The Ricreationi per monache of Suor Annalena Aldobrandini
The Ricreationi per monache of Suor Annalena Aldobrandini
Two newly discovered manuscripts in the Biblioteca Estense provide an insight into convent culture in late sixteenth-century Italy. They are the work of Annalena Aldobrandini, a nun at the convent of Santo Spirito in Florence. Annalena's manuscript contains eight veglie intended for performance during Carnevale and the Calendimaggio. Striking detail is preserved in the instructions for instruments, music, staging and costumes. Subject matter ranges from intellectual debates about the sciences and the arts to an appreciation of religious commitment and the difficulties of maintaining moral rectitude as part of monastic life. There is a wealth of practical information regarding music in a little-known dramatic context as well as a unique exposition of the Divine Office as a musical, as well as a religious, experience. The veglie are testament to the creativity of the nuns, showing how they, like the Medici outside, used spectacle as a method of community bonding. Moreover, because they were transmitted in manuscript rather than in print, they are unmediated by any masculine agency. The importance of this manuscript to our better understanding of early modern monastic women, their attitudes to enclosure, education and the performing arts, and their interactions with the secular world cannot be overestimated.
aldobrandini, ferrara, florence, medici, nuns, veglia
34-59
Stras, Laurie
b1021221-b68d-4a48-bf3c-890e5a63438a
February 2012
Stras, Laurie
b1021221-b68d-4a48-bf3c-890e5a63438a
Abstract
Two newly discovered manuscripts in the Biblioteca Estense provide an insight into convent culture in late sixteenth-century Italy. They are the work of Annalena Aldobrandini, a nun at the convent of Santo Spirito in Florence. Annalena's manuscript contains eight veglie intended for performance during Carnevale and the Calendimaggio. Striking detail is preserved in the instructions for instruments, music, staging and costumes. Subject matter ranges from intellectual debates about the sciences and the arts to an appreciation of religious commitment and the difficulties of maintaining moral rectitude as part of monastic life. There is a wealth of practical information regarding music in a little-known dramatic context as well as a unique exposition of the Divine Office as a musical, as well as a religious, experience. The veglie are testament to the creativity of the nuns, showing how they, like the Medici outside, used spectacle as a method of community bonding. Moreover, because they were transmitted in manuscript rather than in print, they are unmediated by any masculine agency. The importance of this manuscript to our better understanding of early modern monastic women, their attitudes to enclosure, education and the performing arts, and their interactions with the secular world cannot be overestimated.
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 January 2012
Published date: February 2012
Keywords:
aldobrandini, ferrara, florence, medici, nuns, veglia
Organisations:
Music
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 193877
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/193877
ISSN: 0269-1213
PURE UUID: 353e7769-4e74-4977-97f2-f3f934323076
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 21 Jul 2011 11:52
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:47
Export record
Altmetrics
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics