Also known as Jean Teinturier
compositeur et théoricien de la musique
Top works
via Open Library + Wikidata
Tags
1 object attributed to Johannes Tinctoris, held across European museums, libraries & archives · via Europeana
Johannes Tinctoris, latinisation de Jehan le Taintenier ou Jean Teinturier, ou Jean de Vaerwere (né vers 1435 à Nivelles, mort en 1511) est un compositeur, musicien et théoricien de la musique brabançon de l'École franco-flamande. Auteur du premier dictionnaire de termes musicaux, son œuvre la plus célèbre en tant que compositeur est une messe qui développe le motif musical d'une chanson souvent utilisée à l'époque dans des compositions polyphoniques : L'Homme armé (la Missa "Cunctorum plasmator summus").
Abstract from DBpedia / Wikipedia · CC BY-SA
Jehan le Taintenier or Jean Teinturier (Latinised as Johannes Tinctoris; also Jean de Vaerwere; c. 1435 – 1511) was a Renaissance music theorist and composer from the Low Countries. Up to his time, he is perhaps the most significant European writer on music since Guido of Arezzo. He is known to have studied in Orléans, and to have been master of the choir there; he also may have been director of choirboys at Chartres. Because he was paid through the office of petites vicars at Cambrai Cathedral
5 total works indexed
· 2012 · cited 64,962x
· 2020 · cited 34,533x
· 2020 · cited 22,659x
· 1997 · cited 14,355x
· 2011 · cited 14,273x
via Crossref · CC0
via Wikiquote · CC BY-SA
via Wikidata · CC0
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).