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Save The_Knights_of_the_Lute._Journal_of_the For Later Journal of the Lute Society of America
Volume XXXVII 2004
Douglas Alton Smith, Eprror
Michael Miranda, Associate Eprror
John Cassidy, Westbury, New York, Cory Eprror
Consutrinc Eprrors
Paul Beier, Scuole Civiche di Milano
Tim Crawford, Goldsmiths College, University of London
Eprroria. Boarb
Dinko Fabris, Universita di Basilicata Stewart McCoy, Nottingham
and Conservatorio N. Piccinini,Bari Arthur Ness, Boston
Franco Pavan, Conservatorio N. Piecinini, Bari John Griffiths, University of Melbourne
Klaus Martius, Germanisches National- Grant Tomlinson, Vancouver, BC
museum, Nuremberg
Contents
Tue KNIGHTS OF THE LUTE
Mariagrazia Carlone
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ii
Foreworp 1
I. BroGrarrires
L.a Lorenzino TRAceTTr
Lact Eques Arar 8
Laz TreyreruM vare 13
1.4.3 Que GiovaNe, CHE SONA DI LAUTO 16
Lag Lorentzian 22
Las Domus Laurentrus Tracierrus Romanus 26
Le Orner Musicians wrrtt THE NAME LORENZINO
L.p.1 Lorenzino Fiamminco (LORENZO ZEVvERO) 29
1.8.2 LoreNnziNo Booenese (LORENZO Lopt) 32
Lc ViNCENZO PINTI
Le. Vincentius Prvtus Cives Romanus 42
L.¢.2 NEC FIDIBUS QUISQUAM MELIOR 48
1.C.3 OB FIDEI CANDOREM ... LONGE CONSPICUO 50
L.c.4 Lusrtantaz Curisti Minitiaz Eques 55
T.Documents AND Lrrerany Texts 56
ILA SOURCES RELATING TO MUSICIANS NAMED “LORENZINO” 56
IL.b SouRcES RELATING TO VINCENZO PINT 82
Genzatocicat. TREES 96
BioioGrapety 105
ISSN 0076-1526The Knights of the Lute
By MariaGrazia CaRLONE.
Foreword!
orenzino was one of the most appreciated virtuosi, composers and
lute instructors of the 16th century. Celebrated in poetry and called
“divine,” he was considered by his contemporaries to be one of the
leading lutenists of his day. His works have come to us through numerous
manuscripts and prints produced in Italy and other European countries
between the 1580s and the middle of the following century. In contrast,
until recently, vety little was known about him.? In the following account,
I will briefly outline the state of Lorenzino studies as it was evolving up to
the time that I took up my own research.’
One of the most pressing issues from the beginning has been
to determine if Lorenzino could be identified with the equally famous
and similarly enigmatic “Knight of the Lute,” mentioned in a few well-
known sources and the subject of a number of musical attributions. This
identification was first tentatively suggested by Pietro Canal in 1879.4 He
In the text of this article, numbers, labels and acranyms have been used in reference to documents and
Literary texts, musical sources and works, and bibliographic citations. The are defined in Sections IT (ha
and I1.b), HT (U1Lb: musical sources, Hl.c: works) and in the Bibliography. Section III, devoted to the
musical sources, will appear in a subsequent issue of this Journal,
2 Until the last few decades most of what was known about Lorenzinos biography was brought to
light by three musicological pioneers who sified through the archives of Mantua, Ferrara and Parma
in the lace 19th and carly 20th centuries in search of documents relating to the musical life of those
cities: Pietro Canal, Luigi Francesco Valdrighi and Nescore Pelicelli (CANAL 1879, VALDRIGHI
1883, PELICELLI 1932). According to Antonino Bertolotti, Canal based his work “on documents
furnished by Mr. Ferrato, archivist in Mantua’ (BERTOLOTTI 1890: 3). Unfortunately, these
scholars almost never indicated with precision details about the sources they cited, chus making it
difficule vo verify their findings.
> “The present article is an expansion of my PAD dissertation at the University of Pavia (CARLONE
2005). While working on my dissertation, I publicized various aspects of my research in papers
delivered ar seminars and conferences: University of Pavia, Musicology Faculey (Cremona), November
14, 2002; Central Renaissance Conference, University of Kansas, Lawrence, September 19-20, 2003;
Renaissance Society Annual Meeting, New York, April 1-3, 2004; Lute Society of America Lute
Festival 2004, Cleveland, June 27-July 2, 2004. A text based on these papers (CARLONE 2003) was
published on the Internet, “Lorenzino and the Knight of the Lute: A Mystery Unveiled” (hetp://www.
musico.it/Mariagraria_Carlone/Lorenzino and the Knight.him). Following the publication of this
text and of my dissertation in 2005, some of my research was re-examined and put into question by
Marco Pesci (PESCI 2003 [2004] and PESCI 2005 [2007]). I respond to his criticism in the course
of the present article
JLSA XXXVII (2004)
© 2009, The Lute Society of America2 JourNat or tur Lure Socrery or AmERICA
based it on textual evidence in the Thesaurus Harmonicus of Jean Baptiste
Besard, a vast anthology of lute music published in Cologne in 1603 and
the largest surviving source of Lorenzino’s music. Lorenzino’s name appears
in a prominent position throughout the work and on the title page, which
can be translated roughly as: Harmonic Treasure of the divine Lorenzino of
Rome, as well as {of other] most valid musicians who in this century excel in
various parts of the world, containing the choicest compositions for lute of every
hind?
In the preface to his Thesaurus, Besard described “this Divine author
Lorenzino of Rome” (hie Divinus ille artifex Laurencinus Romanus) as his
“former teacher” (instructor quondam meus). Moreover, the last seven pages
of the Thesaurus contain a treatise on lute playing, De modo in testudine
sindendi libellus, chat reveals, according to Besard, the teachings of Lorenzino:
“Here you have, collected into a number of rules that follow, that which I
have been able to observe from Lorenzino and others here and there, and
finally from practice.” When Besard published two other lute anthologies
in Augsburg in 1617 (Novus Partus and Isagoge in Artem testudinariam),
he again inserted the lute treatise: in the first itis still in Latin but slightly
amplified and endowed with a new title; in the second, itis issued in German
uanslation.’ In both of these books Besard claims to have traveled in Italy.’
* CANAL 1879: 45, Canal asks, “could this Lerensino dal lito [...] be the same as the one mentioned
by Pietro della Valle [. ..] named Cavaliere del liuto? But afver having posed the thorny ques
sidesteps the issue: “But let us leave this aside and come to those few items [about Lorenzino] that are
offered by the Mantuan archives.” He then cites, as the only bibliographical references known to him,
WALTHER 1732 and MENDEL-REISSMANN 1870-1879. Since neither of these authors discusses
a possible identification of Lorenzino with the Canaliere del Liuto, ic would seem that the hypothesis
originates wich Canal. In fact, he observes that Walther and Mendel based themselves exclusively on
the Theurus Harmonicas of Jean Baptiste Besard.
> Therauru Harmonicus divini Laurencini Romani, nee non pracitantisimoram rusicorum, qui hoc se-
culo in diversi orbis partibus excellant, selectisima ommis generis cantus in testudine modulamina continens
(Section III.b: BESARD 1, frontispiece).
§ “Ex Laurencini, & aliocum passim observacione, ac ipso tandem usu annotare potui, sequentibus
aliquot regulis comprchensum etiam sic habes.”
7 The new Latin ttle reads: Ad artem testudinit, brevi cioague magnum fastidivom capescendamm, brevis et
amethodtica instiwuio, The treatise enjoyed considerable success. Besides its appearance in the three books
published by Besard, it appeared in another printed work and ovo manuscripts, all non-Lealian sources.
Ie was translated into English, perhaps by the celebraced lutenist John Dowland, with the title “Nec-
essarie observations belonging to the lute, and luce playing,” published by Dowland’s son Robert in
Varietie of Lue Lesons, London, 1610. Itappeared in Latin in the manuscript of Besard’ fiend Philipp
Hainhoffer (Section III.b: WOLFENBUTTEL). Finally, it appeared in another German translation
in a manuscript of around 1630 (Nuremberg, Bibliothele des Germanischen National Museums, Ms.
3148/M.260). As Dinko Fabris comments (FABRIS 1997: 36-37), it would have been interesting to
compare the instructions transmitted by Besard with the Instruct sradens eiusmodi Tabellatura intel-
ligentiam, quod tactum Teitudinis which, together with a composition by the “Cavaliero maestro di
Roma,” was included in the now lost manuscripr of Sorau (Section IIL.b: ZARY).Tae Knicuts oF THE Lure
THESAVRVS HARMONICVS
DIVINI
LAVRENCINI
ROMAND NEC NON PRAE
STANTISSIMORVM MVSICORVM-
QVI HOC SECVLOINDIVERSIS ORBIS
PARTIBVS EXCELLVNT, SELECTISSIMA
OMNIS GENERIS CANTVS IN TESTV-
DINE MODVLAMINA CONTINENS.
OvYM PLANE, ET LONGE EXCELLENS OFS, IN GRATIAM LL
rales bas frcalvatisexcultorsm, quantaferipetnis dizentis, methodoy c fail tate ex varie
‘pforam Authoriem feriptis (quorum nominsp rafatone pagina recenfentur) in
oc volamen congeftum,csdecem libris(quorum guslsbet peenbare mot~
lodte genus complectitur ) ditifum, Per
JOANNEM BAPTISTAM BESARDVM VESONTINVM, ARTIVM
craliam excultovem, & Mulices periilfimam.
Additus eft Operis extremitati de modoin teftudine studendilibellus, in gratiam
udiorum ab eodem uthore conteriptus
QU Satyres Mafis praferty & apelin artes
Sper, 6 bamane wl rations babe.
YG SAIONSLY
COLONIA AGRIPPINA,
Excudebat Gerardus Greuenbruch , famptibus ! uthoris
‘Anao redemptioais M. DCLT.
Cum gratia, & priuslegio Sac. Caf. Matest.addecennium.
Figure 1 — J.B. Besard, Thesaurus Harmonicus, frontispiece4 Journat oF THE LUTE Society OF AMERICA
‘Thus it would seem that Besard, presumably during his trip to Italy, studied
with the great Lorenzino in person.
‘Wedo know that Besard was indeed in Italy for an unspecified period
between 1587 and 1592, although it has not been possible to ascertain if
he actually took lessons from the Roman lutenist during that period. His
claim could be false, accountable to a desire to augment his prestige. Besard,
in fact, pursued a career as lute instructor to young German noblemen and
aspired to a post at one of the German courts.” But a confirmation, albeit
an indirect one, of his claim to have personally studied with Lorenzino can
be inferred from the great quantity of music by Lorenzino published by
Besard in his Thesaurus, much of which is found only in this source. Besard
might have obtained these pieces through direct contact with the maestro,
although one cannot exclude that he may have procured them through a
different route.
Ifit could be established that Besard did know Lorenzino personally,
then the information he transmits would acquire greater credibility,
particularly the claim stated in one of the poems included at the beginning
ofthe Thesaurus Harmonicus," that Lorenzino was. knight (“.. qui propter
insignem testudinis experientiam eques Auratus Romae fieri promeruit”),
which is the basis for Canal’s suggestion that Lorenzino was the Knight of the
Lute. Canal’s hypothesis is reinforced by evidence of musical attribution in
other sources. Two manuscripts, one of which preceded Besard’s Thesaurus,
contain works that describe Lorenzino as a knight: a fantasy by “M[esser?]
Lorenzino Romanese [ ... ] Kowalis [=Knight] Lorentio” and a “Pracambulum
equitis aur{ati] Laurencini civis Romani.”' Furthermore, there are four
instances in which a work attributed to Lorenzino in one source is ascribed
to the Knight in another.'? Nevertheless, there is evidence that contradicts
the claim, even within Thesaurus Harmonicus itself. In the book's preface
there is a list of composers whose works are contained in the volume.!?
“Laurencinus Romanus” and “Eques Romanus” (that is, “Roman Knight”)
are listed separately, and Besard ascribes six musical works to the Roman
Knight. Why should he have done this if we are dealing with a single
8 “Ego vero mutltos in Italia [..] vidi” Novus Partus £ 2v; ‘so hab ich auch in Italia gesehen” Leagoge f
Bijy. See KIRALY 1995: p. 69 note 5.
° KIRALY 1995: 62,
" See Section [.a.1
"The first manuscript (Section IIb: DONAUESCHINGEN) was presumably compiled between
circa 1580 and 1595; the second (Section III.b: WOLFENBUTTEL) was produced for Philipp Hain-
hofer around 1603-1604.
* See Section IIl.c: 6, 81, 82, 83.
© “Nomina Authorum qui passim in hoc volumine occurrant.”Tie Kurcirts or tae Lure 5
musician? A similar procedure occurs in four other musical sources, which
include separate music by both Lorenzino and the Knight.'*
Another problem concems Lorenzino’s provenance. As has already
been mentioned, he was identified by Besard as a “citizen of Rome.” The
connection with Rome is corroborated by five other sources.!> This fact
would seem to negate the possibility of identifying the celebrated lutenist
with acertain “Lorenzino Bolognese” cited in two letters written in 1585 and
1586 (reported by Pietro Canal), according to one of which he had been a
student of the famous lutenist Fabrizio Dentice in Parma. These documents
defined Lorenzino Bolognese simply as a “musician,” singer and viol player,
and notasa lutenist. In fact, Canal did not make the identification between,
the Roman Lorenzino and “Lorenzino Bolognese,” nor was this suggestion
ever taken into consideration until recently.'° To add to the confusion, there
were other lutenists named Lorenzino or Lorenzo in this period.'” A certain
“Lorenzo del Leuto detto Perla,” possibly related to Ortensio Perla, lived in
Padua. The lutenist and composer Lorenzo Allegri (1567-1648) was also
called “Lorenzino del liuto,” and yet another lutenist named Lorenzino is
documented in Rome in the 1620s.'*
In the attempt to unravel this jumble of names and circumstances
and lacking more solid evidence, scholars have advanced various more-or-less
ingenious hypotheses. For example, Diana Poulton informally suggested that
Lorenzino might have been known by his name until receiving the order
of knighthood, after which he became the “Knight of the Lute.” In 1987
Dinko Fabris proposed the identification of “Lorenzino Bolognese” with
See Section Lb: WOLFENBUTTEL (which contains seven compositions by Lorenzino, five by
“Eques Romanus” and one, as mentioned above, by “Eques Aur(atus] Lautencinus ives Romanus’);
Section III.b: CAMBRIDGE 1 (with one each by Lorenzino and Eques Romanus); Section Il.b:
CAMBRIDGE 2 (0wo each by Lorenzino and the lieti di Liuto”); Section I.b: DOWLAND
(onc each by Lorenzino and the “KNIGHT of the Lute”
' Theseare the already cited manuscripts in Wolfenbiittel and Donaueschingen, the autograph man
script of Joachim Van den Hove (Section II.b: BERLIN 1) and the printed books of Georg Leopold
Fuhrman, Téstudo Gallo Germanica (Niimberg, 1615) and Robert Dowland (Varierie... cit)
18 For example, Robert Eitner (EITNER 1900-1904: 76, 221 and 221) composed two distinct entries
for “Lorenzini dal lito” and for “Lorenzino bolognese,” and, in addition, a thied entry for “Laurencino
Romanus” (identical to the entry for “Lorenzini dal liuto” except that it refers to a possible equation
with “Eques Romano”).
” Nor to mention other periods for instance, in the 1470s the Duke of Milan requested the services
ofa certain “Lorenzino sonatore de Lauro” who lived near Pavia (Milan, Archivio di Stato, Autagrafi,
busta 94, Pavia, January 15, 1471).
°® See ROBINSON 2000: 6, which refers to an unpublished work-in-progress by Peter Kirdly, KIRK-
ENDALE 1993: 299-303, WAZBINSKI 1994 (I thank Dinko Fabris for this citation), and TRIN
CHERI CAMIZ 1988,
® Cited by Poulton's student, Paul Beier, in BEI
Beier (PELA 1992: 8).
KIRALY 1996, and previously by a student of6 Journat. oF THe Lure Sociery or America
Besard's “Laurencinus Romanus; Paul Beier, while contemplating the
fact that there may have been diverse Lorenzinos and Knights of the Lute,
suggested that Lorenzino, born in Bologna, may have moved to Rome and
become associated with that city, not unlike the “Roman” madrigalist Luca
Marenzio, who was actually born in Coccaglio near Brescia.”!
In the 1980s and 1990s, new information finally came to light
through archival research into the musical activities of various Italian courts
and musical patrons. An important fact was discovered independently and
nearly simultaneously by John W. Hill (1987), James Chater (1988) and
Patrizio Barbieri (1989):”” the place and date of death of the Knight of
the Lute, indicated as November 23, 1608, at the Roman house (Palazzo
della Cancelleria) of Alessandro Peretti, Cardinal Montalto. Then, in 1989,
Annunziato Pugliese came across a certain “Lorenzino Traetti dal liuto”
employed in the musical chapel of Cardinal Ippolito II d’Este2> Documents
brought to light by Vera Vita Spagnuolo in 1994, in a systematic research
of Roman archives for the year 1590, revealed that a “Lorenzino del liuto,”
whose last name was Tiacetti, or Traiecti, son of one Francesco “gallus
belgicus,” died in Rome in 1590. And in a happy awakening of interest
for this musician whose works finally began to enter into the repertoire of
modern performers,®* the lutenist Carlo Stringhi announced on an internet
lure forum in 1998 that he had found a source of 1612 in which the “knight
of the lute of the Roman court” was named Vincenzo Pint.“
» FABRIS 1987: 23.
% See BEIER 1996. Beier further developed the question in an article that was slated to appear in the
Journal of the Lute Society of America: “he most famous and Divine Laurencini of Rome: His role in
the development of Italian Lute Music.” Shortly before the article was to be published, the Hungarian
musicologist Peter Kindly informed Beier of some important documents regarding Lorenzino in Ger-
‘man sources, and the two decided to integrate the new information into Beier’s original article, putting
off the publication, For various reasons, the result of this collaboration (BEIER-KIRALY 1996) was
never published. However, the authors have graciously allowed me to read their work and cite the docu-
ents brought to light by Kirdly
HILL 1997: 24 (this information wasalready known to John W. Hill in 1987 when he communicat-
ced it wo Dinko Fabris: see FABRIS 1987: 23, fn. 55); CHATER 1988: 195; BARBIERI 1989: 166.
® See PUGLIESE 1993.
* See VITA SPAGNUOLO 1994, Marco Pesci was the frst to gather the discoveries of Pugliese and
Vita Spagnuolo into a study dedicated specifically to Lorenzino (PESCI 1997),
® Sce CRAWFORD 1979. ‘The first recording entirely dedicated to Lorenzino/Cavaliere del Liuto
was recorded in 1994 by Paul Beier (Stradivarius STR 33447, published 1996), who also wrote the
bookler (BEIER 1996),
% See Section Ib: Boccalini 1612. Stringhi communicated this important discovery, made in the
course of his “erratic reading,” on the incernet lute forum LIUTO-IT (hetp://it.groups.yahoo.com!
group/Liuto_ie/), on September 25, 1998, Stringhi wondered if his discovery might indicate that there
were a “plethora of knights of the lure thar populated our peninsula,” in an open reference to the pro
gram notes 10 Paul Beiers CD (BEIER 1996). Consequently, in the most recent edition of The New‘Tue Knicuts oF THE Lute 7
This new information made a general reconsideration of the
entire matter indispensable, as there were still many unanswered questions.
While it was now evident that at least two celebrated lutenists coexisted in
Rome—Lorenzino ‘Tracetti, who died in 1590, and Vincenzo Pinti, who was
called “Knight of the Lute” in 1612—we could not affirm with certainty that
Pinti was the name of the knight who died in Montalto’s palace in 1608,
nor could we exclude the possibility that Lorenzino was also a knight. The
question as to a possible identification between Lorenzino “Romano” and
Lorenzino “Bolognese” remained unanswered, and, last but not least, the
problem of the musical attributions was not resolved.
The present article will present a wealth of new historical
information about Lorenzino Tracetti, Vincenzo Pinti, Lorenzino Bolognese
and others. Much of this new material is the result of very recent work by
scholars who are not specificically interested in Lorenzino per se. For example,
in 2006 Scishiro Niwa published a study on the musical chapel of Duke
Ottavio Farnese,” and more recently Matthew Vester investigated the figure
of Jacques de Savoy, whom I had recognized as the patron of “Lorenzino
Bolognese.”* In my own studies, I have re-examined the original documents
cited in previous research. In doing so, not only have I found numerous
inaccuracies or lacunae in the published citations and transcriptions, but
very often relevant new material has turned up by examining the archival
contexts and following leads in the paper trail. Every person or circumstance
cited in these sources was made the object of further research, which in
turn brought out new threads to investigate and new documents to add
to the growing list of original sources. Given the scarcity of information
specifically about Lorenzino and the Knight of the Lute, it seemed useful
to attempt to identify the largest number possible of people who may have
been in contact with them, in particular their patrons.”
Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, under “Lorentino” (FABRIS 2001), Dinko Fabris noted
that “other ‘Cavalieri del lito’ were active in Rome after 1608.” The same conclusion was made by
Douglas A. Smith in the chapter concerning Lorenzino in his recent book on the history of the lute,
SMITH 2002; 151-52.
® NIWA 2006. I wish to chank Dr. Seishiro Niwa for kindly sharing his information wich me in Janu-
ary and February of 2006 and for his discussion of my own ideas regarding the possible presence of the
utenist Lorenzino in Parma. Immediately following the publication of Niwa research, Marco Pesci
published an article (PESCI 2005 [2007}) rciterating the new information about musicians named
Lorenzo and Lorenzino in Parma that Dr. Niwa had put forward in his article
2 Thanks are due to Dr. Matthew A. Vester, with whom I had a useful correspondence during the
summer of 2006, His research has just been published in VESTER 2008.
® This was not an easy task, since it is usual in old texts to name people by title or position rather
than by their first and last names, and these labels could, of course, designate different people at dif-
ferent times. Moreover, title or position is usually indicated in abbreviated form or ambiguously, and8 JOURNAL OF THE LuTE SocteTY OF AMERICA
‘The new information presented here can be summarized in the
following points:
* The “knight of the lute” active in the service of Cardinals Alessandro
Farnese and Montalto, who died in 1608 in the Palazzo della Cancelleria,
was, in fact, Vincenzo Pinti.
* Since atleast 1564, Pinti belonged to the Portuguese order of the Knights
of Christ in Lusitania. This order did not include the title of Golden
Knight (“Eques Auratus’).
* Thus the enigma of two distinct lutenist “knights” in Rome in the same
period has been resolved: the first was the Knight of Christ, Vincenzo
Pinti, and the second was the Golden Knight, Lorenzino Tracetti,
possibly of the Angelic order.
* Significanc differences between the biographies and the personalities
of Pinti and Tracetti have heen delineated. ‘Ihe former was probably
celibate and very likely spent his entire life in the peaceful shade of the
Roman curia, motivated by his sense of religious modesty to hide his
real name in connection with his musical activities, and to circulate
his compositions only with great reluctance, [Fhe were of the nobility
(something which has yet to be ascertained), this would have been
yet another reason for him to hide behind a nickname. The latter,
Lorenzino Tracetti, was much attached to his wife, whom he married
ata young age. He was an active promoter of his own career, in search
of prestigious posts at some of the most important European courts,
and was sometimes unfaithful to his patrons. Proud of his students, he
owed to one of them in particular, Jean Baptiste Besard, the publication
of many of his compositions.»
* Pinti was appreciated as a singer of religious music, perhaps madvigali
spirituali, by Federico Borromeo and by people who came “from afar”
to hear him, among whom was possibly Giovenale Ancina,
* There are traces of a “soprano” by the name of Lorenzo in the chapel
of San Lorenzo in Damaso, at which Lorenzino’s father was a singer
in the choir.
* The family of Lorenzino might have come to Italy from Belgium through
the protection of Ottavio Farnese, whose wife, Margaret of Hapsburg,
sometimes the spelling or the handwriting itself contains further distortions and mistakes, leading to
the possibility of yet further misunderstandings.
