The Cambridge Songs (Carmina Cantabrigiensia) are a collection of Goliardicmedieval Latin poems found on ten leaves (ff. 432–41) of the Codex Cantabrigiensis (C, MS Gg. 5.35), now in Cambridge University Library.
History and content
The songs as they survive are copies made shortly before or after the Norman Conquest (1066). They may have been collected by an English scholar while travelling on the continent sometime after the last datable song (1039), and brought back with him to the church of Saint Augustine at Canterbury, where they were copied and where the Codex was long kept. The original manuscript was possibly lost in a fire that struck Saint Augustine's in 1168. The dialect of the few vernacular portions found in some of the songs is in the North Rheno-Franconian dialect of Old High German, suggesting that the Goliard or Goliards who composed them came from the north or middle Rhineland, probably the area between Trier, Cologne, and Xanten. It has been suggested that some of the songs originated in France or Italy. While most of the Cambridge Songs survive only in the Cambridge manuscript, a few are duplicated in a manuscript, W, from Wolfenbüttel.
The Cambridge Songs were long thought to be forty-nine in number, but a missing folio that contained twenty-seven more was discovered in Frankfurt and returned to the University Library in 1982. All these songs were copied in the same hand. Seven songs in a different hand, but occurring in the same Codex (after the first forty-nine) have since been identified as probably part of the collection. The total number of Cambridge Songs is now considered to be eighty-three. Some of the verses are neumed and it is assumed that the entire collection was to be sung. Four of the original forty-nine are called modi (melodies, namely sequences). The purpose of the collection has also eluded scholars. It was probably either a book of instruction on Latin verse, a songbook for wandering minstrels (the clerici vagabundi: vagabond clerics), or an anthology for private enjoyment. Classicist Keith Sidwell maintains that their purpose could have been "the repertoire of an entertainer who catered for the imperial court."[1]
List of songs
All the songs in the Cambridge codex (ff.432–44) are sometimes catalogued as "Lyrics in honour of the emperors of Germany in the first half of the XI century". Those songs from Nenia de mortuo Heinrico II imperatore to Gratulatio regine a morbo recreate directly praise the rulers of the Salian dynasty.
Carmen Christo dictum
Modus qui et Carelmanninc
Laudes Christo acte
Hymnus paschalis
Resurrectio
Ad Mariam
De epiphania
Rachel
De domo s. Cecilie Coloniensis
De s. Victore carmen Xantense
De Heinrico
Modus Ottinc
Nenia de mortuo Heinrico II imperatore
Nenia in funebrum pompam Heinrici II imperiatoris
Cantilena in Conradum II factum imperatorem
Cantilena in Heinricum III anno 1028 regem coronatum
Nenia de mortuo Conrado II imperatore
Gratulatio regine a morbo recreate
Cantilena in Heribertum archiepiscopum Coloniensis
Ecclesie Trevirensis nomine scripti ad Popponem archiepiscopum versus
De Willelmo
Modus Liebinc
De proterii filio
De Lantfrido et Corbone
Modus florum
Herigêr
De Iohanne abbate
Sacerdos et lupus
Alfrâd
Carmen estivum
De luscinio
Verna femine suspiria
Invitatio amice
Magister puero
Clericus et nonna
In languore perio
Lamentatio Neobule
Admonitio iuvenum
De musica
De mensa philosophie
De simphoniis et de littera Pithagore
Diapente et diatesseron
Umbram Hectoris videt Eneas
Hipsipile Archemorum puerum a serpente necatum plorat
Argie lamentatio maritum polinicum a fratre interfectum in venientis
Nisus omnigenti
Notes
^Sidwell 2012, p. 244
Sources
Strecker, Karl (ed.). Die Cambridger Lieder. MGH Scriptores rerum Germanicarum 40. Berlin, 1926. Scans available online from the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, HTML text from Bibliotheca Augustana.
Breul, Karl (ed.). The Cambridge Songs: A Goliard's Songbook of the Eleventh Century . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1915. Scans Available as PDF from Internet Archive. Reprinted: New York: AMS Press, 1973. Includes images from the manuscript.
Harrington, Karl Pomeroy; Joseph Michael Pucci; and Allison Goddard Elliott (1997). Medieval Latin. 2nd ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Anderson, Harald. The Manuscripts of Statius, Vol. I, pp. 58–59. Arlington: 2009, ISBN 1-4499-3192-8
Sidwell, K. (2012) Reading Medieval Latin, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, p. 244.
Further reading
Rigg, Arthur G. and Gernot R. Wieland. "A Canterbury classbook of the mid-eleventh century (the 'Cambridge Songs' manuscript)." Anglo-Saxon England 4 (1975): 113-30.
Ziolkowski, Jan (1994). The Cambridge songs (Carmina Cantabrigiensia). Garland Library of Medieval Literature, Series A vol. 66 (New York: Garland Pub.; ISBN 0-8240-2786-8). Reprinted (1998) as Medieval & Renaissance texts & studies v. 192 (Tempe, AZ: Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies; ISBN 0-86698-234-5).
External links
Text at Bibliotheca Augustana
Carmina selecta from IntraText
Paderborner Repertorium der deutschsprachigen Textüberlieferung des 8. bis 12. Jahrhunderts
"First performance in 1,000 years: 'lost' songs from the Middle Ages are brought back to life"