instruction, especially by his most gifted followers
John of Damascus and
Cosmas of Jerusalem. These various layers of the Hagiopolitan tropologion since the 5th century have mainly survived in a Georgian type of tropologion called "Iadgari" whose oldest copies can be dated back to the 9th century. Today the second ode is usually omitted (while the great kanon attributed to John of Damascus includes it), but medieval heirmologia rather testify the custom, that the extremely strict spirit of Moses' last prayer was especially recited during Lenten tide, when the number of odes was limited to three odes (
triodion), especially patriarch Germanus I contributed with many own compositions of the second ode. According to Alexandra Nikiforova only two of 64 canons composed by Germanus I are present in the current print editions, but manuscripts have transmitted his hymnographic heritage. == The monastic reform of the Stoudites and their notated chant books ==