Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
- 2020 (3) (entfernen)
Dokumenttyp
- Teil eines Buches (Kapitel) (3) (entfernen)
Gehört zur Bibliographie
- nein (3) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- Badische Landesbibliothek (2)
- Bibliothekskatalog (1)
- Hofmusik (1)
- Höfische Kultur (1)
- Kloster Salem (1)
- Kloster Sankt Peter im Schwarzwald (1)
- Liturgische Handschrift (1)
- Mittelalter (1)
- Quelle (1)
- Rastatt (1)
- Schwein (1)
- Schweinemast (1)
- Waldweide (1)
Throughout the Middle Ages and well into the early
modern period domestic pigs were driven into the
forest in autumn to fatten them with acorns and
beechnuts. During the rest of the year, they mostly
had to look after themselves for food from waste
and in the pastures. The animals were more like
wild boars than modern pigs. Only a small part
of the mast rights was sold freely. Far more often
there were a multitude of precise regulations for
autumn fattening "according to old custom" as to
who was allowed to bring how many animals into
which forests at what price. The unfree farmers
had the right to drive their pigs into the forests
of their noble or clerical masters, some of them
even tax-free. These pigs were a central part of
the subsistence economy, as they constituted a
reliable source of food in winter with relatively little
effort and regardless of the success of the grain
harvest.
lt was based on the concept of the "Notdurft", the
idea that every household had the right to receive
the supplies necessary for a lifestyle befitting one's
rank - but nothing more. These rules reflected the
social structures: interdependencies within the
framework of the manorial system and an accepted
social inequality that was softened and
Flirting with the forbidden?
(2020)
In an oft-quoted section of his Apology, written in 1125 at the request of his friend William of St Thierry, Bernard of Clairvaux mounts a strenous attack on Cluniae excesses in food, clothing, and buildings, ridiculing his rival order's large churches and their sumptuous paintings that catch the worshipper's eye and, as Bernard laments, dry up his devotion. Fiant haec ad honorem Dei - 'You might say', Bernard concedes, if only as a rhetorical gesture, 'these things are all to the honour of God; nevertheless, just as the pagan poet Persius inquired of his fellow pagans, I as a monk ask my fellow monks: "Tell me, oh pontiffs (as he said), what is gold doing in the sanctuary?" I say (folowwing the meaning, not the meter): "Tell me, poor men, if you really are poor: what is gold doing in the sanctuary?" - in sancto quid facit aurum?'
Nadeln im Heuhaufen
(2020)
Musikalien, insbesondere die für Aufführungen notwendigen Stimmen, waren in der
Vergangenheit in erster Linie Gebrauchsgegenstände, die nach ihrer praktischen Verwendung vielfach als nicht sammel- oder archivwürdig angesehen, sondern oft makuliert oder ganz vernichtet wurden. Anders verhielt es sich mit den Libretti: Sie waren
Sammelobjekte von Privatleuten, fanden aber auch Eingang in höfische Bibliotheken.
Häufig sind schon Einzelexemplare prachtvoll und aufwendig gebunden, nicht selten
aber in Sammelbänden buchbinderisch zusammengefasst.
Der Verlust von fast allen musikalischen Quellen ist für den Fall der Hofmusik in
Rastatt zu beklagen. Nach der Zerstörung Baden-Badens im Pfälzischen Erbfolgekrieg
hatte Markgraf Ludwig Wilhelm hier ein neues Schloss errichten lassen. Mit dem
Rastatter Frieden von 1715 entfaltete sich in der Folge das höfische Leben, zu dem auch
eine bedeutende Hofkapelle zählte. Rastatt blieb bis zum Aussterben der Linie im Jahre
1771 für gut ein halbes Jahrhundert Residenz der katholischen Markgrafen von Baden-Baden.