°° This is, of course, the already cited Thesaurus Harmonicas, published in 1603 at Cologne. It is quite
possible that other students of Lorenzino also contributed to the divulgation of Lorenzino’s works: see
for example Section TII.b, ROMA.Tue Kniets or tHe Lute 9
was Regent of Netherlands; the existence of one “Flemish” Lorenzino
at the Farnese court in those yeats is unveiled and the possibility of
identifying him with Lorenzino Tracetti is discussed and rejected.
* The life and personality of Lorenzino “Bolognese” is explored; his
surname is shown to have been Lodi, thus eliminating the possibility
of identifying him with Lorenzino Tracetti; a side inquiry regarding
this musician's teacher, Orazio Bassani “della Viola,” leads to a better
knowledge of Orazio’s whereabouts in the early 1570s, while another
vein of inquiry brings into view the charming figure of Jacques de Savoy
and his son, Henti, who also played the lute.
Finally, there is the question of the music itself: across the
spectrum of attributions to Lorenzinos and Knights of the Lute in the
many manuscripts and printed books containing their music, how can we
untangle the true identities lurking behind each attribution? Can we say
categorically that Besard’s “Laurencinus” and his “Eques Romanus” were
separate individuals, and identify them conclusively with the characters in
the present study? Unfortunately, while biographical research such as this can
help to delineate the various personalities involved and define the confines
of inquiry, it cannot offer, in the present case, definitive answers to these
questions (which are discussed in more detail in Section HLa). Perhaps a
thorough analytical study of the nearly one hundred surviving tablatures
will one day help to resolve some of the mystery.
I. Biographies
Ia. Lorenzino Tracetti
La.1 Eques Auratus
Following custom, Jean Baptiste Besard included a series of
laudatory poems at the beginning of his prestigious Thevauerus Harmonicus.
‘The first and fourth were dedicated to Lorenzino; the second to Lorenzino
and Diomede; the third to Diomede; and another seven were dedicated
to Besard himself. The first poem, written by “Elias Assaeus Londinensis
‘Anglus,” carries the title:
To facilitate this, a complete, critical edition (with transcription in modem notation) of alld
viving pieces attributed to Lorenzino and/or the Knight of the Lute is being prepared by the author.10
Journat oF THE Lure Soctety or AMERICA
AD DOMINVM LAVRENCINVM CIVEM ROMANYM,
qui propter infignemtefiudints cxperientiam eques Auratus
AL
Roma fieripromeruit.
Auceus,an Lanrus(Laurenti)autaurea Laurus,
Seulis lautadapis, {eu fuperiaura chori:
Seu flos Aurore caletti rorerubentis,
Seu rofa,feu nullo languida ruta gelu,
Totus cs Angclicus:nihil humanum effevideris:
Seufaciem (pecto,mentis an hic aciem,
Non ficvox hominum fonat,antmodalamina mentes
Terrenz hac malcent,par faci ipfe Dijs,
Quid Patronus der prart& quid «rs axes 7
Ernibil eft pre te,quiputateffe aliquid,
Quigererehanclaucum Dux Laurencine ftudebit,
Larvam pro lauro crafus,inerfq, geret.
Etveluti are fine vino finguine corpus,
Arefcent ftudijs aurea fertafais.
ELIAS ASS AEVS LondinenfisAngtos
1VD CARMEN EIVSDEM DELAVREN.
CINO ET DIOMEDE.
Certarunt quiondam Laurentius,& Diomedes,
Eximiumpatrie lumen veerque fuse,
Non chimict lapidis pretiocontentio maior,
Quis Chelis Angelicee Laurea fertagerat,
Sic erat Aiacis quondam,8certatio Viyflis:
Magnns veerque fui,maior atAcacides.
Quid feetadicigm jpofcunt lonis:arbiter aquus
Haic ficras Lauros,buicDiadema dedit.
Cur laurosévelnti certi fant figna trophazi,
SicLavrewetxvs vigtor onuttus ert.
Cur Diadema dedit2regalemve fignat honorem,
Proximas huicLauro Rex Diomedes crit.
Quim belle haic bello pofuitconcordia finem,
Tonia eft Laurus,fit Diadema porens,
PRO DIOMEDE INCERTI AVTHORIS,
Dum Diadema genis Diomedis Tupiter aptat,
EcLaurencini laurea rta comis,
Dilfpsre promeritosinfigni laude triumphos
Inauit,& genij fertiliorisopes.
Poft debellatas dantur Diedemata gentes.
Pott viétosauro texta corona duces.
Clarus Alexander Diademate, elarus & auro
Enituit,domiti cm caput orbis erat.
Scilicetemeriti fant hac infigne trophe,
Et fuper Inuigte ruunera militiz.
Lauro cinge ducesa primo rege fecundos,
‘Nobilitisregi des Diadema decus.
IN DIVINA LAVRENCINI Modulamina.
VT Getica Odryfiuspulsateftudine vates
REaddiditartonitos aftra petente Deost
Mlrandum Afcrais a(ciuit & arte pucllis,
FAmosumg; decus fama per aftravolat:
SOlus Treijcium retulie teftudine vatem
Arti qui Diuum numine nomen habet.
IOANNES A SIGEN, ™
Figure 2 — J.B Besard, Thesaurus Harmonicus, poems dedicated to Lorenzino‘Tue Kyicuts or THE Lure 11
AD DOMINUM LAURENCINUM CIVEM ROMANUM,
qui propter insignem testudinis experientiam eques Auratus
Romae fieti promeruit.
(To Sir Lorenzino citizen of Rome, who because of his remarkable
knowledge of the lute was deservedly made a Golden Knight of Rome.)
‘The fact that a musician, solely by reason of his musical excellence, was
made a knight, does not conflict with the customs of an age in which
belonging to one of the many orders of knighthood guaranteed not only
unquestioned prestige, but considerable economic benefits as well. While the
legal act of Lorenzino’s nomination to knighthood has not been located so
far, it is nevertheless revealing to look at the complex world of the orders of
knighthood in the mid-16th century so as to place Lorenzino within it.”
In this period there existed numerous orders of knighthood, some
of which conferred the title of “eques auratus” (i.e., “golden knight”) and
could even, under certain circumstances, be passed from father to son. As
Francesco Sansovino explained in 1566, “Every supreme Prince can create
Knights;”? naturally, “the more worthy the Prince, the greater the Knight
created by him, compared to one made by a Prince of lesser stature, because
some Princes bestow authority to the Knight to create Knights from doctors
or notaries.”* Thus, doctors and notaries could be created knights by other
knights of a “higher stature.” Sansovino continues:
Knights are created by the Emperor, all crowned heads and similarly Dukes.
From this it follows that the Prince of Venice, as one who has the title of Duke,
can create Knights. Likewise, the Pope can make Knights of valor, as can all the
Princes, and itis said that the first [Pope] that put into practice this authority
was Paul II] of the Farnese family [.. .] and after him all the other Popes did
the same, ‘The Pope can also create another kind of Knight, but for payment.
* Among the numerous sources on knighthood, the following are particularly useful:
1566; BONANNI 1711; ANGELI 1841; MORONI 1841; ZEININGER 1935;
1939; BASCAPE 1972.
% SANSOVINO 1566: 8: “Ogni Principe supremo puo crear cavalieri.” The term “principe” in the
16ch century meant not only first-born sons of kings and dukes, but in general any kind of great lord
(‘gran signore”): See ROMEI 1585: 182.
> SANSOVINO 1566, loc. cit: “quanto il Principe € pitt degno, tanto pitt il Cavaliere creato da lui
é maggiore, chenon € quellsltro, ch'é fatto da un Principe di minor portata, perché tal'un d'essi da
autorith al Cavaliero di crear Cavalieri dottori, 8 notari” See also MORON 1841: vol. LXVIII: 239-
40; “Alcuni collegi di dottori godevano pur ess il titolo di cor
quelli di Milano ¢ di Cremona” (“Some colleges of doctors also enjoyed the title of Palatine Count
and Golden Knight, among them those of Milan and Cremona’).
palatini e cavalieri aureati,¢ fra questi12 Jourat or tHe Lure Soctery or AMERICA
‘These take the name from the Pope who made them knights, so that there are
Knights of Saint Peter, of Saint Paul, Knights of the Lily, Julius Knights, Pious
Knights, of Loreto and so forth. But the amazing thing is this, that the ‘Turk is
also wont to make Knights, and I can affirm this as a witness, as one who has
seen the privilege bestowed upon Gentile Bellini, excellent painter of his times,
by Selim, father of the current Sultan, who invited him to Constantinople
to paint some of his rooms. And besides the privilege of knighthood, he gave
him a beautiful necklace, like the emperors do
Here Sansovino doubtfully wonders whether the knighthood of Bellini,
conferred by the Sultan (“Il Tarco”) was valid, because knights should, in
theory, defend Christianity. He continues,
Nowadays Princes give Knights golden or gilded spurs. Stirred by that gold,
Filelfo, an erudite man of his time, was the first t0 call the knights “golden”
[..] they also give a necklace with a medallion attached containing the effigy
of the Prince that bestowed it.
Knights, therefore, were not only numerous and of different ranks and
types, they were also sometimes nominated “for valor” and at other times
“for payment.” In the Papal court, in fact, knighthood was considered a
marketable entity, and as such—similar to other papal offices—it was sold
for considerable amounts of money. In exchange for the initial investment,
one could count on a proportional annual dividend based on the assets of
» SANSOVINO 1566, Joc. cit.: “Crea Cavalieri l'Imperatore, tutte le teste coronate, & i Duchi simil
mente. Di qui é, chil Principe di Venetia, come quello che ha titolo di Duca, pu crear Cavalieri. Il
Papa parimente fa Cavalicri per degnit’, si come anco iti Principi & si dice ch’il primo che mettesse
in uso quast'autorits fu Paolo Terzo della famiglia Farnese [ ... ] & dopo di lui tuti gli alcri Pontefici
hanno fatto il medesimo. Crea parimente [il papa] unalera sorte di Cavalieri, ma per denari, i quali
prendono il nome da quel Pontefice, dal quale esi son fati, per cio che vi sono i Cavalieri di San Pietro,
di San Paolo, Cavalieri del Giglio, Cavalieri Tulij, Cavalicri Pij, Laurctani, ¢ simiglianti, Ma norabil
cosa é questa, che il Turco suole anco egli crear Cavalieri, et io come testimone lo affermo, come quello
che ho veduto un privilegio fatto a Gentil Bellino pittore eccellente de suoi tempi, da Selim padre del
predente Solimano, il quale lo haveva chiamato a Coscantinopoli per dipignere alcune sue sale. Et oltre
al privilegio della Cavaleria, gli dond una bellissima collana, come fanno gl'Imperatori.”
* SANSOVINO 1566: 8y, 10: “donano ogg’ i Principi al Cavaliero, sproni d’oro, o dorati, dal quale
(010 mosso il Filelfo dotto huomo dell'eti sua, fu il primo che chiamasse i cavalieri, aureati. [...} (dai
Principi viene] anche donata una collana da cui pende una medaglia con Feffigie del Principe che la
dona.” Francesco Filelfo (1398-1481), poet, was created knight in 1453.
” On this complex subject, see for example MORONI 1841 pasim, in particular vol. VII: 185 and
following; vol. LXXXVII: 70-102 (on the marketable offices), and vol, LXVIIL: 52-53, concerning
“Pious Knights” who had to pay 267.000 scudi in exchange for an annual pension of 34.000 scudi.
From 1560 there were 525 Pious Knights, 401 Knights of Saine Peter, 200 Knights of Saint Paul, 260
Knights of Loreto and 350 Knights of the Lilys these people, with their initial investments, provided a
considerable income to the papal tcasuty,Tue Knicuts oF THE LuTE 13
the order.” Princes could also make knights of people who were “unworthy,
abject, and of little consideration,” because “it is by their request, or as a
ceremonial gesture.”** Furthermore, entire categories of people automatically
became knights: for example, all of the courtiers of the pope, from the
steward to the sacristan to the “dapiferi,” that is those who, during the
conclave, brought refreshments to the cardinals. Many of these, in their
turn, had the right to nominate a certain number of other knights.
Sansovino illustrated the complex hierarchy of knights as
follows:?
a) “Knights of the Ecclesiastical Militia’: Knights of Jerusalem (or of
Rhodes, “now called Maltese”), Knights Templar, Teutonic Knights,
those of Saint James of the Sword, of Calatrava, of Alcantara, of Saint
Mary of the Redemption, of Montesio, of the Sepulchre, of Saint Mary
Mother of God, of Christ, of Saint Lazarus, “and recently the Knights
of Saint Stephen, founded and ordained by the Duke of Florence.”
‘These knights were made to submit to religious observance, including
the vow of chastity (which did not exclude marriage, but excluded
adultery), and were divided into three categories: military, priests and
servants (who were divided into knights of arms and offices, or of
station);
“Knights of Orders, that is, of the Necklace:” knights “of the Round
Table, of the English Garter, of the Star, of the Annunziata of Savoy, of
the Ribbon, of the Fleece of Burgundy, of Saint Michael of the King
of France”: only princes or select personages nominated by them could
aspire to one of these titles;
©) Lastly, all of the others, “which we call of the spur, created by Princes:”
they were those whom Filelfo defined golden knights (“cavalieri
aureati”) and the “golden spur” was the “sign of their worthiness
[uJ] they similarly wear a necklace like Princes, as a simple gift of
the person who ordained them, and not as a badge of some order
of knighthood [...] the necklace is plain like all the others and they
wear it on the neck and do not adorn the arms and emblems with it
b
as Princes do.” Some of them were nobles and had the title of Count,
and as such could “create Notaries, Doctors, legitimize bastards and
had other similar privileges,” and could even “create (as is done by
* SANSOVINO 1566, lac. cit“... indegni, abbietti, & di poca consideratione,” “richiesti da loro,
‘© mossi per cerimonia.”
® SANSOVINO 1566: 11 y. and 133-139 v. In the second description, Sansov
of importance of the first nwo types (which are here indicared “a” and “b”)..
averts the order14 Journat or THE LuTE Soctety oF AMERICA
Princes) other Knights.” ‘The knights “of the spur” were not necessarily
warriors who defended Christianity by force of arms, but were obliged
to live “honorably” and “nobly,” “leaving all lowliness and all vileness.”
Unfortunately, however,
-this last kind of Knight [...] has lost, for the most part, its reputation [...]
And one has little or no esteem for it in the courts of Princes and Lords [...]
we can call them common Knights, because in every city, in every time, and
by every Prince, they are created from persons of every quality and condition,
and often from people of no virtue whatsoever, unworthy of the honor, as we
have said.
It would seem that a simple musician who was not born into the nobility
could only aspire to become a knight “of the spur,” and thus a “golden
knight.” Regardless of whether a knights title was esteemed at court it was
a very desirable distinction. Nevertheless, we know of several musicians
who received titles of knighthood that belonged to the first two classes
listed above. For example, Orazio Michi dell’ Arpa and Fabio Buonsignori
de Grandi were knights of Saint Stephen, Sebastian Raval was a Knight of
Malta, and Cesare Marotta was given the Cross of Savoy.*"
Lorenzino was a Golden Knight, thus a knight of the spur, We
do not know to which order he belonged, but maybe a poem contained in
Thesaurus Harmonicus gives us a clue. Addressing the divine “Laurencinus,”
after having punned on his name and its assonance with “lauro” (laurel) and
“Aura” (air), the author declares:
Totus es Angelicus: nihil humanum esse videris:
Seu faciem specto, mentis an hic aciem,
Non sic vox hominum sonat, aut modulamina mentes
‘Terrenae haec mulcent, par facis ipse Dijs.
(You are completely angeli
Both in your appearance and in the acumen of your mind.
: you show nothing human:
—
‘© SANSOVINO 1566: 138 v- 139 v. The over-abundance of knights reduced the value of theie ttle;
for example, as reported by CASTELNAU 1621: Book I chap. VI: 39-40, the necklace of St. Michael
was by now called the “necklace of all animals” (‘collier & routes betes”), Obviously this did not happen
for the more prestigious orders, such as that of the Golden Fleece, which was awarded only to princes.
“! See CHATER 1987: 189-93, N) 1988.a: 9, HILL 1997: Also numerous painters and scu Ip
tors were awarded knighthoods, such as Gentile Bellini, Giuseppe Cesari (called “cavalier d’Arpino’),
Domenico Fontana, Gian Lorenzo Bernini, Peter Paul Rubens (see ANGELI 1826: 132, ORBAAN
1910: 289-90, CHATER 1987: 193, FLETCHER 1998: 149).Tae Knicuts oF tHE Lure 15
‘The voice of men does not sound like this, nor do
terrestrial minds
Produce these modulations; you are the equal of the Gods.)
In the next poem, the same author speaks of a competition between
Diomede and Lorenzino, who, playing on “angelic lutes,” wear “laurel
wreaths.”*? Could these possibly be veiled references to the order of
Angelic Knights” According to Filippo Bonanni,* the Angelic order
of Constantine was “Aureato” (golden), consisted of diverse grades (from
the most elevated Gran Maestro to the humble “Squire and servant”), and
its members could wear a necklace with a golden cross, adorned with red
enamel bearing the image of Saint George killing the dragon.
La.2 Trejicium vatem
‘The fourth poem found at the beginning of Thesaurus Harmonicus
(“On the Divine Modulations of Lorenzino”)® also contains a small but
suggestive detail: it defines Lorenzino as “Trejicium [...] vatem,” that is,
“Thracian bard.” This is an explicit reference to Orpheus, to whom the
divine lutenist is likened following a well-established tradition of comparing
great lute virtuosi to the mythical musician (we think, for example, of Pietro
Bono, who surpassed Orpheus—“Orpheum superans”—according to the
inscription placed on the commemorative medal of him coined by Giovanni
Boldii). It is tempting to speculate that the poet may have played with
the assonance between the term “trejicium” (Thracian) and the last name
© “Certanunt quondam Laurentius, & Diomedes, / Eximium patriae lumen uterque suze. / Non
chimici lapidis pretio contentio maior, / Quis Chelis Angelicae Laurea serta gerat. / Sic erat Aia
quondam, & certatio Ulyssis: / Magnus uterque fuit, maior at Aecides. / Quid sit? Iudicium poscunt
Tovis: arbiter aequus / Huic sacras Lauros, huic Diadema dedit. / Cur lauros? Veluti certi sunt signa
trophaei, / Sic LAURENCINUS victor onus erit. / Cur Diadema dedit? Regalem ut signat hon-
orem, ! Proximus huic Lauro Rex Diomedes erit. / Quam belle huic bello posuit concordia finem, /
Invicta est laurus, fir Diadema potens.”
© Despite the legend that the Imperial Order of the Angelic Golden Knighthood had been created by
the Roman emperor Constantine, the oldest version of its statute comes from the 16th century; the
firsc known printed version was published in Venice in 1573. The order was “under the protectio
of the warrior Saint George; among the first Grand Masters of the order were members of a family of
condottieri named Angeli Flavii (thus che name “Angelic Knights”). In 1585 Pope Sixtus IV bestowed
privileges of ecclesiastical benefits on its members. See SEWARD 1986.
“ BONANNI 1711: cap. XXIV.
igen, “IN DIVINA LAURENCINI MODULAMINA. UT Getica Odrysius pulsa tes-
tudine vates / REddidie artonitos astra petente Deos / Mlrandum Ascraeis ascivit & arte puellis, / FA~
mosumque decus fama per astra volat: / SOLus ‘Tieijcium reculit testudine vatem / LAuti qui Divum
numine nomen habet.”
See HILL 1930: In. 418 p. 110/ Il ab. 79. The medal was coined in 1457.
* Toannes a $16 Journat or rie Lure Society oF AMERICA
of the musician, which today we know to be “Traiecti,” or “Tracetti.”*” It is
probable that Lorenzino’ last name refers to the place of origin of che family.
Since his father Francesco is defined “gallus belgicus” in the documents,
we might, for example, think of a city in present day Netherlands such as
Maastricht, whose Latin name was “Trajectum ad Mosam.”®
In light of the recene discovery of Lorenzino’ last name and of
his father’s name, apart from the Franco-Belgian provenance of the family,
it is now possible to reconsider some of the well-known evidence about
Lorenzino, whose significance has never been fully understood. ‘To start
with, ivis evident that Lorenzino’s father, Francesco Tracetti, was a musician,
In fact, he is cited as a singer of the Basilica of San Lorenzo in Damaso
in Rome during the period of 1564 to 1569.” It is not known if he also
played the lute, nor if he was personally responsible for the education of
his children. In the same chapel, from April 1559 to November 1564
(shortly before the period in which Francesco Tracetti is documented to
have been there), a “Lorenzo soprano” is found: a “putto,” or child.>! It is
possible that this refers to our Lorenzino.® If the termination of service for
a boy soprano corresponds to the changing of his voice, we might presume
a birth date for this child of around 1550-52. This is the same date of birth
for Lorenzino that can be deduced from other documents that refer to him
with certainty.
© See VITA SPAGNUOLO 1994 and, in this article, Section Il.a, 23-29. This group of documents
will be further discussed below.
“* This information was kindly supplied to me by the Belgian scholar Jeanine de Landesheer (Katho-
licke Universiteit, Leuven). Marco Pesci (PESCI 1997: 237, fin. 13) suggests the cities of Utrecht and
‘Thorn. Pesci also cites an ingenious suggestion of Dinko Fabris, according t0 whom “the surname
could be connected with the illustrious patrician family of Caerani, whose Anagni branch inherited the
county of Traiectum, modem day Mincurno” factually "Traetto” or “Traietto,” from “traghetto,
“ferry boat’). Considering, nevertheless, that the father of Lorenzino was defined as “gallus-belgicus’
the first interpretation would seem more probable
© Payments survive from January 1564 to December 1569: see DELLA LIBERA 1997: 56, See also
PESCI 2003 [2004): 125-27, fn. 18, where i is suggested that a “Francesco tenor” active at the same
institution from January to Ocrober 1571, was the same person.
© The names of two brothers of Lorenzino, Innocenzo and Giovanni Angelo, ate cited in Section TL.a,
1, 29, Innocenzo was a musician, as seen in another document cited by VITA SPAGNUOLDO 1994:
40, n. 84 (Roma, Archivio di Stato, Notai Auditor Camerae, vol. 1204, c. 731, 1590 June 20), More-
over, one “Innocentio soprano” (who might have been Lorenzino’s brother) was active in San Lorenzo
in Damaso fiom January 1568 wo May 1569 (DELLA LIBERA 1997: 54).
* DELLA LIBERA 1997: 36 (“that the sopranos were ‘putt’ scems entirely self-evident’), 55.
® In absence of ulterior confirmation (and of any indication of a last name) this for now remains
speculation,
® See in particular Section I.a, n. 3 (September 2, 1570), where the father of Lorenzino declares that
he would like to keep the still very young Lorenzino with him for some time (“per esser [Lorenzino]
anco giovane volontieti lo tertia anco appresso di lui un pezz0”).‘Tae KNicHts OF THE LUTE 17
‘The Basilica of San Lorenzo in Damaso was, and still is, annexed
to the Palace of the Chancellery, whose entitlement belonged to the Vatican
vice-chancellor, the most important personage in the Roman curia after the
Pope himself (the office of chancellor having been abolished at an earlier
dat). Beginning in 1535 the vice-chancellor was Cardinal Alessandro
Farnese (1520-1589), grandson of Pope Paul III. The Pope conferred to him
both the cardinal’s hat and the prestigious position of vice-chancellor, which
had been vacant since the death of the young Ippolito Medici. The maestro
di cappella of San Lorenzo in Damaso, from April 1559 to December 1561
and again from 1567 to 1604 (information about the intermediate period
is missing), was fellow Fleming Jean Matelart,® who in 1559 published a
book of lute tablature containing a number of duets with probable didactic
°° That there was contact between this musician and the young
intent.
e
reat
Figure 3 — Marriage of Ottavio Farnese with Margaret of Hapsburg, detail
(Taddeo Zuccari, Caprarola, Farnese Villa, Sala dei Fasti, 1560-66). Margherita is
on the left, Paul III is in center, Ottavio and his brother Cardinal Alessandro are
on the right.
