2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1477-4658.2009.00634.x
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Scattered knives and dismembered song: cutlery, music and the rituals of dining

Abstract: One of the rarest sixteenth‐century objects going into the new Medieval and Renaissance Galleries has a dual identity: it is both a knife and a piece of music. On one side of its broad blade is a clear, perfectly notated musical setting of a blessing of the table, to be sung before a meal; on the other, a prayer giving thanks, to be sung when the meal has ended. This knife is usually presented as a single item. However, the inscription ‘.i.9[primus] tenor’ implies the existence of other voices, suggesting that… Show more

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