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Discant geig

ALTERNATE NAME(S)
  • Kit
  • Dancing master's fiddle
  • Pochette
  • Discant geige
Date1691
Place MadeAugsburg, Germany, Europe
Serial No.none
SignedWritten in black ink on paper label (old German script): MathiasWorlein / AugspurgAo·i·6·9i·

DescriptionThis is a small dancing master's fiddle that is similar to instruments appearing in sixteenth and early seventeenth century iconography, and referred to as a "discant Geig ein quart höher" [treble violin a quarter higher] in Michael Praetorius' Syntagma Musicam De Organographia, 1619. The back, sides, and neck are carved from one piece of wood, much as medieval stringed instruments often had been.

Top: one-piece, quarter-cut softwood: wide grain; wood pin through top into body
Back, sides, neck, and head: one piece fruitwood, possibly cherry; head terminates in scroll; festooned outline
Purfling: on top only
Arching: high with deep recurve
Varnish: dark orange brown
Fingerboard: black-painted hardwood; wedge-shaped; notch and thinning at neck neel position; scratched line under paint marking position of fifth
Nut: ebony
Tailpiece: black-stained fruitwood, possibly cherry, with most of stain removed; tailgut passes through holes drilled in face
Tailgut: plain gut
Pegs: four boxwood with with festooned, undercut heads and integral pins; later
Saddle: dark brown hardwood; finished with same varnish as body
Endpin: integral with body
Soundholes: f-holes with strongly curved, tapered wings
No linings, top or bottom blocks
Bassbar with low, triangular profile
DimensionsTotal kleine geige length: 460 mm
Kleine geige length without endpin: 454 mm
Top length: 241 mm
Upper bout width: 88 mm
Center bout width: 70 mm
Lower bout width: 112 mm
Rib height: 14-16 mm
Stop length: 140 mm
Vibrating string length: 271 mm
Neck length (bottom of nut to ribs): 131 mm

ProvenancePreviously owned by Baron Armand van Zuylen, Liege, Belgium.
Purchased jointly by Marianne Wurlitzer (NY) and Charles Beare (London) at auction held at Christie, Manson & Woods Ltd., London, March 16, 1988, lot #191
Purchased in 1989 from Wurlitzer-Bruck, New York, New York.
Published ReferencesPictured and described in sales catalog, "Important Musical Instruments including the van Zuylen Collection of early instruments," Christie's (London: March 16, 1988), lot 191, p. 43.

"It's Been an Incredible Decade . . . Museum Makes Important Acquisitions Again in 1989," Shrine to Music Museum Newsletter 17, No. 2 (January 1990), p. 7.

"1989 Acquisitions at USD Music Museum," Newsletter of the American Musical Instrument Society 19, No. 1 (February 1990), p. 16.
Credit LineArne B. and Jeanne F. Larson Fund, 1989
Object number04651
On View
Not on view
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