»* Clement VIL, in conferring the office of vice-chancellor to his second cousin Ippolito Medici in
1532, “added to this position the attached basilica, with the ttle of Cardinal of San Lorenzo in Dam-
aso” (MORONI 1841: vol. VIE: 158 and 163). The assignment of prestigious positions within the pa-
pal curia was almost always influenced by political considerations as well as, when possible, nepotism.
Regarding nepotism at the papal court, I take the opportunity to suggest a few amendments to PESCI
2003 [2004]: 125: Leo X (Giovanni Medici) was the cousin, not the uncle of Clement VII (Giulio
Medici); ic was Clement VII who nominated Ippolito Medici vice-chancellor in 1532, and not Anglo
Medici (elected pope in 1559 under the name of Pious IV), who was not Ippolito’ uncle and belonged
toa different branch of the Medici family; and Paul III (Alessandro Farnese) was the grandfather, not
the unde, of Cardinal Alessandco Farnese (see the genealogical tee of the Farnese family).
5> DELLA LIBERA 1997: 40-segg., 55. Payments to Matclart are documented between April 1559
and December 1561 and from January 1567 to July 1604.
% See BROWN 1967: 189.18 JourNat oF tHe Lure Sociery or America
Lorenzino, including perhaps a direct teacher-student relationship, isa strong
possibility.
‘The presence of Flemish and northern musicians in Rome in the
1560s was common, but their engagement on the part of the Farnese family
could have been facilitated by the wife of Ottavio Farnese, Margaret of
Hapsburg, natural daughter of Emperor Charles V and half-sister of Philip
Il, king of Spain and the Netherlands.” Notwithstanding their kinship,
relations between Ottavio Farnese and the Hapsburgs were not idyllic. One
of the problems was over control of the castle of Piacenza, occupied by the
Spanish but sought by Ottavio for himself. In April 1559 he was in Brussels
with his brother-in-law, Philip II, who had just nominated his half-sister
to become regent of the Netherlands. Margaret accepted the post, which
would prove to be of great hardship, in the hopes that her collaboration
could in some way help with the negotiations for Piacenza. At the end of
April, Ottavio Famese returned to Parma; perhaps he brought with him,
as “booty,” a number of musicians.” It might not be a coincidence that
the above-mentioned soprano, Lorenzo, as well as the chapel master Jean
Matelart appeared at the Basilica of San Lorenzo in Damaso (run by Ottavio's
brother, Cardinal Alessandro) in that same month. It is also possible that
Matelart and the Tracetti, father and son, or sons, entered into the orbit of
the Farnese under the direct protection of the duchess Margaret while she
wasin Belgium, butit seems more probable that it was Ottavio who engaged
the musicians, as this hypothesis accords better with the dates.
1.a.3 Quel giovane, che sona di lauto
Now we come to the years 1570 to 1572, during which, as has been
known for a long time, Lorenzino was in the service of Cardinal Ippolito II
Este, also known as the Cardinal of Ferrara (or, simply, “Ferrara”). Until
recently, this information was based exclusively on three letters conserved at
the State Archive in Mantua, first described by Pietro Canal and cited in all
© Her mother was a certain Johanna van der Gheenst. See the genealogical tree of the Farnese family,
and D'ONOFRIO 1919 (specially Section I)
% On the Farnese, see DREI 1954, pasim. Margaret left Parma in the end of June 1559, arciving in
Brussels on July 26; she was allowed to go home on December 27, 1567. See DTONOFRIO 1919:
pusim, and especially 72 and 165,
® DONOFRIO 1919: 72
‘ From existing documentation, however, which covers the petiod starting in 1559, it does not appear
that Tracet family members were in the service of Margaret, nor, for that matter, of Ottavio Farnese:
see NIWA 2006.Tue Knicuts oF THE LuTE 19
successive studies on Lorenzino.“' In his 1920 book on Cardinal Ippolito, for
example, Vincenzo Pacifici commented on how “Lorenzino dal liuto, perhaps
the famous knight of the lute, admirable musician [...] stayed with Ippolito,
enlivening his final years.”® Annunziato Pugliese, during a symposium in
1989, gave notice for the first time of some registers showing that “Lorenzino
‘Traetti dal liuto” was part of the musical chapel of the cardinal.* Since we
now know that the last name of Lorenzino was in fact Traiecti, or Tracetti,
it is clear that we are dealing with the same person.
From the registers in the Modena State Archive we can reconstruct in
great detail the relationship of service that links our lutenist to the cardinal.
Hired in 1570 (in fact, his name is notamong those paid in 1569), he received
a monthly salary of 2 scudi and 20 baiocchi; from the total for that year,
however, the sum of 3 scudi and 30 baiocchi was subtracted, corresponding
to the salary of a month and a half, “with notification that the time he was
away from service has been deducted.” ‘This detail, which until now, I believe,
has not been cited by other scholars, is interesting because it confirms with
greater precision what was already evident from the three letters cited above,
to which can now be added a fourth which, although it does not explicitly
cite Lorenzino by name, certainly refers to him.© The people involved in
this important correspondence were the Mantuan Annibale Cappello, who
worked for the Cardinal Ippolito II Este, and three employces of Gugliclmo
Gonzaga, the Duke of Mantua: Francesco Fellonica, Roman agent of the
Duke; Aurelio Zibramonti, secretary to the Duke; and an unnamed castellan
of Mantua. In 1570 Guglielmo Gonzaga wished to hire good musicians for
the chapel of Santa Barbara, and since those available “were many, but not too
many, because not only every prince, but every family that wanted greatness
kept a few on the payrolls," he searched for them wherever they were to
© CANAL 1879: 44-45, See Section ILa: n. 1, 3, 4.
© PACIFICI 1920: 387. This is the most complete study to date on Ippolito II d’Este, son of Alfonso
¢ Este and Lucrezia Borgia. See also the genealogical tree of the Este family
© “The acts of this symposium were published four years later: see PUGLIESE 1993, in which the im-
minent publication is announced of a Dizionario dei musicisti alla corte del cardinale Ippolito If d'Este.
“This work has finally been published (PUGLIESE 2006). In his 1993 article, Pugliese specifically cites
registers n. 908, Salariati 1569, cc. 99v.-107 ., n. 875, Conto di tutti li denari che resconterd ¢ paghert
M.A.Cambio 1569, cc. 60t-v. and n. 876, Canto di tutti i denari che rescontert e paghera M.A. Cambio
1570, c. 90 v. He also cites two more registers (n. 896 and 898}, in which “Dardes Traecti” is mentioned
among the musicians: so far I have not been able to verify the accuracy of this information, nor ascertain
if this mu in was related to Lorenzino, which is probable,
See Section ILa, n. 8, 9, 10.
© See Section IL.a, n, 1-4,
CANAL 1879: 38, For an overview of the musical activities at the court of Guglielmo Gonzaga and20 JOURNAL OF THE LUTE SOCIETY OF AMERICA
be found. ‘Ihe best place to hunt for musicians in this period was Rome,
the universal marketplace (“la piazza universale”),°” largely because of the
musical interests of two powerful cardinals, Cristoforo Madruzzo, Bishop-
Prince of Trento, and the aforementioned “Cardinal Ferrara,” Ippolito I
Este. The duke of Mantua sent his agent, Francesco Fellonica, to Rome
in order to “stalk” (“appostar”) the “valorous men” of the two cardinals who
ans] left
happened to be out of town at the time, in case “any of [the mus
them, and arrived” back in the city.
Cardinal Ippolito was by this time old and sick with gout. Bitter
about the bad behavior of his nephew Luigi (for whom he had made an effort
to procure an unmerited cardinal’s hat) and about the hostility of Pope Pius
V (Michele Ghislieri), he appeared very rarely at the papal court and had
a habit of staying away from Rome for most of the year, enjoying instead
his splendid villa in Tivoli, renowned for its ornate gardens and ingenious
fountains, among which was the famous hydraulic organ. Tivoli was the
seat of his prestigious musical chapel, which in the years of interest to us
was directed by Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina. The following table lists
the musicians that were part of this chapel during the years 1569 to 1572.
‘The names of the musicians and their positions or instruments are cited in
Table I as written in the documents.”
In the summer of 1570, therefore, while the cardinal was at Tivoli,
“Lorencino Traietti” was one of the two lutenists in his service.’! However,
much as the cardinal's villa was splendid and his musical chapel prestigious,
it must have felt oppressive to the young lutenist who, as everyone claimed,
was “a monster of nature in that profession for his [young] age.”” Far from
wanting to enliven the solitary days of the aging prelate, our lutenist preferred
a bibliographical update, see FENLON 2001.2.
© CANAL 1879:
® See Section IL 2, cited by CANAL 1879: 32-33. See also BIZZARINI 1998: 21.
© From his leters, i¢can be deduced that the cardinal usually stayed at Tivoli from July to October: see
PACIFIC] 1920: 341. On the hydraulic organ at Tivoli, sce BARBIERI 1986,
” The initials “A.D” stand for “Modena, Archivio di Stato, Amministrazione dei Principi"; the number
is that of the register. The register for 1569 does not include Lorenaino Tracetti. The other three regis-
ters for the years 1570-72 correspond to our Section Ila, n. 8-10.
% ‘The other one was Giovanni Antonio Severino, CERRETO 1601 states that he was stil living in
1601. According to John Griffiths and Dinko Fabris (GRIFFITHS-FABRIS 2004; X), in 1579 he was
the lute teacher at the residence of Don Carlo Rufio.
® See Section Ila, n. 1.Tue KNIGHTS OF THE LUTE 21
‘Table I
Musician 1569 | 1570 | 1571 | 1572
AP | AR | AR [> AR
908 | 909 | 911 | 1023/
1 | Gicanni maestro di x x x {x}
Pietroaluigi Capella
Bernardino Pagano | _Cornewto x x x x
3 | Gio. Barta called “dalla x x x x
viol”
4_| Oratio Massarelli/o | Musico, falsetto | _X x x x
5__| lulio Guerini ‘Trombone re x x xX
6_| Savinio diFranc.o_| Trombone x x x x
7 | Gioanni Schinetia, | Musico, cenore | X x x x
Eschinetta
Giovanni Battista} Organo x x
Nicolo Fiamingo | Musico, con- x x x x
tralto
10 | Gioanni Contino, | Basso x x X =
Cartino
11 | Don Constantino | Musico, cenore | X x x x
Bocchio, Rocchio
12 | Premoro Scrittoree mu- | X x x x
sico, trombone
13 | Allessandro Barre, | Musico, con- x x x x
Barze, Romano tralto
14 | Lorencino Traiewti | _Liuto : x x x)
15 | Gasparo Fiorini xX :
16 | Giovanni Antonio | Liuto 7 x - -
Severino
17 | Martheo Masini__| ‘Trombone - - x x
18 | Ottavio Barre Tenore “ = x
19 | Tomaso Contralto : = = x
20 | Pietro Paolo Basso - x
21 | Raniero Basso. = - - x
22 | Don Alvaro Basso - - - Xx
23 | Bartholomeo Organo . x
Total number of musicians in service 13 16 15 17 [42]
by year
(Legend: X = musician in service; [X] = in service for only part of the year and
already decommissioned by the time of the composition of the document.)22 Journat oF THe Lure Soctery oF AMERICA
toescape to Rome, and he did this surely not out of indolence:” “that youth,
who plays the lute, who is in the service of his Illustrious Monsignor [...],
stays here in Rome and goes around playing here and there all day long,
while the cardinal is in Tivoli.’”* Deaf to the requests of his patron, who
ordered “that he promptly mount a horse and return to Tivoli”> Lorenzino
flew from villa to villa, playing without pause “at the houses of cardinals and
lords,” seizing the opportunity to be heard by “his lordship, the ambassador
of the emperor,” and “scupefying everyone” with his lute playing,”*
All this frenetic activity, evidently, was motivated by the desire to
find a new patron, and the agents of Guglielmo Gonzaga were ready to “stalk”
him. Among the people cited in the Mantuan correspondence, we find an
“illustrious prio,” organizer of a banquet for the imperial ambassador at
which Lorenzino was heard playing the lute.” This was probably Giovanni
Vincenzo Gonzaga, prior of Barletta and cousin of the Duke of Mantua It
seems he was enrolled to mediate between the Duke and Cardinal Ippolito
in case the latter accepted to relinquish Lorenzino. It was to be the lutenist’s
father, Francesco, who would make the initial inquiries, “not mentioning,
however, the most excellent lord, Duke [of Mantua].”” It seems clear
from the letter of September 2, 1570, from Fellonica to Zibramonti, that
Francesco Tracetti played an active role in promoting the career of his son.
He told Zibramonti in person that, since Lorenzino was so young, “he
would happily have kept him by his side a little longer,” adding however
that “he did not lack opportunities [to find a new patron],” and citing by
way of example “Cardinal Orsino.” In case Lorenzino wanted instead to
“stay in Rome,” there was the possibility of an “even better catch’ than the
already lucrative Cardinal of Ferrara, who guaranteed him a stipend of
“three gold scudi a month” as well as an advance payment of two months
salary.®” Finally, Francesco Tracetti claimed to be “most devoted” to the
Duke of Mantua’ “illustrious family.”
* Compare with PESCI 1997: 240, who, in fact, accuses Lorenzino of “un pizzico di indolenaa’ (a
pinch of indolence)..
See the genealogical tree of the Gonzaga family. The Avvisi di Roma (Roma, Biblioteca Apostoilca
Vaticana, Urb. Lat. 1042): c. 61 show that he left for Naples on May 12. CANAL 1879 erroneously
identified the prior of Barletta as Ferdinando Gonzaga.
® See Section IL.a, n. 3.
© ibid. ‘This salary conflicts with that indicated in our Section IL.a, n. 8, where Lorenzino’s monthly
i and the payment was made, noc in gold scudi, but in monetary scudiTue Kyicuts or THe Lute 23,
It also appears that it was not only the Gonzaga who hoped to
take advantage of Lorenzino’s (or his father's) desire to change patrons.
A respectable prospect was Cardinal Flavio Orsini, noble Roman and
Neapolitan patrician, who “entertained him” and “showed a desire to
have him.” Orsini’ prestigious family was closely interconnected through
numerous marriages to the even more illustrious Sanseverino family. For
example, the cardinal’s sister-in-law was the sister of Niccold Bernardino
Sanseverino, who had just inherited the title of Prince of Bisignano.® This is
the prince who, according to Annibale Cappello, was able in the end to land
Lorenzino.** In the summer of that year, Niccolo Bernardino Sanseverino,
while traveling across the Lazio region, went to Caprarola to see Cardinal
' He probably later stopped in Rome, possibly at the house of
rdinal Orsini, and it would be perfectly understandable if
86
Farnese.*
his relative,
Lorenzino joined his entourage at that time.®* But we cannot verify the truth
of Cappello’s assertion, nor could the lutenist’s father, Francesco, who claimed
to “know nothing of this thing,” The rumor that Lorenzino was about to
shift his loyalty to the Prince of Bisignano must have sounded sufficiently
credible to give additional impetus to the efforts of other aspiring patrons
to attract the musician.
In fact, Lorenzino did not leave Cardinal Ippolito afier all. The
behavior of a servant who is disobedient to his patron, leaving without
permission and ignoring his pleas to return, must have seemed intolerable.
Perhaps it was this that Zibramonti referred to as the “things about him”
that rendered Lorenzino “unworthy” to serve at the court of Mantua, saying
(he exchange was approximately 1.4 monetary scudi to one gold scudo).
© "There is no evidence at present that Francesco Tracetti ever served the Gonzaga.
® See the genealogical trees of the Orsini, Sanseverino and Gesualdo families
© “The Prince of Bisignano should not be confused with the Prince of Salerno, Ferdinando Sanseverino,
who belonged to a different branch of the family and is known to have been a patron of Luigi and
Fabrizio Dentice,
* Cappello expressed regret that he was eatlier unaware of the interest of Duke Guglielmo for the
lutenise. Note that the two letters to Zibramonti (Section Il.a, n. 1-2) carry the same date.
© ‘The Avvisi di Roma inform us thac in July the Prince was travelling to Pesaro with his wife, Isabella
della Rovere, Princess of Urbino, Afier having accompanied her wo Assisi for the “Festa del Perdono”
con August I and 2, he arrived at Caprarola on August 12 to visit Cardinal Alessandro Farnese (Roma,
Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, Avvisi di Roma: Urb. Lat. 1041, p. II, ¢. 209 v. and 318 v). Further
confirmation of this is provided by a lewer written on August 12 from Rome to the Duke of Parma
(Parma, Archivio di Stato, Carteggio Farncsiano Estero b. 461), informing him that the Prince of Bisig-
nano, although he had wanted to visit Cardinal Farnese in Rome, has decided not to go back to the city
because of the heat (“per questi caldi"), so he proceeded to the Cardinal’ villa at Caprarola.
% The Prince must have nurtured a certain interest in music, since a number of composers dedicated
works to him: see LARSON-POMPILIO 1983: 111, 118.24 Journat or riz Lure Sociery oF America
that “in a few days” he would be fired and predicting for him an imminent
punishment.” It would seem, instead, that Lorenzino was not punished
for his summer escapade, other than the withholding of his stipend for the
period, a month and a half in all, in which he was absent.** The cardinal
evidently forgave him, perhaps on account of his youth, which could have
justified such impetuous discourtesy, and he even gave him a raise in salary,
probably to discourage further misbehavior.
‘Thus we find Lorenzino happily settled in the service of the old
Ippolito for the whole of 1571, where, furthermore, he no longer had any
rivals, the second lutenist having disappeared from the payment register.
On February 10 the Duke of Mantua’s secretary Zibramonti showed his
puzdlement concerning the behavior of “Lorenzino, who last summer
showed infinite desire to be accepted into the service of his Excellency, but
after my arrival here he was always aloof saying that he is satisfied with the
illustrious monsignor of Ferrara;””® but the following year things began to
change. On December 2, 1572, Ippolito Il d’Este died. Shortly thereafter
a list was compiled of the employees of his “blessed memory” that still
had to be paid up to November 1572.”! Here we find the names of seven
musicians, but not that of Lorenzino, who appears, instead, further on ina
list of 16 people who “were no longer in service.” This list, which included
“m. Gioanni da Pellestrina maestro di Capella,” shows that “m. Lorencino
dal lauuto” was owed 12 scudi and 55 baiocchi. Since the document does
not specify how long Lorenzino was out of the cardinal’s service, we cannot
know the amount of his monthly salary for that year. If it were the same as
the previous year’s salary, 3 scudi and 85 baiocchi per month, we can deduce
that Lorenzino remained with Ippolito for about three months during 1572.
Where did he go after that period?
© See Section I1.a, n. 4. It has not been possible to ascertain whether Lorenzino was guilty of some
other offence,
° See Section Ia, n. 8.
® See Section Ia, n. 9.
°° See Section Ila, n. 4.
" Sce Section Ia, n. 10,‘Tue Knicuts oF THE LUTE 25,
L.a.4 Lorentzin
Most of the cardinal’s inheritance was passed on to his nephew,
Cardinal Luigi, but it has not been possible to ascertain if Lorenzino entered
into Luigi’ service, which would, in any case, have been improbable seeing
that Lorenzino already left Ippolito well before he died. Until now, nothing
was known about the subsequent eight years of the lutenist’s life. However,
it is now possible to point to an interesting episode that took place during
this period that surely refers to our lutenist.?*
As is well known, Orlando di Lasso, maestro di cappella of the court
of Bavaria, travelled in Italy in 1574, passing through Trento, Mantua,
Bologna, Rome and Naples.“ During his stay in Bologna on March 3,
he sent a light-hearted letter to his patron and friend, Prince Wilhelm of
Wittelsbach, the son of the Duke of Bavaria, in which he describes the
musicians he would like to bring with him to the German court. Among
these was “il Lorenzino,” one of the “virtuosi” whom Orlando hoped to
mect in Rome.® We do not know if Wilhelm specifically desired to engage
Lorenzino at this time, or if he was simply interested in acquiring a good
lutenist.% Nor do we know if Lasso already knew Lorenzino; his reputation
may have reached Wilhelm and his maestro di cappella through a common
Roman acquaintance, perhaps the Bavarian ambassador in Rome.”
Ernst, the younger brother of Wilhelm, was in Rome from January
of that year; his arrival had been announced by his father to Cardinal
° My enquiry in the State Archive of Modena, where the majority of documents related to Luigi are
collected, was fruitless. In Amminisinasione dei Principi, n.910, “Vachetta di Salariati di Franza” for the
years 1570-72, no references ¢o musicians have been found. Inn. 1372, “Ruollo di cutti li Gentilhuo-
mini et altre Persone qualle si ritrovano al servitio di mons.re Il mo et R.mo Carle dEste in Roma”
there isa list of “mouths to feed” (“bocche”) in 1579 that includes the following names: “Cavaliere
Roma,” Annibale Cappello, “Sucha cantore,” “nic.lo cantore,” “Giulio organista,” “il musicho Gio.
Pietro dforno per insegnare alli ss.ri Paggi per cantas,” “Giulio
named in n, 404a/b for the year 1580.
» ‘Thanks are due to Peter Kirély for bringing these documents to my attention. | also wish to thank
Kirély, Bjoern Tammen and Douglas Alton Smith for help with translations from the antiquated Ger-
°* OWENS 2001. When Orlando reached Rome, he was knighted by Pope Gregory XIII; see also
BEIER-KIRALY 1996.
°° See Section [1.a, n. 11, and the genealogical tree of the Wittelsbach family,
% Wilhelm’s interest in lute music is reinforced by Vincenzo Galileis dedication to him of his luce
treatise I] Fronimo in 1568, on the occasion of his marriage to Renée of Lorraine.
” BEIER-KIRALY 1996. We know that che Bavarian diake’s Roman ambassador had ample oppor-
tunities to hear music in the eternal city: in BELTRAMI 1917: 6, citing the Aevisi di Roma, we read,
for instance, that due to the inattention of the papal singers, a book fell from thei
the ambassador's head during Vespers at St. Peter's on December 28, 1572, and the poor ambassador
sar branchacio”. Luca Marenzio is
music stand onto26 Journat or THe Lore Soctery oF AMERICA
‘il if
CIM DEG PACIEN®
UtRTV
Figure 4 — Wilhelm Wittelsbach (from Dominicus Custos, Atrium heroicum Cae-
sarum, regu, [..] imaginibus [...) illustr{atum). Pars 1-4, Augsburg: M. Manger,
J. Practorius, 1600-1602)
‘Alessandro Farnese.’ It was left to Ernst, after Orlando returned to the
Bavarian court, to continue the negotiations with “Lorentzin,” which
proved more difficult than expected. On May 22 Ernst confidently assured
his brother that he would satisfy his desires by proceeding with diligence
to secure the services of the lutenist, as well as those of Johannes Baptista
dela Harpa.” By June 5, however, he had to admit that he had run into
wwas sent to bed wounded (“per inavertenza delli cantori cascd un libro del legiglio che diede in capo
all Amb.te di Baviera et ne stain letto aggravaro")
% Parma, Archivio di Stato, Carteggio farnesiano estero, Baviera, series 2: lecter from the Duke of
Bavaria, Albert Wittelsbach, to Cardinal Alessandro Farnese, dated January 2, 1574, in which ic is an-
nounced that his son Ernst will go to Rome in January. Ernst stayed in Rome fora year and a half, due
to the fact that, being a man of the church, he aspired to the important bishopric of Minster, which
‘was vacant, but he had a number of competitors and had therefore to occupy himself personally with
his candidature. After many difficulties and another ten years of waiting, his hopes were finally satis-
fied: see PASTOR 1955: X, 623.
” See Section IL Ivisimprobable that we are dealing here with the famous Giovanni Leonardo
Del’Arpa (sce CARDAMONE 2001).‘Tae Knicuts or THE Lute 27.
