- zither") is a
plucked string instrument from Germany. It is a type of
cittern that has nine (sometimes ten)
steel strings in five courses. Different...
-
described its customs; he
mentions the
Portuguese people’s love for the
cittern and
other musical instruments. In 1649 was
published the
catalogue of the...
- (Mexico)
Chitrali sitar Chonguri Çifteli (Albania)
Citole Cittern (Early
Modern Britain) Bell
cittern Concheras Mandolina conchera or
concheras de mandolinas...
- teacher, who
flourished around 1600. He
taught and
wrote music for lute,
cittern, orpharion, bandora, viol, and voice. Very
little is
known about Robinson's...
- "re-introduced it in
modified form" in the 16th
century as the
cetra (
cittern in English), and it may have
influenced the
development of the
guitar as...
-
Scale Cittern Mid
Scale cittern Short Scale Cittern The two
Puerto Rican cuatro traditions Ibid. Ibid. Ibid.
Rockwell Sorts Out the
Differences See for...
-
early 20th centuries.
These variants all use
metal strings,
similar to the
cittern. The word "zither" is
derived from
Latin cythara,
which was used in this...
- (a wire-strung lute, metal-fretted, flat-backed, and festoon-shaped), a
cittern, a
treble viol (or violin, as time progressed),
sometimes an
early keyboard...
- Waldzither,
Portuguese guitar and the
Corsican Cetera, all
types of
cittern. The
cittern or
cithren (Fr. cistre, It. cetra, Ger. zitter, zither, Sp. cistro...
- fragments) all had ten
strings in five courses. The
English guitar is a type of
cittern that was
particularly po****r in
Europe from
around 1750 to 1850. The English...