Mozarabic chant

E365283

Mozarabic chant is a liturgical plainchant tradition of the medieval Iberian Peninsula associated with the Old Spanish (Mozarabic) rite of the Catholic Church.

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All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Mozarabic chant canonical 1

Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Catholic liturgical chant
liturgical music
plainchant tradition
associatedWithCountry Portugal
Spain
associatedWithRegion Iberian Peninsula
codifiedUnderAuthority Archbishop of Toledo
surface form: Visigothic bishops of Toledo
contrastedWith Gregorian chant
declineCause adoption of Gregorian chant in Iberia
developedInCentury 7th century
8th century
geographicCenter Córdoba
Seville
Toledo
hasGenre antiphon
hymn
mass ordinary chant
mass proper chant
psalmody
responsory
historicalPeriod Middle Ages
influencedByCulture Roman Spain
surface form: Hispano-Roman culture

Visigothic architecture
surface form: Visigothic culture

early Islamic Iberia
language Latin
Mozarabic
liturgicalFunction Liturgy of the Hours
surface form: Divine Office

Mass
musicalForm plainchant
musicalTexture monophonic
notationType neumatic notation
preservedIn Toledan chant books
medieval liturgical manuscripts
relatedLiturgicalFamily Western plainchant
relatedTo Gregorian chant
religiousTradition Christianity
scholarlyField chant studies
musicology
styleCharacteristic free rhythm
modal melody
syllabic and melismatic settings
survivalContext limited liturgical use in Toledo
scholarly reconstruction
timePeriodOfUse pre-11th century Iberia
usedByChurch Catholic Church worldwide
surface form: Catholic Church
usedInRite Hispanic rite
Mozarabic Rite
surface form: Mozarabic rite

Old Spanish Rite
surface form: Old Spanish rite

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Ambrosian chant distinctFrom Mozarabic chant