Lorenzino’s “stubbornness.” Still, he hopefully promised that “with all our
energy we shall try [to make him come to us}, so that we might get hold of
him and speak to him today or tomorrow.” The virtuoso lutenist finally
agreed to attend a meeting with Ernst and declared himself willing to accept
an engagement at the Bavarian court, requesting a salary of 300 scudi per
year, plus a gift of an equal amount for expenses and upkeep for himself and
his wife.'°' Wilhelm replied aghast: “in our country [...] nobody, excellent
as he ever may be, will get more than 120 [scudi]!”"™
‘The prince, nevertheless, really must have desired to obtain the
lutenist’s services. In fact, he proposed in the same letter a compromise:
200 scudi per year plus another gift of 200 scudi, plus travel expenses for
Lorenzino and spouse. Thinking he had clinched the deal, he even suggested
to his brother the name of a person who could be counted on to lend them
the 200 scudi for the gift. The meaning of the last phrase of Wilhelm’s letter
is unclear: “But in case this should not happen and he insists on such a high
level of remuneration, we must resign ourselves and let the matter pass.”
(The final part of the sentence is difficult to interpret and may mean instead
“we must accept it and let it pass to him.”)!© In any case, itis noteworthy
that despite the increasingly frustrating nature of the negotiations, they were
kept alive for another six or seven months.
Ernst finally announced his failure to hire Lorenzino to Wilhelm on
July 3, and on July 16 Wilhelm urged him to try again, but in case it didn't
work out, to look for another lutenist." A few days later, on July 22, Ernst
reveals a new twist. He writes to Wilhelm, “With respect to Lorentzino we
cannot hide from you the fact that the King of France desires him and is
interested in engaging him in his service. But he is absolutely not willing
to move [to France] or to be hired unless the King would grant him 1000
“Cronen” as a gift and the same figure as annual salary." However,
Lorenzino seems to have assured Ernst that if the French deal fell through,
he would accept the Bavarian offer, In the next letter on October 16, the
lutenist was still waiting fora decision from France, but Ernst, tired of waiting
"0 See Section ILa, n. 13.
© See Section ILa, n. 14.
© See Section ILa, n. 15.
“Im Vhal es aber je nit star here vnnd er so hoch auf gedachte Zerung thringen wiirde, hat es seinen
weg vnnd muessen ihme die hieriiber wol lassen Passiren.”
4 See Section IL.a, n. 16-17. These yvo eters were ciced by Berndt Philip Baader in 1943 (BAADER
1943: 226, note 34); unfortunately I have not been able to locate them,
"5 See Section ILa, n. 18,28 Journat. oF tHe Lute Soctery oF AMERICA
for so long, began “dealing with another [lute player], being superior and
excellent, so that even Lorenzin will not be able to reach his level ....”!°° Three
months later, on January 8, after Ernst had already left Rome, Wilhelm’s
chamberlain, Caspar von Lockhenburg, finally had some good news:
Lorenzino had decided to go to Bavaria, but only for halfa year starting in
spring and without his wife, who would join him later if the “German air”
is found to be acceptable. The lutenist asked for a gift of 200 scudi, saying
that leaving his wife and students behind “would be a huge disadvantage
and burden.”!””
Figure 5 ~ Emst Wittelsbach (from Dominicus Custos, Atrium heroicum Caesa-
rum, regum, [...] imaginibus [...] illustr[atum]. Pars 1-4, Augsburg: M. Manger, J.
Praetorius, 1600-1602)
106 See Section II.a, n. 19. Emst offers no other clues about who this other marvelous lutenist might
have been.
See Section Ila, n. 20.Tue KNIGHTS oF THE LUTE 29
After that, the archives are silent. Kirdly, citing Sandberger, notes
that from 1575 the Bavarian registers contain no trace of Lorenzino and
deduces that, despite the efforts of Wilhelm and Ernst, he remained in
Rome.'% In the absence of other evidence, the question remains open, It
is interesting to note, however, that Wilhelm was in Rome the following
August with 60 courtiers in train, and a few months later they were all aboard
four gallcons sailing off the coast of Lazio." If Lorenzino really joined him
that spring, he may have been among the group of 60, or perhaps he took
advantage of the trip to Italy to return to Rome. On the other hand, we
might cven imagine Wilhelm to have disembarked in Rome personally in
order to try again to convince the recalcitrant lutenist to join his court.
‘The inventory taken of Lorenzino'’s belongings after his death
incongruously included one “coat of bear fur lined with velvety silk.”""”
Could this garment, perhaps somewhat unusual for the Roman climate,
have served to protect him from the rigots of weather in Bavaria? The only
other evidence that may possibly indicate that Lorenzino had concluded an
agreement with Wilhelm, if even for just a few months, is the great number
of German sources for his music.'!! Most of these are of a later date, but
they might reflect a tradition that was established on German territory by
the presence of the lutenist in person.
The letters in the Bavarian files reveal other interesting details.
Beginning with the second one, there are repeated references to Lorenzino’s
wife without, however, ever mentioning her name. If the “Lorentzin” of the
Bavarian letters refers to our Lorenzino Tracetti, which indeed seems highly
probable, his marriage must have taken place sometime between 1572 and
1574, when the lutenist was still quite young, given that in the preceding
documents there is no mention of a wife. If any documentation about the
marriage could be found in the Roman archives and if his spouse were
°S BEIER-KIRALY 1996.
© BELTRAMI 1917 cites a few interesting letters from the Este correspondence (Milan, Biblioteca
Trivulziana, Belgioioso collection). For instance (BELTRAMI 1917: 10), a letter from Rome of August
6, 1575, cells of the “inconsiderate departure of the Prince of Bavaria” who “went away for five miles
alone with a single servant without telling any of the 60 gentlemen whom he kept. And he did this
because he was offended by the fact that his {guests} discovered the route by which he went out at night
for pleasure.” Strange behavior indeed for someone who was known to posterity as “der Fromme,”
ies, “the Pious’! The letter concludes: “it is hoped that he will have to return, but for now we talk of
nothing else.” In another letter of October 3, 1575 (BELTRAMI 1917: 11-12), we read: “The Prince
of Bavaria came with his court as far as Ostia with 4 galleons and not finding horses there continued
to Civitavecchia.”
40 See Section Il.a, n. 28.
"See Section IIL.30 Journat or THe Lute Soctery oF AMERICA
ever named, this could provide definitive proof, since we know from later
documents that the wife of Lorenzino Tracetti was a Roman woman named
Lucrezia Paolina (or Paolini).'
Another reference in Ernst’s January letter is worth commenting
upon. Lorenzino complains that if he went to Bavaria he would suffer great
damage by leaving his students behind." From this we can deduce that
Lorenzino had a number of students in Rome, and that they must have
provided a substantial income since the lutenist was so reluctant to leave
them. Ir is also possible that Lorenzino brought the students up simply to
get a better deal in his negotiations with Wilhelm. As we have seen from
the letters in the Mantuan files from 1570 to 1571, Lorenzino’s strategy in
negotiations for a new job (or perhaps that of this father) had been to feign
indifference and to leak information about the existence of other, much
better offers without, however, closing any doors. We have the impression
that a similar strategy was being used in the exchanges with the Prince of
Bavaria. Ivis not known if the attempted engagement on the part of the King
of France was a pure invention on the part of Lorenzino to up the ante with
Wilhelm Wittelsbach, but this would seem unlikely considering the close
rapport between the French and Bavarian courts (Wilhelm married Renée
of Loraine). In any case, the young French king, Charles IX, died on May
30, 1574, and was succeeded by his younger brother Henry IIL. It could be
that Lorenzino had been contacted by Charles who, like his mother Caterina
Medici, had a fondness for the lute,!"* and that his unexpected death put
an end to the negotiations. Thus, as related by Ernst Wittelsbach, Lorenzino
15
was still waiting and hoping for a reply from France in October.
** The name of Lorenzino Tracetti’s wife is found in the documents listed in Section IIa, n. 23, 26-
28. As we will see further on, we know that in 1590 Lorenzino Tracetti lived in the Ponte district of
Rome, Assuming that he might have lived in the same district for an extended period of tim.
worth inquiring in parish archives for that area if there are any references to his marriage. So far, this
effort has not borne fruit.
"® See Section ILa, n. 20.
SME Ocwares (1858-95), Vk: 291-4 (cogarding Charles IX) and X: 44-segg. (on Ca-
terina Medici). In 1574 Charles had also attempted to hire Orlando di Lasso (see LESURE 2001
1.2.i).
" See Section ILa, n. 19.‘Tar Kxronrs oF THe Lure 31
L.a.5 Dominus Laurentius Traciettus Romanus
In 1580 “Dominus Laurentius Traciettus Romanus regionis Trevij,
musicus” (Sir Laurentius Tracicttus, Roman of the Trevi district, musician)!"
was able to maintain a promise made in his matrimonial deed, increasing
his wife's dowry by 200 gold scudi, two chests of linen and clothing, some
furniture, paintings, silverware, a harpsichord, and a substantial collection
of jewels: a golden headpiece (“fronzetta’) with precious stones and pearls, a
diamond ring, another gold serpent shaped ring with sapphire, three other
gold rings without jewels, a necklace (“vezzum”) with 68 round pearls worth
100 scudi, and a crown of coral interlaced with gold and topped with a golden
117 Ip this period, the only property allowed to married women was their
dowry.!"® On the death of the paier familias, a family’s wealth was inherited
by his children or relatives; widows were not allowed to inherit clothing or
even their own wedding ring, A husband could circumvent this custom by
augmenting his wife's dowry, donating to her everything that he wished to
remain in her possession after his death. Such donations were quite frequent
when men feared that their death was imminent, such as in the case of old
age, sickness, war or other dangers. We do not know if Lorenzino, who was
cross.
still quite young in 1580, was moved by such anxicties, or simply by love
and concern for his wife.
Lorenzino may have bought the precious jewels mentioned in the
donation for Luctezia. In particular, the diamond ring was probably her
wedding ring (diamonds symbolized the strength of love), and the serpent-
shaped sapphire ring was typically used as an engagement ring (sapphire
symbolized chastity, and the circled serpent was an image of eternity, the
perfect token of long-lasting conjugal love).!"” Some of the other jewels might
6 See Section Ha, n. 23-24. The “Rione Trevi.” also called “Monte Quirinale” or “Monte Cavallo”
(because of the presence of the famous statues of horse tamers), was known for its good air and was
sparsely inhabited. There were villas with gardens, including one that belonged to Cardinal Ippolito TL
d Este, yards and olive groves. See PASTOR 1963: VI, 277.
1? The definition of “fronzetta’ is not entirely clear. It could mean the same as “fronzolo,” that is,
decoration, or ese it could indicate a pendant in the form ofa litte branch or leaf (fiom “fronda’). We
find “frontale” in FLORIO 1611, meaning “a frontlet, a fore-headpiece, a frontstale, a headband. Also
a square as women weare on their heads being sicke.” Neither the “vezzum” nor the crown described
in the acts can plausibly be identified with the necklace given to knights on their investiture (see the
illustrations of such necklaces in SANSOVINO 1566). On the other hand, icis highly improbable that
Lorenzino would have donated this important decoration to his wife.
8. See VENTURELLI 1996: 73.
1 See VENTURELLI 1996: 134 and 141-4232 JOURNAL OF THE LUTE SOCIETY OF AMERICA
have been given to Lorenzino as gifts by one of his patrons, or possibly by a
well-heeled student. In any case, we can sce that, however his negotiations
may have gone with the King of France or the Prince of Bavaria, Lorenzino
was able to amass a discreet fortune, and that if at the time of his marriage
his finances perhaps were not in excellent shape, by 1580 his affairs had
considerably improved.
However, after only another five yeats, we find Lorenzino at the Tor
di Nona, one of Rome's notorious prisons, implicated in a complicated web
of debts and credits.'2” He owed 26 scudi to the heirs of a certain Antonio
Bonolis, but was owed money in turn by Giovanni de Musci, who had lent
4 scudi to one Giovanni of Margival, who promised to return the money."
It is not clear if Lorenzino was simply at the prison for the drafting of the
document, or if he was serving time for debt. This would be unlikely, as we
know from the documents compiled after his death, which would occur on
July 19, 1590, that Lorenzino certainly had not fallen into destitution. He
lived in the prestigious neighborhood of Ponte and possessed a vineyard and
a grove just outside the gate of San Lorenzo.'2 With the exception of the
jewels, all of the other things given to his wife in 1580 are still found in the
various rooms of his house at his death.'* From the detailed inventory of his
belongings at his death, we can get an idea of this man’ lifestyle and tastes.
His professional tools were spread throughout the upper and middle floors
of his three-story house and comprised three “used” lutes and a chitarrone,
two old lute cases, 11 books of tablature, “a set of books to sing with five
voices,” “diverse sheets of ruled paper, some with writing and others blank,”
and the “Great harpsichord with its legs.”'** The music paper suggests
"9 See Section I.a, n. 25.
"" Margival is a town in Picardie.
"2 See Section Il.a, n. 27-29. Lorenzino lived in the street “ut dicieur passato l'orso” (said co be after
the bear), now called “Vicolo del Leuto.” “The current name of this street is unusually appropriate and
‘may well have derived from the memory of the famous lutenist and the coming and going of his many
osteria con albergo infirm ordine” (an old
tavern with rooms of poor quality), whose sign depicted a lute: see ROMANO 1948-1949: 264, and
also BLAS] 1971: ad vacem, DELLI 1975: 506, and PESCI 1997: 238-239. The neighborhood of this
street, near the Ponte Sant'Angelo, was one of the most lively in the city, and there lived “tich merchants
and bankers, eminent prelates and artists, but also numerous courtesans ... there were many hotels,
such as the hotel of the Lion in Via'Tor di Nona and the hotel of the Bear in che continuation of that
street” (PASTOR 1963: VI, 261-261).
"5 See Section ILa, n. 23 and 28.
"4 According to Alessandro Piccinini (sce Section Ib: Piccinini 1623), the chitarrone did not have the
‘extended neck and bass strings yet by this date, Ie was a “liuto geosso,” that is, a large bass lure strung
with thin strings tuned higher than usual, but with the first and second courses lowered an octave, used
to accompany singing. On the chitarrone, see MASON 1989. For an alternative interpretation, see
SMITH 1979, SMITH 2002: 84.
h their lute cases. In 1664 there was “un'ar
scuclents wi‘Tue Knicuts or rae Lute 33
thar we are dealing with a composer or a teacher who had to copy pieces
for his students. In addition, he had a wooden study chamber (“studiolo
di Albuccio”) in which he kept various books, and in a small inlaid chest
there were a number of books in Italian. In addition to reading, it seems that
Lorenzino enjoyed other pursuits. There was “a game-board with its pieces.”
as well as a “Drum covered with green velvet” and “a sword and a dagger.”
And perhaps he liked to dress up on occasion as well. Besides the already
mentioned bearskin coat, he had a ‘purple outfit of the Buratto Bergamasco”
and a “French felt hat” (a memento of a visit to France?).
By the time he died in July 1590, Lorenzino had become a
respectable citizen. According to our calculations, he must have only been
about 40 years old. We do not know why death gathered him in the prime
of his life.
1.b Other musicians with the name Lorenzino
L.b.1 Lorenzino Fiammingo (Lorenzo Zevero)
As we have seen in the previous section, many Flemish servants
were hired by the Farnese court starting in 1559, the year in which the wife
of Duke Ottavio, Margaret of Hapsburg, became regent of the Netherlands.
Their names are known to us through two large registers in the Farnese
documents at Parma: the “Ruoli Farnesiani” and the “Mastri Farnesiani.”'?
Among the musicians, some were already active and in some cases famous;
others, taken in at a young age, were trained at court under the tutelage of
the older maestri. For example, between October 1563 and October 1564,
a certain Gabriele Valono received 4 scudi a month for the expenses of a
“little Flemish boy” (puttino fiammingo) who, beginning in the third month
of payment, is indicated by his baptismal name, Lorenzino.'”° In November
"= ‘The Ruoli are the lists of court employees in alphabetical order. Each person appeass only once,
together with the payments received by him. ‘The Mastri, huge volumes containing hundreds of pages,
record all of the monthly payments and carnings; employees are listed month by month with their
relative salaries, but their names could also appear elsewhere in the book, under headings sich as
“special payment,” “travel expenses," etc. Ruoli and Mastri each cover slightly different chronological
periods, and the Mastri havea number of lacunae. For the present research, I have consulted the Ruoli
1, 2 (1553-1570), 3 (1571-1577), 4 (1578-1582), 5 (1583-1587), 6 (1587-1590) and the Masti n
3 (1557-1560), 4 (1561-1564), 5 (1565-1568), 6 (1569-1570), 7 (1574), 8 (1575-1578), 9 (1583.
1586), 10 (1588-1590), 11 (1591-1592), 12 (1593-1594): see Section Ila, n. 21-22.
8 Maso n. 4, pp. 322, 350, 386, 404, 422, 430, 438. Payments for he month of April 1564 are
missing, ‘This child was possibly one of the rwo Flemish pages who came from Flanders (‘paggi famin
hi venuti di Fiandra’) for whom, in November 1563, six scudi were spent for towels, handkerchiefs34 Jourwat or Tae Lure Society oF Amgrica
1564 Lorenzino Fiammingo was paid in person, but in December he was
again assigned to the care of an adult; this time his caretaker was none
other than Cipriano de Rore.'” Having just returned to Parma after a brief
period in Venice, Cipriano was maestro di cappella of the ducal chapel.!"8
He was likely the one who requested the acquisition of a “quill instrument”
(strumento di penna—probably some variety of harpsichord) with the intent
of teaching Lorenzino."” Cipriano continued to receive 4 scudi a month
“per Lotenzino fiamingo musico” up to May 1565; after this date, Lorenzino
was paid directly.'*° Payments to him continued until June 1588, then
again for three more months beginning in December of that year!
list of “extraordinary expenditures,” 5.52 scudi were given on December 28,
1566, “to the musician Giuschino, for the price of a fur given to Lorenzino
fiamingo when he was sick, by order of his Excellency.” Wedo not know
if this illness was the cause of a hiatus in payments to Lorenzino Fiammingo
for five months, from July to November. ‘The fact that “his Excellency” the
Duke was personally involved in ordering one of his musicians to acquire
a fuur to help cure the sick youth shows how much Ottavio Famese cared
for his musicians, and also pethaps indicates a special affection he may have
had for this young Fleming. After February 1567 there is another hiatus of
six months in payments to Lorenzino Fiammingo; they take up again in
September and proceed uninterrupted until August 1570. The last payment
was his salary for five months, from April to August; as we will see below, this
lump payment may have had a certain significance." In this period, two
events of interest occurred: starting in May 1568 Lorenzino Fiammingo’s
Ina
and socks ("per sugavori facioletti et scapini”) and another four for other, unidentified expenses (Mastro
1.4, p. 290). Gabriele Valono, or Valonij, was probably Flemish; that he was a musician is made clear,
for example, by an entry in the Mastro n. 5, p. 98, which recorded a rent payment in the house where
he lived with other musicians.
" Mastro n. 4, p. 444; Mastro n. 5, p. 88.
2% ‘The duchess Margatet is also chought to have facilitated the engagement of Cipriano de Rore with
the Farnese dynasty. Margaret was born in a village not far from Cipriano’ native city. See also OWENS
2001, who cites “Cambier and others” (CAMBIER 1981).
% Mastro n.5, p. 96 (January 22, 1565): “Scudi 4 Y d’oro pagati a messer Ottobuono organista alla
Steceata per uno strumento da penna per far imparare Lorenzino.”
% Mastro n. 5, pp. 96, 124, 136, unnumbered page (writ no. 69), pp. 152, 176
' Mastro n. 5, pp. 184, 194, 210, 220, 234, 256, 320, 336, 358-9, 368. Payments for the month of
August and December 1565 are missing. For the second group of payments, sce Mastro n. 5, pp. 466
and 496.
* Mastro 1. 5, p. 386: “a Giuschino musico per il prezzo d'una pelliza che diede a Lorenzino fiamingo
quando era amalato d’ordine di sua eccellenza.” The “Giuschino musico” cited here was Josquin Per-
sones.
8 Mastro n. 5, pp. 532, 534, 580, 606, 610, 612, 622, 630-31, 642; Mastro n. 6 pp. 44, 84, 104, 105,Tue Knicuts oF THE LuTE 35
monthly salary was raised from 4 to 7 gold scudi, and on August 3 he received
8 extra scudi “to pay for debts from clothing expenses.”
Considering the facts as I have set them out so far, one would
indeed be tempted to identify this Lorenzino Fiammingo with our Lorenzino
Traceti. The elements in favor of such identification are: they share the same
first name, they are both natives of Flanders, they both worked at the Farnese
court, and the scarcity, or rather absence, of information specifically about
Tracetti before 1570. On the other hand, there is nothing to suggest that
Lorenzino Fiammingo was a lute player; as we have seen, the instrument
acquired to instruct him was a “quill instrument,” not a lute. Of course
playing the harpsichord did not exclude lute playing, and the Parmesan
court was surely well endowed with lutes and lute teachers, More serious
objections, however, are raised through a more accurate analysis of the dates.
As we have seen in Section [.a.2, it is probable that the “Lorenzo soprano”
active in Rome at the chapel of San Lorenzo in Damaso from 1559 to 1564
was really Tracetti, but already from the month of October 1563 and for
all of 1564, Lorenzino Fiammingo was at Parma. Another serious obstacle
is that while Lorenzino Fiammingo continued to be paid regularly by the
Farnese through August 1570, Tracetti was on the payment books of Cardinal
Ippolito II d’Este in Tivoli from January of that year. For all of Tracetti’s
infidelity and bad behavior toward the decrepit cardinal (see Section I.a.3),
it is difficult to imagine that it would have been possible for him to double
cross his employer that spectacularly.
After August 1570 the name “Lorenzino fiammingo” no longer
appears in either the Ruoli or the Mastri of the Farnese accounts. Instead,
on February 10, 1574, a certain “ms. Lorenzo Fiamingo musico” appears
ona list of back expenses. He was given 42.12 scudi, 30 in restitution of the
sum he had anticipated for rent of the room where he stayed from September
1, 1570, to the end of February 1573, and 12.12 for “provisions” he had
received at an unspecified time. These payments were part of a promise he
received on return from a trip to Flanders, stipulating that he would be paid
a monthly salary of 8 gold scudi plus the rent of a room, as was customary
with the other musicians.'* In fact, going back to April 3, 1570, among
113, 124, 135, 152, 158-9, 170, 190, 206, 263. Ruolo n. 2 only shows Lorenzino Fiammingo between
October 1567 and September 1568 (Ruolo n. 3 only starts at the beginning of 1573).
‘4 Mastro n. 5, p. 628: “per pagar debiti per vestirs
8 Mastro n. 7, p. 50: “A ms. Lorenzo Fiamingo musico [scudi] quarantadua di fino soldi 12 cioe
{scudi] 30 d’oro per il fitro della camera dove é stato dal primo di settembre 1570 per tutto febbraio
1573 che tanto ha pagato lui et [scudi] 12 d’oro soldi 12, a compimento della sua provisione di detto36 JOURNAL OF THE LUTE SOCIETY OF AMERICA
the “Travel expenses and horse-drawn carriages” notated in Mastro n. 6,
we find an entry of 48.30 scudi “to messer Lorenzo fiamingo for his trip to
Flanders;”** although it is not specified that this Lorenzo was a musician,
it is probable that it refers to our Lorenzino Fiammingo. If so, then his
trip to Flanders may have begun in April and ended in August, when he
returned to Parma and received, in one lump sum, the salary of those last
five months. Bearing this in mind, let us look again in greater detail at the
annotation of 1574, which leaves many points unclear. For example, the
address of the room he rented is not given, and the period of time for which
he was compensated for “provisions” is not specified. The sum given for
his provisions corresponds to only a month and a half of his salary, so it is
also unclear why he was not paid for the nearly two-and-a-half-year period
during which he rented his room.
One explanation may be that during this time Lorenzo was “on
loan” to another court which paid his salary, with the proviso that he
eventually return to Parma. In fact, during this period there is no mention
of a Flemish musician named Lorenzo or Lorenzino in the Parmesan court
records. At this point, however, one would expect to find him reinscated
at court starting in March 1573; instead, he completely disappears! ‘Two
conclusions are possible: either he left for good, or he returned, but he was
registered under a different name. In fact, a few months later, from October
1573 and continuing for nearly ten years until March 1583 when he dies,
all of a sudden there appears a new Lorenzo: “Lorenzo Zevero Fiamingo
”'8” The patronymic Zevero, also written Zeveri or even Zeuri, may
have been an Italianization of Sevres, perhaps the native city of this musician.
musico.
