
thumb|Shepherd playing the shawm (1646), by Jan Baptist Wolfaerts|Jan Baptist Wolffort (Dutch [[Rijksmuseum)]]
via Wikipedia infobox
thumb|Shepherd playing the shawm (1646), by Jan Baptist Wolfaerts|Jan Baptist Wolffort (Dutch [[Rijksmuseum)]]
The shawm () is a conical bore, double-reed woodwind instrument made in Europe from the 13th or possibly 12th century to the present day. It achieved its peak of popularity during the medieval and Renaissance periods, after which it was gradually eclipsed by the oboe family of descendant instruments in classical music. It is likely to have come to Western Europe from the Eastern Mediterranean around the time of the Crusades. Double-reed instruments similar to the shawm were long present in Southern Europe and the East, for instance the ancient Greek, and later Byzantine aulos, the closely related sorna and zurna, and the Armenian duduk.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).