Citole

An angel (English, c. 1310) plays what would probably have been called a citole

Citole, also spelled Sytole, Cytiole, Gytolle, etc. (probably a French diminutive form of cithara, and not from Latin cista, a box), an archaic musical instrument, similar and a distant ancestor of the modern guitar of which the exact form is uncertain. It is generally shown as a four-string instrument, with a body generally referred to as "holly-leaf" shaped.

The citole is frequently mentioned by poets of the 13th to the 15th centuries, and is found in Wycliffe's Bible (1360) in 2 Samuel vi. 5: "Harpis and sitols and tympane". The Authorized Version has psaltiries, and the Vulgate lyrae. It has been supposed to be[1] another name for the psaltery, a box-shaped instrument often seen in the illuminated missals of the Middle Ages, and is also liable to confusion with the gittern; whether the terms overlapped in medieval usage has been the subject of modern controversy.

British Museum citole

There is a surviving instrument from Warwick Castle that was made around 1290-1300, that is now in the British Museum's collection.[2] At some point, probably in the sixteenth century, it was converted into a violin-type instrument with a tall bridge, 'f'-holes and angled fingerboard; thus, the instrument's top is not representative of its original appearance.

View from the top. 
View from the side. 
1776 engraving by Sir J. Hawkins. 

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Citole.
Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica article Citole.

References


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