Ic is never stated in the documents whether we are dealing with a singer
of an instrumentalist, of, in case of the latter, what instrument he played.
Nor is it ever specified whether he was the same as the Lorenzino/Lorenzo
Fiammingo of the earlier registers, and thus we may be dealing with an
entirely different person. But the fact that his monthly salary was exactly the
same as that of Lorenzino Fiammingo, cight gold scudi, leads us to believe
tempo a [scurdi] 8 d’oro il mese che tanto se
lialtri musici” In rrying to find out 10 which period “detto tempo” refers to, I checked the preceding
pages of the Mastro, in which various back payments are recorded, but to no avail, Musicians’ rent
expenditures are extremely detailed in the Mastti, which record whether they lived together (as in the
case of the “five violinists,” Mastro n. 5, p. 98), oF alone (as with Cipriano de Rore, Mastri n. 4 and
5, passim).
© Masuro n. 6, p. 214.
‘7 Ruoli n. 3, 4, 5; Mastri n. 7, 8, 9.
romisse quando tomo di Fiandra ct fteo di casa come‘Tue Kxients or THe Lure 37
that he was in fact the same person.'** Apart from a few interruptions, the
court paid his rent every six months and at his death on March 26 1583 the
last ewo months of his salary were paid to unspecified heirs.'” Considering
the date of his death, it would be impossible to identify Lorenzino Tracetti
with Lorenzo Zevero and if, as seems probable, Zevero was the same person
as the Lorenzino Fiammingo active at Parma from 1563, it is evident that
he, too, could not have been the same person as our Roman lutenist.
I.b.2 Lorenzino Bolognese (Lorenzo Lodi)
In the same years there were other people named Lorenzo employed
at the Parmesan court: I have carefully followed the career of each of them to
see if anyone could be identified with our lutenist. Two names in particular
stand out: a certain “Lorenzo da Bologna sotto bottigliere” (Lorenzo
from Bologna assistant bottle-man), and a musician called “Lorenzino
Bolognese”. The first personage, some sort of second-rank butler, is certainly
not a candidate for our study, but the similarity of names can lead to some
confusion. In fact, a recent study on Lorenzino conflates the two, and
sustains that the entry recording the death of the “former botte-man”'“”
refers to the musician. However, the two are easily distinguishable in the
court registers by the fact that the butler’s salary was always much lower than
that of the musician. We will henceforth only refer to Lorenzino Bolognese
the musician.
According to Nestore Pelicelli, Lorenzino Bolognese was “at the
Court of the Duke [of Parma] from October 1, 1573 to June 3, 1582,
on which day he quit in order to join the service of the Duke of Namur,
demonstrating in this way his ingratitude. He asked to return to his previous
patron and after great insistence he was readmitted on April 20, 1584, and
then let go definitively on September 30, 1586.""' Pelicelli states that he
“There is some confusion in the way in which payments to Lorenzo Zevero are recorded. In the Ruoli
rn. 3, on February 8, 1574, there is an entry for his allowances for the “past” October and November,
ice., of 1573: the same payment for the same period is recorded in Mastro n. 7 on April 10. In the Ruoli
n, 3 Lorenzo Zevero’s salary is indicated as 5 monetary scudi and subsequently as 8 gold scudi, but in
fact the actual payment is always of the second figure, whether indicated as monetary or gold scudi.
(11.20 monetary scudi corresponded to 8 gold scudi, but beginning in November 1576 the exchange
was 11.36.)
' His death is recorded in Ruoli n. 5, the payment to his heits in Mastro n. 9, p. 31
4 Ruolo n, 5, entry “Lorenzo da Bologna gid sotto bottiglicre” (on a different page, following those for
“Lorenzo Zeuro” and “Lorenzo Lodi”). See PESCI 2005 [2007]: 353; Pesci also erroneously identifies
the page on which this information is Found.
‘™ PELICELLI 1932: 12138 Journat or THe Lute Sociery or AMERICA
gathered this information from the Ruoli of the Farnese court, without,
however, giving precise indications as to which ones. An examination of
both the Ruoli and Mastri shows that the information given by Pelicelli is
incomplete and at times inexact. For example, Pelicelli reports that Lorenzino
Bolognese appears at Parma beginning in 1573. I have found no trace of
him before October 1574; pethaps he mistook him for Lorenzo Zevero,
who does appear in October 1573." Furthermore, Pelicelli does not seem
to have noticed that this Lorenzino “Bolognese,” or “da Bologna” as he is
sometimes called, and a certain “Lorenzo Lodi musico” were, in fact, the
same person.' The following outline contains all of the information about
Lorenzo Lodi, alias Lorenzino Bolognese, which can be gathered ftom the
Parmesan Ruoli and Mastri:
© 1574. In December he received three months salary. The register
comments: “Lorenzino da Bologna is with his Excellency as a musician,
his salary is seven gold scudi a month and begins on the first of October
[corrected from January] 1574, formerly he ate at the table.” From this
we can deduce that by October 1, 1574 he lived at court, but we do
not know when he arrived there. On October 17 he received 10 gold
scudi for medicine purchased to cure an illness."
+ 1575-1581. During this period his monthly allowance is paid regularly.
It is always 7 gold scudi, or its equivalent of 9.80 monetary scudi.
He also receives a bi-monthly payment for rent from June 1575 to
November 1577 and from June to November 1578. Despite the fact
that the registers show him always to be at court, he did not receive
rent payments for the entire period.'
© Pelicelli was not alone in confusing the identities of these two musicians. In Mastio n. 8, for exam-
ple, I have noticed several places in which the scribe of the registers showed uncertainty. For instance,
fon page 290 the name “Zevero” is crossed out and substituted with “Lodi.” Often one or the other is
simply identified generically as “Lorenzo musico,” and itis only by the difference in salary that we are
able to deduce to which musician each enuy refers.
"4 Thae they were the same person can be seen by comp:
with those in the Mastri, and by examining the encties
1. 5 a8 “Lorenzo Lodi da Bologna.”
1 Ruolin, 3: “Lorenzino da Bologna sta con sua Eccellenza per musico ha di salario [scudi] setce d'or0
il mese et li comincia al primo di ottobre [corrected from: gennaio] 1574 che per Padietro hi mangiato
in casa.” The medical expense is listed in Mastro n. 7, p.125: “17 ottobre 1574. A messer Lorenzino da
Bologna musico [scudi] dieci d'oro mandatoli per spenderli in medicine mentre sta malato.” Regard-
ing the expression “mangiare in casa,” literally “eating in the house,” Dr. Niwa, in « personal correspon
dence, suggests thar this may indicate that the musician was first employed as a page: “I guess that he
was fostered as a page in the ducal chamber.”
*® Ruoli n. 3 (end of November 1577) and n. 4 (December 1577 vo December 1581); Masti n. 8
the entries for the two names in the Ruoli
mselves, For example, he is listed in the Ruoli‘THe KNIGHTS OF THE LUTE 39
* 1582. ‘The stipend of Lorenzo Lodi, always 7 gold scudi a month,
continues until June 15, “at which time he quit.” Mastro 9 records a
payment in January, listed under “extraordinary expenses and gifts” for
of the end of the previous year, of a gift of 5.68 monetary scudi from
“His Excellency.”
* 1583. Fleeting reference in Ruolo n. 5 to: “m.lorenzo lodi, in the service
of his Excellency as a musician with a monthly stipend of seven gold
scudi;” however, no actual payment is registered."* Tt may be that this
entry was predisposed by the scribe of Ruolo n. 5 who did not yet know
that the musician was no longer at court.
* 1586. Payments to “Lorenzo Lodi musico” start up again in Mastro n.
9, He returns to service in April with a monthly stipend of 10 gold scudi
and is paid until December 8, at which time he is dismissed. His rent
is paid starting in May and continuing with certainty until September,
and possibly for the two following months.'®
‘Traces of Lorenzo Lodi are no longer found after December 8, 1586.
While the information in the Ruoli and Mastri helps to clear up
some of the previous confusion about this musician, it does not paint the
full picture of his role at the Farnese court. For this let us return to Pelicelli,
who referred to two letters conserved in the State Archive of Mantua.!° To
these I can now add another.'** All three stem from the pen of Ippolito
Olivo, who was at the Farnese court in Parma. The letters of November 25,
1585, and December 11, 1586, are addressed to his cousin Luigi Olivo,
“castellan of Mantua’; the third letter, written on December 18, 1586, was
addressed to “Cavalier Federico Cattaneo,” at Goito, a feudal holding of the
Gonzaga.
Let us begin with the middle letter (December 11, 1586)."*? Here,
Ippolito Olivo informs his cousin that, following the death of Duke Ottavio
and 9.
© Ruoli n. 4: “che poi si presa licentia.”
1 Mastro n.9, pp. 554-55.
"88 Ruoli n. 5: m. lorenzo lodi sch al servirio di Sua Eecellenza per musico con provisione di scudi sette
oro il mese deis”. The last word of this sentence is barely visible; the letters seem to spell out “deis,” but
its significance is unclear. On the following page, the death of Lorenzo Zevero is announced.
1 Ruoli a. 5; Mastro n. 9.
© See Section IL.a, n. 5 and 7, Pelicelli refers to Canal and Eitner. Actually the entry under “Lorenzino
Bolognese” in EITNER 1900-1904, VI, 221 is based entirely on CANAL 1879,
551 See Section I.a, n. 6. Canal cited this letter partially and without revealing that it too regarded
“Lorenzino Bolognese”
2 See Section ILa, n. 6.40 Journat or THe Lure Soctery oF AMERICA
Farnese (on September 2, 1586), the new duke (Alessandro) had released
all of his employees, including the musicians. If the Duke of Mantua were
interested, there was still the possibility of hiring some of the virtuosi who
were still free, but he would have to hurry: there were “those who would take
great pains to have them, and in particular the Duke of Bavaria, who sent a
messenger a few days ago in order to acquire most of them, and with care
blanche to give them whatever they ask.” Evidently, while others were unable
to renounce the acquisition of a prestigious musical establishment, the “hero
of Flanders,” Alessandro Farnese had other things in mind. His son Ranuccio,
however, was of a different opinion, and claimed to “have written to Flanders
to the lord Duke his father, asking his highness to concede him the favor of
maintaining in service” at least some of the musicians, presumably the best
ones, among whom was Lorenzino Bolognese. Lorenzino, then, was released
from court on September 30, 1586, as reported by Pelicelli, but he was not
necessarily fired on account of his ingratitude towards the Duke, since he
was not the only one to be released at that time, and if Ranuccio’s pleas to
his father were heard, Lorenzino may have been re-hired soon thereafter.
In the letter written by Ippolito Olivo the year before, there is
even more information about Lorenzino Bolognese.'* “This youth,” he
related, “was raised by my lord the Duke [of Parma, Ortavio Farnese], and
all that he knows, he knows thanks to the good maesiri that His Highness
has always maintained, as for example one Fabritio Dentici, a Horatio dalla
53
Viola, and many other valiant men;” the result of this education was that
Lorenzino joined the ranks of the “valiant men” and that there were “few
his equal,” he was “a most perfect tenor for the choix” and performed “also
asa contralto,” singing “with good grace and disposition.” Furthermore, he
knew composition “most well and his things [compositions], amongst these
valiant men here, are in good esteem.” [n short, he was an authentic talent,
so much so that “he played his part, extremely well, on the Viol.”
Ippolito Olivo reports that Duke Ouavio gave Lorenzino Bolognese
the opportunity to study with Fabrizio Dentice and “Horatio dalla Viola”
(Orazio Bassani). It does not appear that Dentice arrived at the court of
Parma before January of 1569, or, at the earliest, the end of 1568.'* As for
'53 See Section Il.a, n. 5.
'™ FABRIS 1992: 73. Fabris writes that Dentice arrived at Parma in January 1569, based on two letters
addressed to Ortavio Famese. ‘The first (Pesaro, October 22, 1568) was written by Paolo Animu
forming the Duke that Dentice was “available and inclined to serve the lord marquis” (“si trova libero et
in
con animo di servi il signor marchese’), and affirming that by hiring him, Oztavio would acquire “the
umber one virtuoso in this profession, and a most honoured and virtuous gentleman’. ‘The second
Jeter (Pestvo, December 28, 1568) is by Giachetto Buontempo, who writes, “your excellence could notTue Knicuts oF THE Lure Al
Bassani, until now it has been thought that his arrival at Parma could not
be dated earlier than 1574.'* In reality, the date of Bassani’s service at the
court of Parma should be moved back at least by four years. In the month
of January 1570, Lucrezia d’Este, daughter of the Duke of Ferrara, martied
Francesco Maria IT Della Rovere, who was the nephew of the Duke of Parma
(he was the son of Vittoria Farnese and the Duke of Urbino, Guidobaldo
II della Rovere).'*° This wedding took place in the city of Ferrara, and one
year later, in January of 1571, the bride moved from Ferrara to Pesaro to
join the court of her husband. The processional entrance of the Duchess
was celebrated, at least officially, with great pomp and was accompanied by
abundant festivities. The musical director of the entertainments was Fabrizio
Dentice, on loan for the occasion from Otavio Farnese to his brother in
law, the groom.'” Dentice had arrived in Pesaro at least a month earlier.
In fact, on December 22, 1570, he wrote to the secretary of the Duke of
Parma, Giovan Battista Pico, with a specific request:
“the Lord Duke of Urbino this morning ordered me to write to his Excellency
supplicating him to command messer Horatio to be sent immediately to Pesaro,
because he plans to adorn himself with his virtues at chis festival. Your Lordship
would be well served ro do me the favor of telling this to his Excellency and
giving the order as soon as possible that messer Horatio come here. [..] If there
were a way to bring here the viol of messer Horatio, this would contribute to a
m8
good result because there is no appropriate thing here.
Ivis clear from these lines that the celebrated “Horazio della Viola” was already
at Parma in the service of Duke Outavio in the month of December 1570,
find a better lute player in the world” (“vostra eccelentia non poteva trovare il migliore sonator di liuco
al mondo [...]"). However, these sources are not incompatible with the possibility that Dentice arrived
at Parma earlier than January of 1569, perhaps as early as late October or November, 1568.
5 See NEWCOMB 2001.
56 See genealogical trees of the Farnese and Este families. The marriage, imposed on the groom, Fran-
cesco Maria, by his father, was not a happy one, and was later dissolved. ‘The lack of enthusiasm on the
part of Francesco Maria for this union was such that he didn’t even bother co show up for his wedding
ceremony, and was represented by a substitute (marriage “by proxy” was common but usually occurred
when there was good reason for the absence of the groom, such as obligations during wartime, etc.)
Francesco Maria arrived in Ferrara ten days afier the ceremony in order to attend the festivities, but
forgetting to bring his bride a wedding gift, and left quickly afterwards without her. See SCOTONI
1899: 75-76.
'57 See FABRIS 1992: 73-74, who erroneously indicates January 1571 as the date of the wedding,
8 Parma, Archivio di Stato, Carteggio Farnesiano Estero, Pesaro, b. 289. ‘This letter is cited in its
entirety in FABRIS 1992: 102 (doc. 11).42 Jounnat or tie Lute Sociery or America
four years earlier than the date previously thought. Since no documents
regarding the preceding period of Bassani’ life have come down to us, we
may well speculate that he was in Parma even earlier, Thus, if Dentice was in
Parma from the end of 1568 and Bassani from the end of 1570, Lorenzino
Bolognese may have benefited from their teaching in the period in which
he “ate at the table,” before, that is, he entered into the court register as a
musician in his own right (i.e. October 1574).!°
In the letter of November 25, 1585, Olivo mentions another fact
about Lorenzino Bolognese that merits attention: his service with the “Duke
of Namur.”'®? Olivo writes, “My Illustrious, most Reputable Lord Cousin.
I believe that Your Lordship ought to remember well that when I was in
Mantua a few days ago, I told you that because of the death of the Duke
of Namur there was a musician by the name of Lorenzzino Bollognese [sic]
who was without a patron.”'*' Canal, commenting on this letter, modified
without explanation the title of the duke in question from “Namur” to
“Nemur.”"® A direct examination of the document shows, however, that the
spelling given by Olivo is, indeed, “Namur” (with an “a’). This would lead us
to think that Canal simply made a mistake in transcribing the letter, or that
there was a typographical error in the printing of his book. In an attempt
to follow this lead, I was surprised to find that the “Duke of Namur” never
existed. In fact, the city of Namur, in Belgium, was never a dukedom, it was
a county.'® Evidently it was in the letter by Olivo that some kind of error
had been made, and I have formulated a number of possible solutions:
1. Olivo may have erred in calling the lord of Namura “duke” rather than
a “count.” If this were the case, then the person being referred to here
would have been Phillip II, who was given the title “Count of Namur”
‘The service of Fabrizio Dentice to the Farnese may also have facilitated an encounter with Loren-
ino Tracecti. In January 1570 Tracetti was in the service of Cardinal Ippolito II d'Este, the uncle of
Lucretia d’Este. Icis indeed possible not only thac the Cardinal was present at her marriage in January
1570 in Ferrara and a er for her processional entry at Pesaro, but that he also contributed to the
good outcome of the festivities by lending his musicians, among whom may have been the young and
promising lucenist. Thus, Lorenzino Tiacetti, following the Cardinal, may have encountered Dentice
at Pesaro, at Parma or even Fecrara on the occasion of the marriage, and might have benefited from his
advice and teaching, ‘The stylistic influence of Dentice on Tracetti has been noted in BEIER-KIRALY
1996 and FABRIS 2001
© ‘This derail has been noted in past studies of Lorenvino, but its implications have never been ex-
plored.
161 See Section Ila, n. 5.
'@ CANAL 1879: 41.
“3 BAURIN 1984; bTae KniGuts oF THE LuTE 43
at the death of his father, the emperor Charles V. But Phillip II was
still alive in 1585; he would live for another 13 years.
‘The city Namur was governed by the son of Ottavio Farnese, the
condottiero Alessandro; perhaps Olivo was thinking of him? To begin
with, Alessandro was still alive and, moreover, he was nota duke. The
title “Duke of Parma” belonged to his father, who would die a year
later. As a matter of fact, no member of the Farnese dynasty died in or
shortly before 1585. Finally, Olivo, who lived at the court of Parma,
would hardly have used the expression “Duke of Namur” (incorrect
in itself) to refer to one of his patrons: he would surely have used the
elocution “the Lord my Duke” or something like that.
. Could Olivo have merely made a mistake in the spelling of “Namur”?
7
we
Reconsidering Canal’s transformation of the name into “Nemut,”
and after having searched in vain for a city of that spelling, I noticed
that in northern France there is the town of Nemours. Moreover, the
tide of “Duke of Nemours” existed and during the 16th Century it
was conferred upon various people belonging to different families of
the highest nobility. After Louis d’Armaignac, Gaston de Foix and
Giuliano Medici, it was given to Phillip of Savoy in 1528 and, after
his death, to his son Jacques." Cultivated gentleman, lover of poetry
and music, an able dances, Jacques of Savoy would seem the perfect
candidate to have desired engaging the services of a musician of the
caliber of Lorenzino Bolognese. This duke, in fact, died precisely on
June 18, 1585. Thus, it seems to me, there is no doubs that Olivo was
referring co Jacques of Savoy in his lewer.
Jacques of Savoy was a personage of great prominence. First cousin
of Frangois 1*, King of France and famous in his youth as a dandy of the
French court," he undertook a military career, becoming lieutenant general
of France. His commanding officer was the highest ranking soldier of the
French army, Frangois de Lorraine, Duke of Guise and Count of Aumale,
called “Balafré” (“Scarface”) on account of his famous facial wound. In 1566,
three years after Balafré was killed by pistol during the siege of Orleans,
Jacques married his widow, Anna d’Este (rumors of a preceding love affair
1 See the genealogical rees of the Valois and Savoy Families
1 See BRANTOME Oeuvres V: 77-102: “He was a beautiful prince, very gracious, brave, valiant,
handsome, pleasant, personable, well-spoken, able to write well both in verse and prose. He was among
the best dressed, so much so thacin his time, the whole court, or atleast the youth, took him asa model
and dressed like him".44 JOURNAL OF THE LUTE SOCIETY OF AMERICA
Figure 6 - Jacques of Savoy (anonymous, Chantilly, Musée Condé)
between the two raged like wildfire).' Anna, the sister of Lucrezia d’Este,
was the favorite niece of Cardinal Ippolito [I d’Este, who, as we have noted,
was once the patron of Lorenzino Tracetti.'” The marriage of Anna and
Jacques took place shortly after the liquidation of a legal dispute against
Jacques by one of his former lovers, Francesca of Rohan, who had a child by
'@ Sce BORDEAUX 1920. In 1678 Madame de La Fayette published a novel, Zes aimants d’Annecy,
which was liberally inspired by the story of the Duke of Nemours and Anna d'Este, who appears as
“Princesse de Cléves”; the work was successful and gave rise to considerable controversy because of its
explosive mixture of history and fiction.
18 See PACIFICI 1920: 299, Cardinal Ippolivo II d’Esce was also particularly fond of the first husband
of Anna, Frangois de Lorraine Duke of Guise. Thus, Anna may have been familiar with the Cardinal’
famous lutenist Lorenzino Tracetti, and may even have nurtured an interest in hiring him. Another
interesting consideration is that Renée de Lorraine, nephew of Anna and her first husband, married
Wilhelm Wittelsbach, Prince of Bavaria in 1568 (see the genealogical trees of the Guise, Lorraine and
Wittelsbach families). ‘This was the same prince who, as we have already seen, was later to become
very interested in hiring “Lorentzin". These facts once reinforced a possible identification of Lorenzino
Bolognese with TracetTue Knicuts oF THe Lute 45,
him whom Jacques always refused to recognize." Soon after the marriage,
however, Jacques suffered from severe gout and his social life diminished
as a consequence. He retired to his castle at Annecy and later to Cassine-
Chastelier near Moncalieri, where he died on June 18, 1585.'°
‘Anna d’Este (who apparently preferred to remain at the court
of Paris after her husband's retirement) had several children with her firsc
husband and gave birth to three more with her second: Charles-Emmanuel,
Marguerite Marie, who died aged three, and Henri. Certainly Anna and
Jacques were able to provide the best education possible to their offspring,
including music. That at least Henri (known also as the “Marquise of Saint-
Sorlin”) knew how to play the lute and collected music is shown by the
heading ofa manuscript conserved in Genoa: “Garden of Tablatures for the
Lute [...] in which the Prince, his Lord Marquis of Saint-Sorlin, brother of
the Lord Duke of Nemours, granted me the favor of letting me copy from
all of his most rare Tablatures.” At Jacques’ death the title of “Duke of
Nemours” was passed to his first born, Charles-Emmanuel. In the written
“instructions” left to his children, the duke recommended that they not
fire the servants, unless they had been unfaithful.’ When, on November
25, 1585, Ippolito Olivo wrote to his cousin that “because of the death of
the duke of Namur [...] Lorenzzino Bolognese [...] was without patron,”
we find that, just a few months after the death of Jacques, the musician
evidently was fired by the Duke’s son. It could be that Charles-Emmanuel
was not particularly interested in music (unlike his brother Henri), or that
Lorenzino Bolognese had not shown sufficient proof of loyalty. From the
words of Ippolito Olivo it is not clear if the unemployed musician was in
Parma or Mantua at the time. Coincidentally, at precisely this moment
“8 This natural child ususped the title of the “Duke of Nemours” for a few years, For information
about Jacques of Savoy; besides BRANTOME Octwes (1858-95) and BORDEAUX 1920, see LITTA
1839-1846: vol. X tab. XIIL
‘© BORDEAUX 1920: 107 and BRUCHET 1898: 110.
