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Pope Gregory I
- In the fourth century, Pope Sylvester I was said to have inaugurated the first Schola Cantorum, but it was Pope Gregory I who established the school on a firm basis and endowed it.
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When Pope Gregory I was elected pope of the Roman Catholic Church in 590, he founded the Schola Cantorum. This was the school of singers which established the authoritative delivery of the musical liturgy for all of Europe. [ 24 ]
According to tradition, the schola cantorum was established by Pope Sylvester I (d. 335) and was reorganized by Pope Gregory I (d. 604), but the first written mention of it dates from the 8th century.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
The first documentary evidence of a separate group of singers in Rome is found in the Vita of Pope Sergius I (687 – 701) in the Liber pontificalis. It is said there that he came to Rome during the reign of Pope Adeodatus II (672 – 676) and was taken into the Roman clergy.
Oct 24, 2024 · An educational institution founded in Paris in 1894 by d'Indy, Charles Bordes, and the organist Alexandre Guilmant to foster the continuation of the church music tradition. The curriculum had a strong antiquarian and musicological bias, encouraging the study of late Baroque and early Classical works, Gregorian chant, and Renaissance polyphony.
Mar 15, 2019 · Schola Cantorum is Oxford University’s longest-running chamber choir, and one of the most long-established and widely known chamber choirs in the UK. It was founded in 1960 by the Hungarian dissident László Heltay as the Collegium Musicum Oxoniense.
Oct 23, 2015 · Vincent d’Indy, one of the founders of the Paris Schola Cantorum. My research topic for our second paper assignment is the Schola Cantorum, founded in Paris by Vincent d’Indy and two colleagues.
In 1894 Bordes, along with the organist Alexandre Guilmant and the composer Vincent d’Indy, founded in Paris the Schola Cantorum, a society that in 1896 became a school for church music with Bordes as professor. Its publication, La Tribune de St. Gervais (1895), became the main organ of French musicology.