- Dankiyo
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Dankiyo (from ancient Greek: angion (Τὸ ἀγγεῖον)), is an ancient word from the text of Evliya Çelebi (17th century, Ottoman Era "The Laz's of Trebizond invented a bagpipe called a dankiyo..." [1] describing the Pontian tulum, a type of bagpipe which the ancient Greeks called an askaulos (ἀσκός askos – wine-skin, αὐλός aulos – flute). It consists of a lamb skin, a blow pipe, and the double reed chanter.
The dankiyo is played in small villages near Trabzon and Rize. A similar type of bagpipe possessing less holes can be found on the islands of Greece. Its use is also widespread in the prefecture of Macedonia in Northern Greece amongst Pontian Greek populations. What differentiates the dankiyo from other bagpipes is that the dankiyo does not use a separate pipe for the drone. Instead, the sound is created by two reeds in the chanter.
Contents
Etymology
Ancient Greek: To angion (Τὸ ἀγγεῖον) "the vessel". Can also be interpreted as "the container".[citation needed]
Parts of the instrument
The Pontian Touloum is made up of these parts:
- Aulos - flute : Wood & Reeds (ancient Greek instrument}
- Post - Skin (bag) : Animal Skin
- Fisaktir - blowpipe : Wood or Bone
- Kalame - Reeds: Reeds
Notes
References
- Özhan Öztürk (2005). Karadeniz: Ansiklopedik Sözlük. 2 Cilt. Heyamola Yayıncılık. İstanbul. ISBN 975-6121-00-9
Greek musical instruments String Instruments
Woodwind instruments Exposed: Askomandoura, Dankiyo, Gaida, Tsampouna
End-blown: Floghera, Karamuza, Klarino, Lalitsa, Mantura, SouravliDrum Instruments See also Turkish musical instruments String instruments: █ Bowed instruments: Kemençe • Yaylı tanbur • Rebab • Kabak kemane • Sine kemanı
█ Plucked instruments: Kanun • Çeng • Tanbur (Turkish) • Ud • Cümbüş • Ahenk • Saz • Baglama • Komuz • Shahrud • Rud • Lavta • Mugni█ Struck instruments: SanturWoodwind instruments █ Exposed: Zurna • Tulum • Karkm • Dankiyo • Gaida • Düdük • Çifte █ End-blown: Ney • Ney (Turkish) • Kaval • Sipsi • Dilli Kaval • Dilli ney • Mey • Taragot • Dilli düdük • Kargı DüdükPercussion instruments See also Categories:- Bagpipes
- Greek musical instruments
- Musical instruments of Georgia (country)
- Pontus
- Trabzon
- Turkish musical instruments
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