"© Genoa, Biblioteca universitaria, Ms. cartacco sec. XVI, Ms.EVILLL. The complete title is: “Giardino
dé intarolature per il leuso et villanelle et capriccio Brandi volte, Ex corrente Gagliarde, pas et meazo che
il Principe il Sig.r Marchese di San Sorlino fratello det Sig.r Duca di Nemeurs mi ha fasto favore di las-
ciarmeli copiare sopra rutte le sue pitt rare Intavolavure.” See TANASINI 1994: 6. It would be interesting,
to know who the lute instructor of Henri was. These are no works attributable to Lorenzino in this
manuscript
"Paris, Bibl, Nationale, Fonds Francais n. 8967 (complete text in BRUCHET 1898). The passage
referred to reads: “Servez vous des vieubx serviteurs de voz pere et predecesseurs et leur faictes du bien
ec de !honneursilz sone et ont esté fidelles& Ja maison, et s'ilz sont aultres, n'ayez respect & la vicllesse
en ce cas.” (BRUCHET 1898: 127-8).46 Journat or THe Lure Society or AMERICA
Charles-Emmanuel happened to be traveling in the area of Mantua. From
4 number of heretofore unpublished letters, we find that the young Duke
of Nemours and his entourage were sailing up the river Po in a bucintoro."””
Starting in Ferrara and heading toward France, he landed here and there
at nightfall to the discomfort (and even panic) of the locals who had to
supply the large group with provisions and hospitality.'”? Is it possible that
Lorenzino Bolognese was initially with this group, and that he disembarked
during their passage at Mantua? We do not know, In fact, nothing more is
ever heard about Lorenzino Bolognese after the death of Ottavio Farnese in
1586.
oe
When, in 1987, Dinko Fabtis first proposed to identify Lorenzino
Bolognese with the lutenist Tracetti, two main objections were raised." The
first was that no reference to Lorenzino Bolognese ever mentions that he
played the lute, the second that if he were “Bolognese” (ie. from the Italian
city of Bologna), he could hardly be “Romano,” as the many references to
‘Tracetti attest. In my doctoral thesis on Lorenzino, I was inclined to dismiss
these objections as being inconsistent.'”> However, in examining the Olivo
correspondence, I raised a third, more subtle objection. In 1571 the secretary
of the Duke of Mantua, Zibramonti, wrote about Lorenzino (Tracetti) to
the castellan of Mantua. Ic is clear from this letter that the castellan already
0 di Stato, Archivio Gonzaga busta 2632, c. 635, 652, 656, 660, 665 (leiters dated
1585 November 2, 8, 11, 12 and 13). Aletter from Girolamo Arrigoni to the Duke of Mantual?], Fer-
rara, November 13 1585 reads: “The Lord, Duke of Nemur {sic] has entered the Bicineoro at Bonizio
probably at the seventeenth hour, and is now coming toward us with as great diligence as possible.
Excellence took a meal at Melara, and as soon as he boarded the Bicintoro he set himself to playing
dice. | doubt it will even reach the fourth hour of the night before he gets to Mantua’. A bucintero was
a double decked ceremonial galley with a large canopy. The most famous example was the one used by
the Venetian Doges for the yearly celebration of Ascension Day, These letters, if nothing else, at least
confirm the difficulties for contemporaries in the spelling of “Nemours”: Charles-Emmanuel is called
alternatively the Duke of “Nemur”, “Anemors’, “Nemorus’ (the correct spelling appears only once). It
is no wonder, then that Olivo, too, was prone to error in this regard.
"5 For example, Ercole Stroz2i of Borgoforte, who had already waited for three days, was greatly wor-
ried about the food and carriages. Another declared: “Here we cannot procure fish and if it were a day
for meat, those necessary supplies would not be here”
™ FABRIS 1987: 23. See PESCI 2005 [2007]: 351-352 for a reiteration of the same two objections.
” See CARLONE 2005: 39-41. My arguments can be summed up, briefly as follows. 1) Olivo may
simply not have known that Lorenzino played the lute; he may have taken it for granted, since in the
Renaissance most musicians were familiar with the lute even if they were not specifically identified with
the instrument (i.e., Marelart, Palestrina, and Marenzio to name a few ~ see OWENS 1997: 293-294
who cites a letter of October 18 1578 from Annibale Cappello to the Duke of Mantua, and BIZZA
RINT 1998: 40-41, 45-47), Alternatively, Olivo may have thought that the Duke of Mantua was more‘Tae Kurcuts oF THE Lure 47
knew all about Lorenzino: his identity and activities are taken for granted.
Fourteen years later, in 1585, the castellan of Mantua received another
letter, this time from his cousin Ippolito, which amply describes the story
and activities of Lorenzino “bollognese.” Why was Lorenzino’s story related
in full to the castellan in the second letter but not in the first? It would
make sense if Lorenzino Tracetti and Lorenzino Bolognese were different
people.”
‘The matter has now been definitively resolved, thanks to the detailed
examination of the Farnesian Ruoli and Mastri. The real name of Lorenzino
Bolognese was Lorenzo Lodi, singer, violist and composer, first in the service
of the Farnese court at Parma from 1574 to 1582 (and possibly as a page
from childhood), then in that of the Duke of Nemours, Jacques of Savoy
from 1582 to the Duke's death in 1585, and finally with the Farnese again
until the death of Duke Ottavio in September 1586. Thus, he could not
have been the same person as the golden knight, Lorenzo Tracetti.
Lc. Vincenzo Pinti
Lc.1 Vincentius Pintus Cives Romanus
As we have seen in the Foreword to this article, one of the most
difficult problems in the reconstruction of Lorenzino’s biography was
first advanced by Canal in 1879: can he be identified with the lute player
known in the sources only as the “Cavaliere de] Liuto” (written hereafter as
“Cavaliere”)? Until recently, given the scant information available about this
interested in viol players and singers chan in lutenists. Moreover, Ottavio Farnese maintained highly
skilled lutenists at his court, such as Fabrizio Dentice, whose students — including Lorenzino Bolognese
— would certainly have had the opportunity co advance in cheie study of the instrument, 2) Apart from
the possibility that a native of Bologna could have acquired Roman citizenship, the term “Bolognese”
itself might be open to question. Rather than to the Italian city of Bologna, it may have refecred to the
town of Boulogne in the French district of Nord-Pas de Calais (now called Boulogne-sur-Mert), which
in the 16th Century was part of Flanders. The art historian Michael Amy called my attention to the
iambologaa’ (alias “Giovanni da Bologna”, “Jean Boulogne’,
“Jean de Bologne”, “Boullongne’...), who was in fact of Flemish origin, being born in Douai, not far
from Boulogne. Lorenzino Tracetti, whose origins were Franco-Belgian, may well have been a native of
that city. Situated strategically on the border between France and Flanders and near the port of Calais,
Boulogne was the theatre in those turbulent years of numerous battles, causing the destruction of,
among other things, most of the city’s archives. ‘Thus, it would be difficule ro ascertain the presence of
any family — including the Tracett — in that city in the 16th Century.
"5 Sce Section H.a, n. 4. Ie could also be that the castellan was not the same person. In 1585 he was
Luigi Olivo, cousin of Ippolito Olivo, but in 1571 his identity is not known, On the other hand, Luigi
Olivo may have known Lorenzino well from the 15708, but his cousin Ippolito may not have known
this. I discuss these points in detail in CARLONE 2005.
case of the famous sculptor known as48 JOURNAL OF THE LUTE SOCIETY OF AMERICA
knight in a few contemporary documents and several literary and musical
sources, such identification did not seem unreasonable:
* in 1581 he was in the service of Cardinal Alessandro Farnese;!78
* in 1589 he entered into the service of “Cardinal Montalto,” with whom
he was still found in 1593 and 1602;'”
+ he enjoyed a certain celebrity, although he was judged inferior to
* he was said by Piccinini to have appreciated his new invention, the
archlute, and he kept it for himself for some time."*"
New findings made in the late 1980's and carly 1990's, however,
showed that the Cavaliere, who died in 1608, could not have been the same
person as Lorenzino Tracetti, who died in 1590." The discovery ofa literary
source of 1612 (Traiano Boccalini, Ragewagli di Parnaso),!® in which “the
knight of the lute of the Roman court” is given a name, Vincenzo Pinti,
was at first received with a certain amount of skepticism, since the text in
question, written and published after the death of the Cavaliere, spoke of
Pinti in the present tense:
“Apollo proposed Vincenzo Pinti, called the knight of the lute at the
Roman court for the excellence with which he plays that instrument (...]
You, Vincenzo, you are the first of your profession that has been admitted
into this company of literati...) but the need we have today of yout person
has moved us to make this resolution. Zach, therefore...,” etc. (italics
184
mine).’
"7 See, for instance, how Dinko Fabris (in FABRIS 1987: 23-25) succeeded in reconstruct
an apparently logical and coherent way the then available biographical details regarding Lorenzino-
Cavaliere del liuto-Lorenzino Bolognese, considered as a single person, placing him within a wider
historical-musical context.
8 See Section II.b, n. 32.
"See Section II.b, n. 39, 56, and Raval 1593.
"© See Section Ib, Tagliaferro 1608.
See Section IIb, Piecinini 1623.
"See Section ILb, n. 57 (death of the Cavaliere) and Section Tl.a, n. 26-29 (death of Lorenzino
Tracett).
8 See Section II.b, Boce and Foreword, fa, 25,
4 “Apollo propose con la quale svona quell'istrumento [...] Voi, Vin:
enzo, siete il primo della vostra professione che sia stato ammesso in questo lecterato collegio [...] ma
la necessita che ogg? si ba della persona vostra, ci ha violentati a far questa risoluzione. /nsegnate dunque
[.11”. See Section II.b, Boccalini 1612.
161
incenzo Pinti, pet l'eccell‘Tue KNIGHTS OF THE LUTE 49
Furthermore, it seemed strange that not a single musical source mentioned
the name Vincenzo Pinti. In sum, even admitting that Pinti was an excellent
lutenist and was, i 1612, a “knight of the lute of the Roman court,” one
could not exclude that another “Cavaliere del Liuto” worked in Rome at
an earlier date.
Starting with these scarce and contradictory facts, the first thing that
stimulated my curiosity was the Cavaliere’s move in 1589 from the service of
Alessandro Farnese to that of Alessandro Peretti (called Cardinal Montalto).
In fact, Alessandro Farnese died that year, and the office of vice-chancellor
that he held for over fifty years passed to Montalto. As we have already
seen, the vice-chancellor’ residence included the church of San Lorenzo in
Damaso, and it is from the parish register of this church that we have the
indication of the death of the Cavaliere. In the course of my research into
the history of San Lorenzo in Damaso, | discovered that the tomb of the
“Cavaliere del Liuto” was originally placed there, and I was able to recover
the text of the now missing tombstone, which was transcribed by Vincenzo
Forcella in his monumental 14-volume collection of the Inscriptions in
Churches and other Buildings in Rome From the 11th Century to the Present,
published in 1874:'8
Figure 7 — Cardinal Montalto (Gian Lorenzo Bernini, Hamburg, Hamburger
Kunsthalle, 1622)
© FORCELLA 1869-1884: V (1874): 196 number 559. See Section IL.b, GALLETT! 1760-Pinti
1608. Valticri (VALTER 1984: 102) tells us chat the tombstone was originally placed in the transept.
‘As Franco Pavan has kindly cold me, the book by Forcella was very likely the source for Camillo Frangi-
pane, Memorie sulla vita ei fatti del Cardinale Alesiandro Farnese, Roma, 1876, p. 36: “Among the many
noteworthy personages who frequented the rooms of his residence, there was still that famous musician
Cavalier Vincenizo Pinti, decorated with the chivalric order of Christ of Lusitania, renowned professor
and familiar to Farnese as well as to Montalto, Ics also known that the pages, living in a house next to
the villa of Caprarola, sang praises with harmonious invention to their munificent lord, and the melodya. 1608.
D.O.M.
VINCENTIO PINTO ClV1
ROMANO
IVSITANIAE CHRISTI MILITIAE
EQVITI
INTER IVL. III. RM. INTIMOS
CVBICVLARIOS
OB FIDE] CANDOREM ET
FIDIVM
PVLSANDARVM PRAESTANTIA
LONGE CONSPICVO
AETATE PROVECTIORE DVOBVS
MAGNIS
ALEXANDRIS FARNESIO ET
MONTALTO
S.RE. CARDD, ET
VICECANCELLARIIS
AEQVE CARISSIMO
ARCHICONFRATERNITAS .SS.
APOST.
EX TESTAMENTO HAERES BC.
VIXIT ANNOS LXVI. MENSES. V.
DIES XVI.
OBIIT XV, KAL. IAN, M.D.C VIII.
OYAEN MH. I1POX. XOP AHN
NEC FIDIBVS QVISQVAM
MELIOR
NEC MORIBVS VNQVAM
SIC FIDIBVS MORES
CONTINVERE TVI
JouRNAL OF THE LUTE SOCIETY OF AMERICA
Year 1608
To the Lord, the Best, the Greatest.
To Vincenzo Pinti, Roman citizen,
Knight of the Militia of Christ of
Lusitania,
Among the grooms of the chamber to
Julius I
Greatest Pontiff
most illustrious for the candor of his
faith and for his ability to make strings
vibrate,
ata more advanced age equally dear to
the two great Alexanders, Farnese and
Montalto,
cardinals of the Holy Roman Church
and vice-chancellors.
The Arch-confraternity of the Holy
Apostles, heirs by testament, erected [shis
monument).
He lived 66 years, 5 months and 16
days.
He died fifteen [days] before the Calends
of January 1608.
“Nothing if not befiuing to strings”
No one was ever better in faithlstrings or
in conduct,
thus your conduct was maintained by
‘jour faithlsirings
Here, finally, we have the full name of the Cavaliere, and many of the essential
facts of his biography come into view:
* he was a Roman citizen;
+ he was Knight of the Militia of Christ in Lusitania (1c. Portugal);
* he was groom of the chamber to Pope Julius IT (Giovanni Maria Ciocchi
del Monte, 1487-1555, elected pope in 1550);
of those notes echoed in that sublime monument.”‘Tue Knicuts or THe Lure 51
* he was esteemed by the two cardinals and vice-chancellors, Alessandro
Farnese and Alessandro Peretti Montalto;
» his heirs, the Arch-confraternity of the Holy Apostles erected his
tombstone;
+ he died on December 18, 1608, at the age of 66 (thus he was born in
1542);
* he was appreciated for the purity of his faith and his high morality;
* he was famous for his ability to “make strings vibrate.”
‘The tombstone shows unequivocally that the so-called “Cavaliere
del liuco” was, in fact, Vincenzo Pinti, and we can now positively identify
him as the same Cavaliere cited by Traiano Boccalini in 1612." His name
is again shown on a baptismal act of 1581 in which “ms. Vine.’ Pinti detco
il Caval.ro del liuto” is named godfather of the baptized subject.'"” The
fact that Pinti was a Roman citizen (“cives romanus’) is confirmed in his
autograph testament where he states that he was born “here, in Rome?'**
As with the case of Lorenzino, this does not necessarily imply that Pinti had
Roman, or even Italian ancestry, and there is some indication that his family
origins may have been Portuguese. A contemporary of Vincenzo living in
Figure 8 — Pope Julius III (anonymous)
"© See Section IIb, Boccalini 1612. Boccalinis use of the present tense in citing Pinti, even though his
text was dated 1612, could be explained in several ways: he may not have known of Pingis death, his
texe may have been written prior to 1608 and only published later, ot he may have selected the present
tense to give the impression of realty to his fantasy of life in Parnassus
© See Section ILb, n. 55.
18 See Section ILb, n. 45.52 Joursa: or THe Lure Sociery or AMERICA
Rome was Antonio di Francesco Pinto, canon of Lisbon,'*” and the wealthy
and noble family of the Freitas Pinto, whose origins were Jewish, Spanish
and Portuguese, flourished in Naples in the 17th Century." Other Pintis,
possibly unrelated to the Neapolitan family, lived in the Republic of San
Marino during the early 16th Century and occupied political positions of
importance." It is not known if these were of Portuguese origin. In any
case, no information has come to light so far linking our Vincenzo with
any of these families, and we do not know if he was of noble birth,'” nor
if he was a converso (as the Jewish converts to Christianity from the Iberian
Peninsula were called).' Regarding the order of knighthood to which he
belonged, the Militia of Christ of Lusitania, this is not in itself sufficient to
confirm his Portuguese origin, since orders of knighthood could be bestowed
for various reasons. I shall return to this point further on
As to the date of death, there is a contradiction between the date
engraved on the tombstone and the information given in the death registers
of San Lorenzo in Damaso, which gives the date of the Cavaliere’s death
as November 23.'" The inscription on the tombstone reads “OBIIT XV.
KAL. IAN. M.D.C VIIL,” which means, literally, “Died on the fifteenth day
before the Calends [first day] of January,” that is December 18, Another
inscription on the tombstone reads “he lived 66 years, 5 months and 16
days.” If this amount of time is added to the date of birth given by Pinti in
his testament, July 2 1542, the same date of death, December 18, 1608, is
See PESCI 2003 [2004]: 124, fn. 16.
"© See RAUZINO 2003.
™ One *Giacomo di Lodovieo Pinti® was, in 1530 and again in 1541, one of the ewo “Capitani
Reggenti” of the Republic of San Marino. He also had the delicate mission of defending the auronomy
of San Marino against Rome during a long negotiation, concluded successfully in 1549 with a Papal
Brief by Paul II] (Archivio Storico della Repubblica di San Marino, Jnveweari ¢ Sommari, Busta 345).
He is always cited in the Farnese accounts and elsewhere as a knight. As already shown in Section
La.1, noble birth was not a requirement for knighthood. Furthermore, nobility was also not required
foremployment by the Curia, Theve are many cases of musicians of humble origins who served at Italian
cours, including that of the Pope, on account of their artistic valor. A well known example is Francesco
da Milano: see PAVAN 1995. Pope Julius II], Pint’ first patron, caused a sensation when he adopted
young boy from the underclasses, Santino (subsequently re-baptized Innocenzo del Monte) to whom
he also conferred an unmerited cardinal’s hat. (See BURKLE YOUNG ~ DOERRER 1997).
8 “This would not have prevented them from being given the honor of knighthood, as was often the
case, despite recurrent protests such as that of Cardinal Francisco Mendoza y Bobadilla, who, in his
Tizin de la nobleca expaviola (1581) revealed that a large portion of the Spanish aristocracy was not, in
reality, of “sangre limpio”,
* See Section ILb, n. 57.‘Tae Knicuts oF THe Lute 53
obtained." However, this does not take into account the ten days subtracted
from the calendar in 1582 by the reform of Pope Gregory XIII. Taking this
into account would put the date of his death back to December 8. Two
documents seem to further complicate the situation.’ They testify that
the corpse of Pinti was seen on December 10, and on the same day 75 scudi
were paid for his funcral. Thus, he may have died on December 10.
Of the four dates under consideration (November 23, December 8,
December 10, and December 18), the first is certainly erroneous, since Pinti
signed his own testament three days after this date.'” The second one seems
the most likely, since the funeral payment may have plausibly been made
two days after his actual death, and it accords with the calculation of his age
made taking into account the Gregorian reform. Regarding the erroneous
date of December 18, this may be due either to an error in the 19th Century
transcription made by Forcella, which is the only evidence of the text of
the tombstone in our possession, or to the possibility that the author of the
inscription did not take into account the Gregorian reform when calculating
the date of death. There is further evidence in this inscription of a certain
amount of confusion on the part of its author: 15 days before the calends
of January 1608 gives the wrong year, 1607.
‘The engraving of the tombstone and its erection was executed by
the Arch-confraternity of the’Fwelve Apostles, following indications given by
Pintiin his testament, which nominated the Arch-confraternity as “universale
herede” (sole beneficiary).
1.c.2 Nec fidibus quisquam melior
‘The final lines of the text of Pinti’s tombstone play with the double
meaning of the word “fides,” which can be translated both as “faith” and
“strings,” implying any stringed musical instrument.!”® These lines praise
Pinti for being the best both in his religious faith, and in the art of lute playing
Section Il.b, n. 45
' See Section II.b, n. 40, 49.
See Section TI.b, n, 48 (a second testament, with autograph signature).
'% See GUIDOBALDI 1995 and 1999: 291-293, fora detailed exposition of the many ways in which
in the epigram for political alliances (“foedera’) by Ambrogio Alciati, based on the reciprocal faith
of the allies, and in the elaborate marquetty of the “studiolo” of Federico Montefeltro (Fedetico =
“Fede"s ricco,” ie. rich with faith) in the ducal palace at Urbino: in both cases the concept of faith or
fidelity is summoned by means of the image of a stringed instrument.54 Journat or THe Lute Soctety oF AMERICA
(represented by “strings”). It is possible, however, to read yet a third meaning
into the word “fides,” regarding a certain expertise that Pinti apparently
possessed for lute strings as objects in and of themselves. Returning to
Boccalini’s Ragewagli di Parnaso, we learn that the “Cavaliere del liuto” is
invited to “teach princes and commoners the most necessary arts of tuning
the lutes, in which many are ignorant, so much so that by overstretching
the strings, they break them. And above all you should take care of certain
wacky fools who I know will surely fall into your hands and who, being
obstinate in wanting the bass strings to do the job of the chanterelles, will
stretch them so much that, although they are very thick strings, they break
anyway, and smash the lutes to smithereens.”
In fact, Pint’s involvement with lute strings went deeper than
this. An official letter issued by the Vatican chamberlain nominated Pinti
superintendent of the “master lute string makers.” Unfortunately, we do
not know the exact date of this document, which is referred to in the statute
of string makers issued in 1589.2" If, as is probable, the letter originated in
the same year or thereabouts, the chamberlain would have been Cardinal
Enrico Caetani, elected to the office in 1587. String makers were bound
by their statute to follow very precise rules, and the job of the superintendent
was to resolve any disputes between them. It must not have been a very
time-consuming job for Pinti, since he could delegate his duties to someone
else, yet it was not merely an honorary position, as it provided him with a
204
good income.
\% ‘This comment might have arisen from a misunderstanding of the new chitarrone tuning invented
by the Florentine Camerata: see PICCININI 1623: 5: “furnish with thinner strings” the “large Lutes’,
which “being so sweet” were “Very appropriate to accompany one who sings”, by “pulling them up to
a pitch which is comfortable to the voice”, having “found them much lower than was necessary.” For a
political-allegorical interpretation of Boccalini, see PESCI 2003, (2004): 122-123.
2 VITA SPAGNUOLO 1994: 25, fin. 6, The author does nor give precise indications as to the date
of this lewter oF its present location.
20! See Section II.b, n. 42.
32 See the genealogical tree of the Caecani family.
*3 VITA SPAGNUOLO 1994: 24, Vita Spagnuolo cites chree documents, one of 1588 and ewo of
1589 (Section IL.b, n, 40-42), in which the string makers were rigorously assigned by statute to buy
material for making gut strings from specific butchers. Claudio Annibaldi has pointed out (ANNI-
BALDI 1987-1988: I, 82, fn. 180) that, in 1599, the new chamberlain, Cardinal Piewo Aldobrandini,
Cactani’s successor, clamped down severely on the fraudulent practices of Roman lure string makers,
1g the Roman Avvisi: “because there had entered even among themselves deceit and fraud regarding
their art, nor only in falsifying the stringsand their measurements, but also in making itso that one had
co beg them to have some” (AVVISI 1600, July 12, c.419v). A new string makers statute was drafted
in the same year (sce Section ILb, n, 44).
21 PESCI 2003 [2004]: 133. See Section ILb, n. 43, for an example of the direct intervention of Pinti‘Tur Kuicuts oF THE Lure 55
‘Two documents ftom this period regarding the Roman string-
makers guild mention a certain “Pietro Alberto” (also cited as “Alberto
teutonico”).”” This may be the same “mastro Pietro-Alberto” cited a few
years earlier in a letter to the Duke of Ferrara, Alfonso I] d’Este, which also
mentions the Cavaliere.” In this letter, Giulio Masetti, a Roman agent of
the Duke, wrote to inform his patron that three “excellent” lutes made by
Piecro Alberto, which cost eight golden scudi apiece, were ready to be sent
to Ferrara. Alfonso had ordered his maestro di cappella, Ippolito Fiorini, to
ask the “Cavalliero dei letito del sig. Cardinale Farnese” to retrieve the three
“most rare” instruments for his court.” The letter also mentions a man
named Pignati, presumably one of Alfonso’s lutenists, who had asked that
one of the lutes be chosen by the Cavaliere for himself. Masetti asks Alfonso,
therefore, if the lute for Pignati could be sent directly to him rather than
to Ferrara with the other two.2 ‘There was nothing unusual in asking an
expert lutenist to check out the work of a lute maker before spending a large
amount of money on his instruments. That Pinti and Pietro Alberto knew
each other and were possibly friends is shown by the fact that a few months
later, Pinti was named godfather at the birth of the lute maker's son?” In
any case, Masetti’s letter shows that Pinti was considered an authority on
utes, and informs us that he was well enough known at the Ferrarese court,
by fame if not in person, that his judgement could be trusted by one of his
peers.
