In the late nineteenth century, Walter Frere and the
Solesmes monks were the first to refer to these manuscripts as the "Winchester Troper." Despite the implications of the name, the manuscripts are not identical, not part of a set (such as Volume 1 and Volume 2), and contain liturgical genres other than
tropes. The term "Winchester Troper" can refer to either manuscript or to the repertory of the two as a collective.
Dating The dating of the two manuscripts has been subject of debate. The core repertory of Corpus 473 was likely copied in the 1020s-1030s. Bodley 775 was possibly copied in the 1050s. However, scholars disagree about the dating of the possible exemplars on which Bodley 775 was based. Perhaps Bodley 775 was copied directly from a now lost exemplar dating from the late 970s or 980s. Therefore, the manuscript is retrospective because it reflects practices different than those at the time it was copied. On the other hand, Bodley 775 may have been copied from two preexisting manuscripts: a late tenth-century gradual and a troper of a possibly later date. This hypothesis considers both the retrospective characteristics of Bodley 775 and its status as a later manuscript than Corpus 473. Bodley 775 was not modeled after Corpus 473. Each manuscript contains additional chants copied by scribes throughout the eleventh century. Although the core of each manuscript reflects a connection to Northern France, the supplementary chants copied by scribes in the latter half of the eleventh century exhibit a very strong Norman influence. In 1066,
William, Duke of Normandy,
conquered England, strengthening the cultural connection between northern France and England. As a result, chant in England began to reflect this new political reality. This influence is especially strong in the later
sequences of the Winchester Troper; increasing Norman influence did not impact the Alleluia series. Thus, while the core of each manuscript dates to
Anglo-Saxon England, they also contain some post-Conquest music. College 473. Pictured is folio 3 v., which contains Alleluias for Epiphany,
Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary, and the Easter season.
Physical description Corpus 473 contains 199 folios of
parchment with dimensions of 140/145 x 90/93 mm. The final folio dates to the sixteenth century and is not original to the manuscript. The complete manuscript was rebound and conserved in 2004. It is written mostly in dark brown ink with colored capitals; the handwriting is
Caroline minuscule. Corpus 473 may have been used by the
succentor or cantor of the Old Minster and Bodley 775 by its
cantor. The first quire (ff. 1-7v, col. 1 seven) is a later eleventh-century addition and is misbound, with the original sequence of leaves being 1-3, 5, 6, 4, 7. The remainder of the book is organized in quires of 8, with half sheets appearing in quires 3, 12, 14, 16, 20 and 23. It is written in black and brown ink with red
rubrics and colored initials. Some
proses were subsequently erased and cannot be recovered. Although
Wulfstan the Cantor was once thought to have a direct role in the copying of these manuscripts (and perhaps even composing the organa of Corpus 473), more recent dating makes this impossible because the manuscripts are now believed to have been copied after Wulfstan's death. The organa were possibly composed by several people at Winchester and represented the best attempts at improvised polyphony that were deemed worthy of memory. == Overview of contents ==