Bartholomäus Aich |
| Also known as |
- Bartholomaus Aich
Bartholomäus Aich was a South-German organist and composer in the 17th century. Little is known about his life: originally from the village of Uttenweiler near Biberach an der Riß in Upper Swabia, he was the organist of the Franciscan abbey of Lindau/Lake Constance.
His only surviving work is the musical-dramatic festival play Armamentarium comicum amoris et honoris, written on the occasion of the wedding of Count Maximilian Willibald of Waldburg-Wolfegg and Clara Isabella Princess of Aarschot and Arenberg that took place in Lindau on December 6th, 1648. Armamentarium combined the Jesuit theatre tradition with the Italian monody of the early Baroque music and was performed by pupils of the Lindau Jesuit college on December 8th, 1648. It is one of the earliest surviving examples of an opera work performed in Germany.
The libretto (by an unknown author) is highly allegorical and focussed on the heraldic symbols that the combined coat of arms of the bridal couple would contain....
With the exception of Wikipedia summaries and some images the
content on this page is typically distributed under
the Creative Commons
Attribution license or Public Domain.
The original description for this topic was automatically generated from the Wikipedia article "Bartholomäus Aich" licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
| Gallery | add an image |
Recent Discussions about Bartholomäus Aich
no recent discussions