Also at the court of Alfonso II d’Este in Ferrara was the celebrated
Piccinini family of lute players: Leonardo Maria | and his three sons
Alessandro, Girolamo and Filippo.2!" Alessandro is not only remembered
into a legal argument.
2 See Section Il.b, n. 40 and 42.
2 See Section IIb, n, 32.
2” On Fiorini, see BOTTRIGARI 1594 (cited in CRISTOFORETTI 1983: [i]).
8 Patririo Barbieri (BARBIERI 1989: 166) erroneously interprets the document, attributing to the
Cavaliere the acquisition of the lutes. [cis clear from the text, however, that Pinti was simply asked ro
retrieve the instruments and consign them to Masetti A final consideration is that Pignati would have
wanted the instrument for his own use and was therefore anxious to make sure that it was of the high-
est quality, bu the owner of the instrument would probably have been the Duke, as it was usually the
case that instruments played by court musicians were owned by the court and not by the musicians
themselves.
2® ‘See Section ILLb, n. 55. Marco Pesci suggests (PESCI 2003 [2004]: 130) that Pinti was sclected as
‘godfather by the luthier for the advantage of Pinti’ highly placed contacts.
*° For more on the Piccinini brothers see CRISTOFORETTI 1983. ‘The music of Alessandco Pic-
cinini is found in his Primo libro li lnavolarura dl tiuco, ed di chicarrone (Bologna 1623) and the post-56 Jourwat or THe Lute Sociery or America
for his compositions, but also for his experiments in lute design. In the
introduction to his Primo libro dintavolatura di liuto, et di chitarrone,
published in Bologna in 1623, he claims to have invented both the archlute
and the “pandora,” a type of chitarrone with the “fifth string, and the sixth,
and the contrabasses in silver thread”?!' He writes that his “exquisite”
archlutes were very much appreciated both by Duke Alfonso and by the
Prince of Venosa, Carlo Gesualdo.*'* Such was Gesualdo’s enthusiasm, it
seems, that the Duke gave him two of them. Gesualdo knew something
about lutes: in playing the lute he is said to have had “few peers.” When
he returned to Naples, he stopped in Rome and left one of the archlutes
there, which, according to Piccinini, “then fell into the hands of the Knight
of the Lute, who always used it, infinitely appreciating that invention.”*"4
Piccinini was able to get the instrument back when he visited Rome after
the death of the Cavaliere.”"*
humous /ntavolanura di luto, Secondo libro (Bologna 1639) which includes compositions by the book's
editor, Alessandro’s son Leonardo Maria Il.
» See Section ILb, Piccinini 1623. Itis nox exactly the case, as some commentators have affirmed, that
Piccinini was, or claimed to be, the inventor of the chicarrone, Instead, he states that his “invention”
consisced of the addition of a long neck extension for additional bass strings to the ordinary lute, thus
producing the “archlute,” and that this type of extension was applied to the chitarrone (originally the
name given to an ordinary bass lute with a new tuning) a few years later, not earlier than 1597. Regard
ing the “pandora’, see PICCININI 1623: 5.
Asis wall known, Gesualdo da Venosa married Eleonora d’Este, cousin of Alfonso II, in 1593: see
the genealogical tree of the Este family.
9 This expression comes from a lecter from Jean de Macque to Camillo Norimberghi, July 30, 1586,
cited in LIPPMANN 1978: 263.
21 “This probably happened during Gesualdo’s second trip from Ferrara to Naples, which took place
berween late summer and December 1595, and not during the first trip, between May 15 and De-
cember of 1594 (see BIANCONI 2001). This is because Piccinini invented his archlute after having
failed ac his lute design, the “liuto dal corpo longo” (long-bodied lute), which was
constructed beginning in January, 1595. Piccinini wrote to Duke Alfonso on January 31, 1595, that
he went to Padua on the 25th of that month and ordered che new lutes to be made, bur had to wait
for the long soundboards 10 arrive from Germany (CRISTOFORETTI 1983: [iii], who in turn cives
VALDRIGHI 1884: 272). The resulting instrument, which was called “stravagante” (extravagant) by
the luce maker, was judged to be a failure for its acoustic quality. It was after this frst experiment that
Piccini had the brilliant idea of extending the neck, rather than the body of the lute.
2 There is no trace of this archlute in the inventory of objects in PinciS room ac the palace of the
Chancellor at the time of his death (sce Section II.b, n, 50). The inventory only contains one “liuro
con la sua cassa’ (lute with its case). [tis possible that the archlute was housed elsewhere, for example at
his private home in the Trevi district of Rome (see Section II.b, n. 45), but considering that Pinti was
employed by the vice-chancellor, the instrument may have belonged to his patron, who may have kept
ic in a different pare of his residence.‘Tue Knicrts or THE Lute 7
I.c.3 Ob fidei candorem ... longe conspicuo
Although Piccinini does not say so (perhaps he didnt know), the
archlute probably did not fall into the hands of Vincenzo Pinti by accident.
Ir is not certain that Pinti and Gesualdo knew cach other, but it is likely,
and their acquaintance may have been facilitated by the composer Jean de
Macque. Before joining the court of Gesualdo at Venosa in 1585, the Flemish
musician lived and worked for many years in Rome and made many close
friends whom he remembered in later years with nostalgia.?"° One of these
was probably Vincenzo Pinti.2"” Ina letter written on April 28, 1589, to his
friend Camillo Norimberghi, Jean asked for news of the lutenist: “I beg you
[...] to inform me if the Knight of the Lute [...] has retired into the service
of the Cardinal Mont’Alto, as here it has been said.”""* Cardinal Farnese
had just died and Pinti did in fact “retire” to Montalto’s household: could
this letter suggest perhaps that someone in Naples also hoped to acquire the
services of our lutenist?
Nicold Tagliaferro, “singer in the royal chapel of his Catholic
Majesty in the Kingdom of Naples,” also knew the Cavaliere and dedicated
a somewhat confused passage to him in his list of those who “raised that
instrument [the lute] to such perfection as we see today.”2"” The first players
he cited in his list were “signor Luise Dentice, most expert in that practice,
and after him signor Fabritio his son, true light and master regarding the
way to play the lute, who has no equal cither in Italy or outside of Italy.”
2 See LIPPMANN 1978 for a well-documented examination of the relations berween Jean de
Macque and the two cities.
2” Cardinal Alessandro Farnese, Pinti’s patron, was a cousin and good friend (“cugino e amicissimo”)
of Nicold Caetani, uncle of Camillo Caetani, to whom Jean de Macque dedicated his Secondo Libro
Di Madrigaletti Et Napolitane A Sei Voci (Venice 1582): See LIPPMANN 1978: 250-51, and the ge-
nrealogical tees of the Cactani and Farnese fumnilies. The relationship between Alessandro Farnese and
Nicol Cactani may have facilitated an encounter, and perhaps friendship, between Vincenzo Pinti and
Jean de Macque. It also seems probable that it was Cardinal Farnese who suggested in 1588 the choice
of Pinti as superintendent of the string makers’ guild co the chamberlain, Cardinal Enrico Caetani,
another nephew of Niccold. While on the subject of the Cactani family, ie is possible thata member of
this family from the next generation knew Pinki, ie. Cardinal Bonifacio, who was the patron of Tiaiano
Boccalini, author of the Rageuagh di Parnaso (see PESCI 2003 [2004]: 123). Note, 0, the somewhat
distant familial relationship beoween Cardinal Famese and Carlo Gesualdo (see the genealogical trees
of the Farnese and Borromeo families) which may also have facilitated an encounter between Gesuialdo
and Pinti.
© See Section IIb, n. 39. Documents from between 1583-84 and 1589 indicate thar Norimberghi
was in the service of che Caetani during this periods one of his duties was to hire musicians for religious
services (LIPPMANN 1978: 252-3),
8° See Section IIb, Tagliaferro 160858 Jounnat or tHe Lute Society or AMERICA
After this, he conceded, the “Cavaglierino (little knight] who lived in Rome
with the Lord Cardinal Farnese was not of negligible renown.””” ‘The use
of the diminutive “Cavaglicrino” and the description that follows seem to
indicate a certain amount of condescension on the part of the singer of the
royal chapel. Perhaps Tagliaferro also wanted to underline the difference in
social class between Dentice (who belonged to “one of the principal noble
clans of Naples, that of the Capuana,”®' and was thus without doubt a
knight of “great stature”) and the Roman lutenist. Certainly the “licde
Cavaliere” could not compete with the great Dentice, who, Tagliaferro adds,
was without equal both “in lute playing” and “in every other thing that can
induce harmony and beauty,” that is: “arias for bass and soprano to sing to
an instrument,” “madrigaletti,” “but above all those things that are sought
for the Holy Week.”
Let us return to Jean de Macque. While in Naples, Jean’s religious
fervour, not entirely evident in some of his profane compositions, was
suddenly heightened after an encounter with the fierce moralist Giovenale
Ancina, who had been sent to Naples in 1586 by Filippo Neri as part of his
counter-reformation program of religious renewal. One of Ancina’s missions
was to ensure that the musical arts were addressed to the greater glory of
God In 1602, a few months before being elected bishop of Saluzzo, Ancina
wrote a letter to his good friend, Cardinal Federico Borromeo, in which he
touches on musical matters in a past seriptum:™
“[ have at hand a young Roman, 19 of 20 years old, who plays the lute
excellently, and he is a diligent student of the works of the G. knight, known
as ‘of the lute,’ praising them lavishly, Therefore, | pray your most illustrious
29 The “cavaglierino” referred to by Tagliaferro would appear to be Pinti because of his description as
being in the service of Cardinal Farnese, but it might also refer to Lorenvino Tracetti, fhe was also in
Famese service (sce above, Section 1.2). Tracetti was a golden knight and thus, according to Sanso-
vino, of a lesser rank than the noble Dentice.
FABRIS 1992: 61.
See the clarifications by Francesco Sansovino: “The more worthy the prince, the greater the knight
created by him, compared to one made by a prince of lesser stature”. Pinti may have been created
knight by a prince of “lesser stature” (SANSOVINO 1566: 8).
» “The methods of persuasion used by Ancina were quite radical. For example, in the case of Jean de
Macque, after having scolded him for setting lascivious lyrics, he tore apart his book of madrigals, at
which poine the composer was promptly convinced. ‘This episode, which can be seen in the Apostolic
“Processi" (Rome, Chiesa Nuova, Archive of Padri Filippini) is recounted by DAMILANO 1956: 36.
Ancina was sent 10 Naples in 1586 by Filippo Neri, who recalled him to Rome ten years later. On
Giovenale Ancina and his works, see FISCHER 2001 and Tempio armonico 2007.
2 ‘The text of the letter contains a few comments about various common acquaintances and news
of the imminent arrival in Rome, “in the red habie of a pilgrim’, of the recently converted “Dottor‘Tue KniGuts oF THE Lure 5s
lordship to do me the courtesy of [writing] a letter [to the knight] so that he
may not be reticent in communicating his works to the virtuosi, who will do
him honor; and that he give me some rare examples of his compositions, all of
which I will devote to the praise of God and Our Lady the Blessed Virgin.
Signor Emilio de Cavallieri, musician extraordinaire, is dead. We will all
die.”
T have not so far been able to identify the young Roman lutenist
who was so enthusiastic about the Cavaliere’s music, nor have I been able
to clarify the significance of the letter “G” that precedes the word “cavalier”
(maybe “Gran,” i.e, “Great”). Nevertheless, the following significant points
are raised by this letter: there existed compositions by the Cavaliere “of the
lute,” these works had a very limited circulation but not so much so that
they could not fall into the hands of a young Roman virtuoso, and Ancina
counted on Federico Borromeo to convince the Cavaliere not to be “reticent”
in “communicating his works,” guaranteeing that they would be “devoted to
the praise of God and Our Lady the Blessed Virgin.””® Who was Ancina
trying to reassure with this last phrase, Borromeo or the Cavaliere? Probably
both. Borromeo, cousin of Saint Carlo Borromeo, was, like his friend Ancina,
a staunch and active counter-reformation moralist, but Vincenzo Pinti, too,
Figure 9 ~ Cardinal Federico Borromeo
Rossetti,” who was “formerly [..] a most rotten Calvinise and fierce antagonist of the Catholics.” See
Section ILb, n. 30,
> ‘The last phrase regarding the death of Emilio de’ Cavalieri is cited in KIRKENDAL 1993: 386. To.
date, I have not seen the preceding part of the letter cited in modern musicological studies.
26 As far as | know, no other documents, apart from the document discussed here and Section IL.b, n.
31, show a personal connection between Vincenzo Pinti and Federico Borromeo. Such a connection60 JOURNAL OF THE LUTE SOCIETY OF AMERICA
was known for his religiosity, as his tombstone records: “most illustrious
for the candor of his faith.” That this was not simply rhetoric, but reflected
a commonly held opinion about Pinti seems to be confirmed by another,
heretofore unnoticed document.’”
In a long sermon for the nuns of Saint Catherine, written at an
unspecified date between 1612 and 1614, Federico Borromeo explains that
in the Holy Church, one sings not for “vanity, from which may God save
you,” but to “accompany the singing of Angels,” so that the souls of listeners
are moved to devotion. To obtain this admirable effect three conditions are
necessary: a good voice, music well composed, and aboye all the sincerity of
the soul of the singer, because “he who does not practice prayer or does not
feel within himself a certain pious and devoted emotion cannot arouse it in
others.” The third condition counted for so much that, even if the voice was
not very good, the “pious and devote emotion” of the singer would be enough
to give him such a beautiful and convincing manner that he would be able to
“suspend the souls” of the listeners. And to better convince the good nuns of
the truth of his words, Federico cited a few examples, both of “saintly souls”
(such as, “Saint Catherine of Siena, who played and sung very well”), and of
contemporary people, among whom were two men that he himselfhad heard
with his own ears, One of these was an “Excellent Musician” from Ferrara
(not identified), and the other was the “Knight of the Lute,” known by this
name “because he played excellently on this Instrument:”
he also sung in a marvelous way and although the voice was not good but rather
quite hoarse (“ratica”), nevertheless he sung some Psalms with such a beautiful
manner that he attracted to himself the souls of the people who even came
from afar to hear him,
It is not surprising that a lutenist would recite psalms, perhaps
according to the tones, with a chordal accompaniment on his instrument, and
he would certainly not be lacking for repertoire.” His voice may have been
hoarse, but it was evidently inspired by a sincere faith, a faith also asserted,
might have been facilitated by the long friendship becween Borromeo and Pint’s patron, Cardinal Mon-
talto, The two cardinals were given their hats at the same session in 1585 by Pope Sixtus V. Borromeo was
a groom of the chamber to this pope (Felice Peretti) and Montalco was the pope's nephew. See LITTA
1839-1846: IV, table “Peretti di Montalto”
»” See Section ILb, n. 31.
28 To cite one example, Vincenzo Galilei published in his Frenimo an “In exitu” for four voices “per
cantare sul liuto la parte piu grave” (GALILEI 1584: 14, 17-23). That Pinti may have composed vocalTue KNiGuts oF THE LUTE 61
as we have seen, on his tombstone, which notes that he was loved by a
pope (Julius III) and two cardinals.” It is not known if he composed his
psalms, hiding his authorship for religious modesty, and it may be that this
modesty was also responsible for the limited circulation of his instrumental
compositions and for the total absence of his proper name (substituted, as it
were, by that pseudonym, “knight of the lute,” that has so exercised lutenists
and musicologists) in the musical sources.”
L.c.4 Lusitaniae Christi Militiae Eques
‘Turning again to Pinti’s tombstone inscription, we read that he was
a “Knight of the Militia of Christ in Lusitania.” We do not know when or
by whom he was nominated knight, but it is unlikely to have been by Pope
Julius II, because Pinti would have been too young for such recognition
by the time of the pope’s death in 1555, although young children, usually
the sons of “great princes” were sometimes so honored even shortly after
birth!
In the accounts of Cardinal Alessandro Farnese conserved at the
State Archive in Naples, we find Vincenzo Pinti’s name reccurent among
the Cardinal’s salaried employees.” He is always listed there as “signor
cavalier Vincenzo Pinto” (in a single occasion with the addition of “sonatore
di lito”). Thus, he was already a knight at least from the beginning of
music is suggested by the presence of a villanella, “Di pianti e di sospir nodrisco il core,” attributed
to “S. Cavalier del Leuto” in Ms. B. k. 6. 31 (olim It. 1384), ce. 8v-9r, in the Biblioteca Estense at
Modena. ‘his collection of villanelle was arranged to include a line of lute tablature, but the tablature
itself was omitted, I wish to thank Franco Pavan for this important information.
ca UI was particularly fond of music (see PASTOR 1963: V1, p. 38). In a report by Ippolito
Capilupi of February 3, 1551 (Mantua, Archivio Gonzaga, cited in PASTOR 1963: V1, appendix 12,
p. 602) we learn that Plauto’s comedy Aulularia, “with nice costumes and well recited by young boys,
with intermezzi of good music,” was given at Belvedere that year. Is it possible that the young Vincenzo
took part among the “fanciull” on that occasion?
29 Temay be that the high esteem Federico Borromeo had for Pinti caused him to suggest the lutenist’s
inclusion in an unexpected place: among the poets of Parnassus in Traiano Boccalinis Raggwagli di
Parnaso. Borromeo was closely associated with Boccalini, who entrusted the cardinal with his Roman
affairs in 1596 (see FIRPO 1969).
31 Unless, of course, itis eventually shown that Pinti was of noble bieth. For example, the two children
of Jacques of Savoy (the Duke of Nemours) received the necklace of the “Annunziata di Savoia’ when
they were respectively five and ten years old. See LITTA 1839-1846: vol. 10, table XIII, and GIGNA-
SANTI 1786: 74.
‘ee Section II.b, n. 33-38, which cover the years from 1564 (not 1563 as erroneously reported by
NIWA 2006 and repeated by PESCI 2005 [2007]) to 1570. 1 would like to thank Dr. Rosa Russo for
reading these documents. Apparently, the accounts for the following years ate missing, and
is not possible to ascertain if Pinti remained with the Cardinal after that date. There is a levteroe Jourwat or tHe Lure Society oF AMERICA
these accounts in January 1564. And in 1581, Giulio Masetti speaks of him
as the “Cavalliero del leiito del sig. Cardinale Farese.”2* It was probably
Alessandro Farnese (the first of the wo “great Alexanders” named on the
tombstone) who elected him to the prestigious order of knighthood. ‘The
vice-chancellor could, by right, nominate a certain number of knights (for
the record, he could nominate 26 Knights of Saint Peter, 13 of Saint Paul,
20 Pious Knights and 2 Knights of the Lily). Furthermore he often
succeeded in conferring additional knighthoods on his protégés by exerting
influence over those who could intervene on his behalf. Cardinal Montalto
used this strategy to have Sebastiano Raval declared Knight of Malta and
to give Cesare Marotta the Savoy Cross and Pompeo Stabile that of Saints
Maurice and Lazarus.”*° Cardinal Farnese beseeched the Duke of Savoy to
bestow “the cross of Saints Maurice and Lazarus, as you are in the habit of
benevolently conceding to all those who, with the appropriate means, ask for
it” toa certain “Knight [...] being one of my gentlemen, and long-standing
servantin our household,” promising “particular obligations” in exchange for
this favour.*” In the case of Pinti, Alessandro Farnese could have turned for
help to his relative, Carlo Borromeo, who was the protector of the Order of
the Militia of Christ in Lusitania until his death in 1584.2 This hypothesis
is reinforced by the fact that Carlo’s cousin, Federico Borromeo, knew the
lutenist personally and appreciated his religious fervour. The choice of the
Portuguese order of knighthood would concord with the possible Portuguese
ancestry of Pinti, and the direct involvement of the King of Portugal in this
matter cannot be entirely excluded.””
of November 15, 1570, feom Ludovico Tedesco to Cardinal Alessandro Famese that speaks of the
dismissal of musicians, which must be carried out while erying not to displease “the knight of Aragon,
at whose request {the Cardinal] took the said musicians into his service” (Parma, Archivio di Stato,
Carteggjo Farnesiano Estero b, 462 [ex 362]). Ie cannot be stated with certainty thar Pint was among
those being dismissed, since itis not known if Pinti was one of the musicians hired ac the suggestion of
the knight of Aragon. ‘That Pinti could nor be dismissed on account of his nobility, as affirmed by Pesci
(PESCI 2005 [2007]: 357-8), is still an open question.
™ See Section ILb, n. 33, c. 17.
4 See Section ILb, n. 32.
> See MORONT 1841: VIL, 163.
26 See CHATER 1987 p. 189-93.
®” Turin, Archivio di Stato, Lettere Gardinali mazzo 1°, n. 32: December 12, 1580.
8 Carlo Borromeo was nominated Protector of the Order of the Militia of Cheist in Lusitania in 1560
‘when he was made cardinal by his maternal uncle, Pope Pious 1V (Gian Angelo Medici). See PASTOR
1963: VI, 85, and the genealogical trees of the Farnese and Borromeo families
2 Documentation regarding Pintis elevation co knighthood has not been found so far. In the inven
tory of his belongings (Section IIb, n. $0) there is a ce:
di poter pigliar la croce di Christo”), and 2 document conceding to Pinti the col
ing from his membership in the order of knighthood, allowing him co displa
his house. This privilege of displaying the emblem of kn
ate for “keeping the cross of Christ” ("Breve
-ction of revenue deri‘Tue Kxicuts oF THe Lute 63
‘The knighthood of the Militia of Christ in Lusitania, according to
Francesco Sansovino, was a “religious militia” or knighthood “of the cross”,
and its adherents were committed to religious regulations.” We learn from
the roundabout explanation of Filippo Bonanni that such regulations were
originally those of Saint Benedict: poverty, obedience and chastity, “but then,
by indulgence of [Pope] Alexander VI, they can practice marriage, and they
vow to take up arms for the Catholic faith whenever needed”.**' Although
the vow of chastity did not exclude marriage, Pinti does not seem to have
taken advantage of this loophole: his tombstone, so rich in information about
his life, mentions neither wife nor children, to whom Pinti probably would
have left his inheritance, instead of to the arch-confraternity. On the other
hand, at the time of his death, Pinti may have been a widower and/or may
have survived children who died young. There is no strong evidence for this,
but there are two indications that are worthy of note and might stimulate
further research. The first is that in his testament, Pinti left a substantial gift
to the “monastery of the virgins of Saint Catherine of the Rose in Rome [...]
for the benefit and service of the said virgins and for those things that they
need for their use and for themselves: to keep themselves clean, and both for
sleeping and for eating.”** Could this generosity have been motivated by
the presence of a close relative in the monastery? Furthermore, the inventory
of his belongings mentions two birth certificates (“fedi”) for one “Giovanni
Battista Pinto” and a “letter of lady Menichina, his mother”.*? That Pinti
saved these birth certificates suggests that the person named may have been
a'son, The reference to “his mother” ix less easily explained: if Giovanni
Battista was his son, it is strange that the lady in question was referred to as
the mother of Giovanni, rather than as the wife of Pinti, unless, of course,
Giovanni Battista was born out of wedlock. Giovanni Battista could also
have been a nephew or other relative. Another possibility is thar the
person named in these birth certificates was not the son, but the father of
Vincenzo. A document of 1599 reveals that Vincenzo’s father was in fact
named Giovanni, but a second name of Battista is not indicated there.**”
3 SANSOVINO 1566: 11 v., 22 1: and 133.
*! BONANNI 1711: Section LVI.
