This book focuses on the compilation of the different practices of Eastern Orthodox Chant, looking at the subject through various languages, practices, and liturgical books and letters. The subject of this book is also analysed through newly found, unique material, to provide the entire history of Eastern Orthodox Chant, from the ninth to the nineteenth centuries and approached through a number of different disciplines.
The book consists of sixteen topics, grouped in four parts: Studies on Genre, Studies on Liturgical Books, Studies on Distinguished Men of Letters, and Studies on Bulgarian Orthodox Church Chant. The aim of the book is to present the Eastern chant as a phase in the evolution of Mediterranean art, which is the cradle of Graeco-Roman heritage. This complex study brings in a variety of sources to show the purpose of Eastern Orthodox Chant as strengthening the Christian faith during the Middle Ages and the revival of Balkan nationalism in the nineteenth century.
This book will appeal to students and scholars alike, interested in liturgical musical books, liturgy, and chant repertory. Likewise, it will be of interest to those engaged in medieval and early modern history, music, and culture.
Studies on Genre
- Psalm 140: Versions and Redactions
- The Akathistos Once Again
- The Byzantine-Slavic Sanctus: Notes on Its Liturgical Context
- The Tropologion: Sources and Identifications
- The Tropologion Vaticanus Graecus 771
- The Tropologion Vaticanus Graecus 2008
- The Notated Repertory in the Early Oktoechoi Revisited
- Studying the Oktoechos: From the Oktoechos to the Anastasimatarion
- St. Cyril and St. Methodius: In Looking for the Roots of Slavic Orthodox Church Chant
- Metropolitan Theoleptos of Philadelphia: Between Tradition and Innovation
- Hieromonk Evstatie of Putna: The Putna Music School Revisited
- Metropolitan Serafim of Bosnia: New Findings in Graeco-Slavic Contacts in Balkan Orthodox Church Chant
- Melismatic Chants Related to Bulgarian Church Chant up to the Fifteenth Century
- Indications of Musical Performance from the Fifteenth Century
- "Bulgarian" Chants in Musical Manuscripts Revisited
- The Transition from Monophonic to Polyphonic Church Music: The Case of Bulgaria
Studies on Liturgical Books
Studies on Distinguished Men of Letters
Studies on Bulgarian Orthodox Church Chant
Bibliography
Biography
Svetlana Kujumdzieva, Dr. of Sciences, is Professor of Medieval Music at the National Musical Academy "Prof. Pancho Vladigerov" and Theological Faculty of the Sofia State University "St. Clement of Ohrid"; academician at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. She has published 12 monographs and more than 150 articles in Bulgaria, Austria, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, USA, etc. Kujumdzieva was an associate member of the John W. Kluge Center at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., the Resource Center for Medieval Slavic Studies at the Ohio State University in Columbus, OH, St. John's College, Oxford, GB, etc. She is a member of many national and international scientific organizations.