-
follows the
hexameter and is
collected in a book
called sticherarion (Gr****: στιχηράριον). A
sticherarion is a book
containing the
stichera for the morning...
-
cantors sing
monodic chant out of the
traditional chant books such as the
Sticherarion,
which in fact
consisted of five books, and the Irmologion. Byzantine...
-
created in many
different traditions, but one
voluminous book
called sticherarion collected and do****ented them all by the use of
musical notation. Since...
-
Saint Sava's time, a
Serbian Prophliestologion (Cod. 313), a
Novgorod Sticherarion (Cod. 301), and Kiev
Irmologion (Cod. 308 with Old
Church Slavonic musical...
- here are
referred according to the
standard abridged version of the old
sticherarion (Troelsgård 2003). See the
Romanian version (Ms. 89m) of his heirmologion...
- the
sticherarion, the new
notated chant book of the reformers.
Until the 14th
century the book Octoechos, as far as it
belonged to the
Sticherarion, was...
-
evolution of this
notation in Gr****
monastic chant books like
those of the
sticherarion and the
heirmologion (Chartres
notation was
rather used on
Mount Athos...
- Heirmologion), and the
sticheraric melos (related to the
hymns of the
Sticherarion)
according to its
modal formulas and its tempo. In casual, unqualified...
- Raidestinos, his
approach was
based on the
recomposition of the late
medieval sticherarion as it was
described by
Manuel Chrysaphes in his
treatise about psaltic...
-
Anastasima (Resurrectional)
hymns of vespers,
Sunday matins and
other hymns.
Sticherarion (Gr****: Στιχηράριον) it
contains the
stichera for the
morning and evening...