- Symphonia
:"For the plant genus of the Clusiaceae, see
Symphonia (genus) . For the game, seeTales of Symphonia ."Symphonia (Gr. "συμφωνία") , a much discussed word, applied at different times (1) to the
bagpipe , (2) to thedrum , (3) to thehurdy-gurdy , and finally (4) to a kind ofclavichord . The sixth of the musical instruments enumerated in Dan. iii. 5, 10, 15, erroneously translated "dulcimer," in all probability refers to the bagpipe.Symphonia, signifying drum, occurs in the writings of
Isidore of Seville : "Tympanum est pellis vel corium ligno ex una parte extentum. Est enim pars media symphoniae in similitudinem cribri. Tympanum autem dictum quod medium est. Unde, et margaritum medium tympanum dicitur, et ipsum ut symphonia ad virgulam percutitur." The reference comparing the tympanum (kettle-drum) to half a pearl is borrowed from Pliny ("Nat. hist." IX. 35, 23).Symphonia or "Chifonie" was applied during the 13th and 14th centuries, in the Latin countries more especially, to the hurdy-gurdy. Symphonia is applied by
Praetorius to an instrument which he classed with the clavichord, spinet, regals and virginal, but without giving any clue to its distinctive characteristics.
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