- A
kitharode (Latinized citharode) (Ancient Gr****: κιθαρῳδός [kitʰarɔː'dós] and κιτηαρῳδός; Latin: citharoedus) or citharist, was a
classical Gr**** professional...
- lyre, the
cithara was
primarily used by
professional musicians,
called kitharodes. In
modern Gr****, the word
kithara has come to mean "guitar", a word which...
-
Arion (/əˈraɪən/; ‹See Tfd›Gr****: Ἀρίων) was a
kitharode in
ancient Greece, a
Dionysiac poet
credited with
inventing the dithyramb. The
islanders of ****s...
- the
establishment of the
choral singing of a
stasimon to the
celebrated kitharode Arion of Hermione.
Pierre Chantraine,
Dictionnaire étymologique de la...
-
sources do not
specifically confirm this categorisation.
Aoidos aulos bard
kitharode Homeridae Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Rhapsodist" . Encyclopædia Britannica...
- Jan
Jeroen (baritone); Albou, Frédéric (b****-baritone); Tessé, Benoît (
kitharode); Berland,
Nathalie (aulete) et al. (Ensemble Kérylos) (2016). D'Euripide...
- St****inopoulos),
liberal pundit and
blogger Alypius composer Terpander poet and
kitharode Rita
Abatzi musician Maurice Abravanel conductor Haris Alexiou singer...
- lyre, the
kithara was
primarily used by
professional musicians,
called kitharodes. The kithara's
origins are
likely Anatolian. Po****r in the
eastern Aegean...
-
never possible for
ancient Gr****s musicians.
Although note that some
kitharodes were
musically experimental and inventive, and
sought musical novelty...
-
battleship Lemnos's coat of arms. It
depicts the lyra of the
ancient poet and
kitharode Arion and
dolphins in waves. "HS Limnos". ****enicnavy.gr.
Retrieved 6...