28 See Section ILb, n. 45
8 See Section ILb, n. 50.
Marco Pesci suggests that Menichina might be Vincenzo Pinti’s mother. However the grammati-
cal construction of the phrase implies that she was the mother of Giovanni Battista (see PESCI 2003
[2004]: 131). Vincenzo Pinti did have a loved nephew, Francesco Leone (or Leoni) Pinti, who died
when he was 25 years old (see Section II.b, GALLETTI 1760-Leoni 1597). His tombstone, erected by64 JOURNAL OF THE LUTE SOCIETY OF AMERICA
‘The vow of poverty, too, was not to be taken too literally. As we have
already scen, the position of superintendent of the string makers guaranteed
Pintia fairly good income. That his economic situation was discretely florid
is seen from his testaments and from the inventory of his possessions drawn
up after his death. Since Pinti was neithera soldier, nor, as far as we know,
achaplain, we can infer that within his order of knighthood he would have
been considered a “servant”, probably “of office”.*” We learn from Bonanni
that knights of Lusitania wore around their necks a “ted cross bordered with
gold with another white cross set in the middle of it” and that “the clothing
used in the capitulary functions is a large cloak of white wool tied around
the neck with two white ropes” ** In fact, suich a cloak is possibly referred
to in the second testament, in which Pinti asks to be buried in “the white
clothing that I usually wear when in communion.”*”
‘The Militia of Christ in Lusitania was an “ecclesiastical militia’.
Sansovino informs us that knights of the ecclesiastical militia were a separate,
distinct category from knights “of the spur,” i.e. “golden knights.” Thus the
expressions “cayaliere aurato” and “eques auratus” (golden knight) could
only refer to Lorenzino Tracetti and not to Vincenzo Pinti, although both
Lorenzino and Vincenzo could be aptly described as a “knight of Rome”
and, no doubt, “knight of the lute.”
his uncle Vincenzo, records that he worked in the houschold of the Cardinal of Saint George (Cinzio
Passeri Aldobrandini, 1551 - 1610), nephew of Pope Clement VIL. The use of the term “avunculus”
(maternal uncle) 10 indicate Vincenzo Pinti on the tombscone points to the existence of a sister of the
lutenist, whose death probably predates that of her son, as otherwise she would have been mentioned
‘on the tombstone. See PESCI 2003 [2004]: 134-135, who seems to have overlooked this detail, and
inexplicably affirms thar the death of the young nephew must have been violent.
2 See Section II.b, n. 54. This document is mentioned by Marco Pesci (PESCI 2003 [2004]: 128,
note 24), but he doesn’ seem to have noticed the reference to Pinti’s father,
2 See Section II.b, n. 45, 48 and 50,
+8” See Section |.a.1: the classification of orders of knighthood.
2 ‘The description of the cross given by Sansovino (F, 22) is a little confusing: “una croce rossa, ma
tonda con certe tacche d’oro per entro sparse” (a red, but rounded cross with certain marks of gold
spread around inside).
2” See Section IILb, n. 48.Tae Kuicuts oF THE LuTE 65
II. Documents and literary texts
‘The documents and literary texts cited in this article as sources for
biographical information are categorized into two sections: documents and
texts concerning musicians named “Lorenzino” (Section I].a), and documents
and texts concerning Vincenzo Pinti (Section II.b). Within each section,
documents are listed first, then literary texts. Documents are numbered.
progressively. They are grouped alphabetically by city according to their
present place of conservation, and then ordered chronologically. Labels
have been assigned to literary texts, in order to identify them easily within
the text of the article. The labels are composed of the name of the author,
if known, or the title in abbreviated form, plus the date. Literary texts are
listed in chronological order of publication, or compilation in the case of
unpublished manuscripts.
A short description is given for each documentary source. For the
more important documents and texts, a partial or total transcription is given,
sometimes provided with short explanatory notes. In the transcriptions,
abbreviations are spelled out whenever possible, and the use of capital letters
is modernized. Documents in Italian and Latin have been left, for the most
part, in their original language. It was considered opportune to translate
documents from Bavaria written in carly German, which is substantially
different from modern German. Finally, a bibliography is listed for each
document and text, referring to studies, published and unpublished, that
cite the source in question in the musicological literature.
ILa. Sources relating to musicians named “Lorenzino”
DOCUMENTS
MANTOVA (Mantua): ARCHIVIO DI STATO (MANTOVA-AS.)
1. MANTOVA-AS. 1570 August 12 [1].
Archivio Gonzaga / busta 904 / cc. 696 r. — 697 r.
Tivoli. Lecter from Annibale Cappello, agent of Cardinal Ippolito II ’Este, to Aurelio
Zibramonti, secretary to Guglielmo Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua. In this letter Capello
also refers to a “mottetto a otto ch’ha fatto il Palestina [sic] per il Re di Spagna”
[L..] "Non accade chiio dia particolar ragguaglio a Vostra Signoria delle qualita et
sufficienza di Lorencino dal liuto, né meno chro scriva con che conditioni verria a sevire
Sua Eccellenza,essendo partito da questo servitio per andare col prencipe di Bisignano,66
JOURNAL OF THE LUTE SOCIETY OF AMERICA
che se prima avessi saputo questa volunta di Sua Eccellenza li haverei mandato senz‘alero
che ne saria restata sodisfattissima, essendo veramente un monstro di natura in quella
professione per l'eti sua; se compariri qualch’altro che sia bono, fard che Sua Eccellenza
rescara servita.”
Bibliography: HABERL 1886: 37; CANAL 1879: 45-46; BEIER-KIRALY 1996; PESCI
1997:240; FABRIS 2001; CARLONE 2003; CARLONE 2005.
MANTOVA-AS. 1570 August 12 [2].
Archivio Gonzaga | busta 904 | ce. 694 7. — 695 r.
Rome. Letter from Francesco Fellonica, agent of Duke Guglielmo Gonzaga of Mantua,
to Aurelio Zibramonte. Fellonica expresses his gratitude for having been asked to find
singers for the ducal choir (“per servitio del Signor Duca Eccellentissimo nostro signore
in materia de trovargli Cantori da Coro”), and reports that he found one who had a good
tenor voice and is experienced in counterpoint (“uno mi & cappitato, che buonissimo, et
sufficiente saria, perla parte del tenore, con voce gagliarda, et piena, bellissimo cantante,
etdi buon contrapunto”). However, he reports that the singer will not leave Rome if not
well paid (“non usciria di Roma se non ben paggato”), since he hopes to enter the Papal
choirand isalso in negotiations with a Neapolitan abbot. He asks 7
if he should continue to insist with this singer, considering that “questa professione di
Musica al presente in Roma, e tanto al basso, che non ci cappitano huomini come solea,
sil Cardinale di Ferrara, et quel di Trento non ci reccappitassen questa sorte d’huomeni,
Ja musica correria tuttil giorno alla staffa, dietro a Cocchi, eta Mule, li quali Cardinali
tutti dua sono fuori di Roma, et hanno de buoni huomini in tal professione, che se
alcuno se ne partisse, et cappitassero qui, non mancharei appostarlo per sua Eccellentia,
quando fusse a proposito.”
ibramonte therefore
Although the name of Lorenino does not appear in this leer, ic is nevertheless probable
that Fellonica refers to him in the following passage, referring co the correspondence
between Cappello and Zibramonte:
“Ho visto quel tanto Vostra Signoria dice scrivere a Don Hanibal nel particular di quel
giovane, che sona di lauto, che sta con Monsignor Illustrissimo suo, so che da lui nesara
raguagliato apieno, pero io non gli dico altro, se non che lui, se ne sta qui per Roma et
cuttil giorno, si va sonnando in qua ¢ in le et il cardinale ¢ a Tivolis or esso non canta
nel Jauto, ma ben sa contrapunto, come esso sia grato a Sua Signoria Ilustrissima io
non lo so, ne meno dio se quella servitu a corte sia di sodisfatione a lui, ch’el euteo
lasciaro dit a Don Hanibale”.
Bibliography: CANAL 1879: 33; BEIER-KIRALY 1996; CARLONE 2003; CARLONE,
2005
MANTOVA-AS. 1570 September 2.
Archivio Gonzaga | busta 904 / 00.714 1. ~ 715 v.
Rome. Letter from Francesco Fellonica to Aurelio Zibramonte:
[ea] Subito hauta la lettera di VS. di 28 del passato et visto quel tanto la mi serive
intorno a quel che Don Hanibal Cappello, ha scritco di Lorenzino dal lauto, gli dico, cheTue Knicuts of tue Lute 67
ritrovandomi con suo padre hieri, del tutto mi ho voluto chiatice, il qual mi rferisce, che
quatro giorni fa il Cavagliere Montino scrisse, a detto Lorenzino, che senza altro se ne
montasse a cavallo, et se n’andasse a Tivoli, per comissione di monsignor eminentissimo
suo; il qual come quello, che fa professione di non volerlo pitt servire, per molte cause
non lo volse alurimenti ubbidite, et se ne restd, andandosene cuv’l giorno sonando in
casa de cardinali, et signori, et pur P'altra matina il signor priore illustrissimo diede desinar
al signor ambasciator cesarco, ct ancor lui vi fu che sonando fece stuppir ogn'uno, or
ragionando io pur con suo padre, et dimandandogli che animo saria il suo intorno al
pose, che partici
non gli mancayano, ma che per esser anco giovane volontieri lo terria anco appresso
giovane, quando non restasse al servitio del signor cardinale, ess0 mi
di lui un pezzo et che il cardinal Orsino gli fa gran chiera et gli di intratenimento, et
mostra desiderio d’haverlo, quanto a quello VS. dice, che scrive don Annibale, che é
partito dal cardinal di Ferrara, per andar a servire il prencipe di Bisignano, esso suo
padre dice non saper tal cosa, et che se hari a partirsi da Roma non vorri lasci la servitit
del signor duca nostro eccellentissimo, essendo esso per molt’anni affetionatissimo a
questa casa illustrissima, ogni volta, che gli sara fatto partito che vi possi stare; io gli ho
dimandato di quel tanto sicontentatia, esso mi dice, che dal cardinal di Ferrara havea la
spesa per due bocche, et tre scudi d’oro al mese per provisione, et quando voglia star in
Roma, sa trovar’ maggior partito; or in conclusione siamo restati, poi che cosi suspeso
se ne sta, per le parole che il cavaglier Montino gli mando a dire, che dimane o Taltro,
esso suo padre se ne vaddi a Tivoli, et chiarirsi del fatto, et saper qual sia Panimo di
sua signoria illustrissima, 0 di volerlo, o lasciarlo, non nominando perd il signor duca
eccellentissimo, né altri et cosi ha promesso fare; fra tanto se vostra signoria mi far’
saper qual sia la mente di sua eccellentia intorno alla provisione col resto che li volesse
dare, ogni volta, che si risolvesse, et fosse con buona licenza lasc
offerte, ct propenergli, per non dar tempo al tempo, et per venir tosto a condlusione,
LO, acc
eli puoessi
io afho fatto motto al signor priore illustuissimo del ecto, et quel tanto € passato fia il
padre, ct me, sc sara bisogno del!’opera sua, non mancar’ interponervisi. Quanto poi a
quel Tenore chai di passati proposi a Vostra Signoria, per hora non ne posso dit altro,
per esser fuor di Roma con quel suo abbate [...] se sia meglio di quel Af...) Anco
Napoletano, 0 buono, come lui, non lo so” [..]
Bibliography: HABERL 1886; CANAL 1879 p. 45; BEIER-KIRALY 1996; PESCI
1997: 240-41; CARLONE 2003; CARLONE 2005.
MANTOVAC-AS. 1571 February 10.
Archivio Gonzaga | busta 905 / ec. 107 r- 0.
Rome. Letter from Aurelio Zibramonti to the unspecified “castellan of Mantua”
[...] *Piace cosi questa stanza al castrato Spagnuolo che se bene il signor Cardinale di
Ferrara Pha cacciaco di casa sua perche venga & servire al signor Duca Eccellentissimo
nostro signore egli c stato ostinato di non voler venire ma sé accommodato con Mons.
Illustrissimo di Trento al quale ho esposto in presentia del signor segietatio Mondino
il modo con che egli ¢ partito di costi, et che per tal causa c stato licentiato dal signor
Cardinale di Ferrara, sua signoria Illustrissima mi rispose che manda
Masta dell'Imperatore, ct che per duioi mesi ch’ha a star qui dissegna di servirsi del
suddetto Spagnuolo et poi di consegnarlo a sua Eccellentiain cotesta cicta di dove passari,
masse sua Eccellentia non si contentata che lo renga pet duoi mesi lo cacciari dalla casa
| suo castrato alla68
JouRNAL OF THE LUTE SOCIETY OF AMERICA
sua, et che percid dovessi intendere la sua mente scrivendone da sua parte. Veggo questo
castrato rissoluto di non ritornar pero quando non mi venga contraria commmissione
non solo non tifutard la promessa di detto signor Cardinale, ma secondo le [..2] gli
raccordard Vordine ch’ho da sua Eccellentia di rimandarlo per che non si itrovando
imi di questi animali, et essendo quelli puochi che si trovano tutti volubili
et huomini di puoco senso non mi par di dover haver altra mira che di far che venga
ch'invero se questa consideration non mi consolasse restarei con molto dispiacere che
costui mbhavesse cosi ben uccellato a farmi scrivere quel ch'io scrissi a Vostra Signoria.
perche fosse ricevuto in gratia di sua Eccellentia. Non son restato manco chiarito di
Lorenzino il quale questa estate mosttd infinito desiderio di esser accettato al servigio
di sua Eccellentia ma dopo la venuta mia qui é stato sempre sit la sua dicendo che sta
bene con monsignor illustrissimo di Ferrara; he di poi anco inteso alcune cose di lui per
Jc quali lo reputo indegno di tal servitit et son sicuro che sua eccellentia in pochi di lo
licentiarebbe, et buona sarebbe per Lorenzino che se ne andasse impunito. Ho percid
procurato che il signor segretario Mondino habbi scntito a sonarc un giovane il quale
sona di leuto bene et poco meno di Lorenzino, é rarissimo di viola da musica, et di
violino, sona bene l'arpa et clavicordo e giovane di buoni costumi, ma perché guadagna
bene qui dimanda tanto di provisione et due spese che non prenderemo pit oltre sinche
esso segretario Mondino alla venuta sua havra parlato con sua eccellentia” [..]
se non rari
Bibliography. HABERL 1886: 37; CANAL 1881 p45; PELA 1992: 6; BEIER- KIRALY
1996; PESCI 1997: 241; CARLONE 2003; CARLONE 2005.
MANTOVA-AS. 1585 November 25.
Archivio Gonzaga / busta 1381 /c. 370r — 37 1v.
Parma, Letter from Ippolito Olivo to his cousin Luigi Olivo, castellan of Mantua.
“Illuscre Signor mio Cugino Osservandissimo, Credo che Vostra Signoria si deve molto
ben arriccordare, che quando io fui alli di passatti in Mantova, io li dissi, che per la morte
del duca di Namur, vi era un musico addimmandato Lorenzzino Bolognese che era
senza patroneet [..] questo giovine é stato allevato dal Signor Duca mio, et tutto quello
che sa lo sa per boni magistri che le mantenne sempre Sua Eccellenza come sarebbe a
dire un Fabritio Dentici un Horatio dalla Viola, et molti altri valenthuomini li quali
sono stati, et sono [...] al servitio di questi Signori desiderava in estremo di ritornare
ad cotesto servitio Ma perche il Signor Duca si sdegnd assai seco quando li dimmando
licentia, dicendoli che quando era in termine di servirlo lo voleva piantare, che questo
era un ticonoscer poco l'ammorevolezza che li haveva usata seco con haverlo ridotto
guella perfetione et haver speso assai per farlo huomo da qualche cosa, et che li pareva
pur strano che addesso che se ne poteva mo servire usase un termine cosi fatto, ma che
andasse pure al bon viaggio, et cetera hora mo come dico a Vestra Signoria il Signor
Ducacon tutto che lo conosca per valenthuomo ethaverne di grandissimo bisogno, per
trovarsi pochi suoi pari et allevato in casa, con tutto questo non lo ha voluto accettare.
Ond’io, desideroso di far (..] a Sua Aleezza il grandissimo desidetio che io ho di ben
servirlo, son stato sempre, avertito, che lasciandose questa pratica, di operare che venghi
questo valenthuomo al servitio di Sua Alrezza et perche Vastra Signoria sappia le qualia
sue, Dicole, che questo e un tenore perfetissimo da Capella, et serve anco per contraldo,
in camera [...] Canta con bona gratia, et dispositione Conpone benissimo et le cose sue,
qui presso questi valenthuomini, sono in bona consideratione, sona la sta parte, assai‘Tae KnicHts oF THe Lute 69
bene, di Viola et altri virtu le quali meritano che sij stimato assai Io li ho parola da lui,
che ogni volta che Sua Aleezza voglia trattarlo al paro di quello che hanno facto li alesi
principi, che ha servito che molto volontieri venira a servir, questo Serrenissimo principe.
Si che ho voluto darne conto a Vostra Signoria di quanto habbia fatto per in sin adesso
di questo negotio, perche so certo che Sua Altezza sara molto ben servita, et havera uno
giovine che molto si parleras Prego mo Vostra Signoria che di gratia mi favorischi o dentro
6 fuori darmi risposta di questo negotio et dir a Sua Altezza, che bisogna risolversi presto
perche visono partiti grandi per lui, che tutta via li sono preposti, et a me basta ’animo
di trattenerlo qualche giorni, perche io ne posso disponere assai, et perche anco Vostra
Signoria sappia quello che per in sin adesso luii ha havuto di trattenimento erano dieci
scudi d’oro in oro; et la spesa per lui et dua servitori et stantia fornita, et credo certo che
a questa hora dal Duca di Ferrara ce ne siano stati offerti dodeci, Ma quando Sua Altezza
si risolvera a volerlo a me basta I’animo, di farlo venire per li dieci, se bene trovassi anco
piu di dodici et anco tredici, perche so io quanto me amico et quanto ne posso disponere
che sera per fine di questa mia, pregando Vostra Signoria a darmi, presto risposta, perche
sappia anchio quello che posso risolvermi a risponderle, et per riconpensa di questa fattica
che io faccio per Sua Altezza io non voglio altro che la gratia Sua la quale stimo piu che
tutte le cose di questo mondo, et che se degni gratiar mi di un Cavallo, della sua tanto
famosa stalla che ottenendo queste due cose mi reputero felicissimo et me ne andero
altiero. Vostra Signoria mi fara gratia ancora di arricordarsi di Messer Giulio Camillo
mio fratello et haverlo per raccomandato sappendo, il grandissimo suo bisogno. Et a
‘Vostra Signoria insieme con la Signora sua consorte, Ie baccio le mani, avisandola, che
volendo scrivermi, sero a Piaccenzza perche il Signor Duca se parte vener che viene, pet
dar lordine del Tosone al Duca di Terra nova.
Di Parma il di 25 di Novembre 1585. Di Vostra Signoria Ilustre Cugino et Servo
Hippolito Olivo.”
Bibliography. CANAL 1879; HOSTHOFF 1926: 21; FABRIS 1987: 23; BEIER-
KIRALY 1996; CARLONE 2003; CARLONE 2005.
6. MANTOVA-AS. 1586 December 11.
Archivio Gonzaga / busta 1381 | ¢. 457 7. — 469 r.
Parma. Letter from Ippolito Olivo to Luigi Olivo. Following the death of Duke Ortavio
Farnese on September 2, 1586, Ippolito Oliva discusses the funeral, and informs his
cousin Luigi that Carlo Artecordati (probably in the service of the Farnese) has arrived
from Flanders with a great case for the defunct duke. ‘The new duke, Alessandro, wrote
to the prince (his son Ranuccio) asking Arrecordati to dismiss all of the dependents
of “happy memory (“felice memoria”), with no exceptions (“non eccettuando servitori
vecchi di fine merito”, knights, vassals, etc., whether at Parma, Piacenza, Rome, Milan,
Bologna, Venice, etc.). On the other hand, the Duke reconfirmed four gentlemen
(‘gentilhuomini”), including himself (Ippolito Olivo). In this wholesale dismantling
of the old order, the musicians were also dismissed:
[ue] tutta la musica é licenziata, Perche so che Sua Aleezza desidera avere parte di questi
musici, ho subito parlawo a molti et in particolare a messer Paolo Basso, il quale mi ha
risposto di questa manicra, che vuole esser libero della persona sta c chea nessunovuole
promettere di certo; che, buon servitoreall’Altezza Sua, et desidera grandemente servirla,
¢ che le fa sapere che il Duca di Baviera li ha offerto alli giorni passati trecento scudi diJOURNAL OF THE LUTE SOCIETY OF AMERICA
provisione ¢ un donativo, e che Sua Altezza facci mo lui fofferta ancora, che secondo
che lofferta che li sara fatta che si governera ancor lui, et fara quel tanto che li tornera
a piu utilica, per che per essere aggravato di bona famiglia la quale ¢ di dodici bocche,
et non avendo altra possessione ne entrata che questa della musica et vole che il Signor
Julchi (2) li piaciendo loro, bisogna che se la facci velen [2] et ne vene sopra, avvertendo
Sua Altezza che la prowisione che li offrira, vuole haverla in vita. Et questo ¢ quanto
ho powuto cavar de questo humo. Ho parlaco medesimamente col castratino, il quale
mi ha detto che al presente non puo far dererminatione alcuna della persona sua per
un travaglio grande che ha al presente. [...] Vie ancora una muta di questi musici da
concerto che sono in cingue; i quali, quattro ve ne sono che sonano trombone, ed un
contralto che ¢ valentissimo giovane; ¢ tutti cingue sonnano piu sorte di instrumenti,
come sarebbe a dite tromboni, fiferi, flauti, viole; ct fra questi vic un fratello di Messer
Horatio della Viola tanto famoso, il quale sona ancor lui divinamente bene ¢ piaccra
assai a Sua Altezza. Questi cinque si sono messi insieme, e setviranno all’Altezza Sua
molto volentieri ogni volta che siino trattati bene et che posino vivere. Vi sono poi
altre voci e valenthuomini in componere, di tal maniera che se Sua Altezza desidera
fare una bella musica di cantanti diversi d’instramenti et voci, adesso ha la comodica
pero per servir all’Altezza sua et accio resti sattisfata di me et che veda che nel servitio
suo sonno accuratissimo ho preso espedienti che mandar il presente messo a posta et
inviarlo a Vostra Signoria accio sijsubbito ragualio a Sua Altezza et desiderando servirsi
(2] di questi tali mandi some fusti qui a Parma una rissolutione di ogni cosa et finisco
perche vi sonno chi fa molta instantia per averli, et in particolare il duca di Baviera,
il quale pochi giorni sonno mando un corriero a posta per levarne la maggior parte
€ con carta bianca addimandassero cio che volessero [...] Occorre che Sua Altezza si
risolva, et egli dara tutti il possibile: ma sono certe genti, questi colla quale et con gran
difficolta si puo wattar seco [...”
Bibliography: CANAL 1879; CARLONE 2005.
MANTOVA-AS. 1586 December 18. Parma.
Archivio Gonzaga / busta 1381 /c. 463 r. — 484 r.
Parma. Lecter from Ippolito Olivo to Cavalier Federico Cattanco, at Goito (Mantua).
‘This document has numerous lacunac.
“Illustre Signor mio Osservandissimo. Da il Reverendo Messer Don Sigismondo,
Mal.
il negotio [...] Il quale per non esser riuscito conforme al desiderio [...] ne ho sentito
grandissimo dispiacere. A loro adunque [...] in tutto quello che essi rifferirano, in questo
suggel...] diro per conclusione di questo negotio, che havendo il Signor Principe mio
patrone, fatto intender 4 Messer Paolo Basso al castratino, a Messer Giamaria contraldo &
Lorenzino Bollognese et A Messer Gottofredo che essi vadino risserbati in accettar alcun
partito, perche Laltezza sua dice haver scritto in Fiandra al Signor Duca suo padre, accio
Laltezza sua le facci gratia di confirmarle al suo servitio, questi cinque. Et il cornetto
dice che ogni volta che Sua Altezza vorra et commandara, che tutto il concerto insieme
d'instrumenti, venghino 4 Goito, a farsi sentire, che sonno cinque, come ho scritto
in due altre mie, che fatto le feste, se ne vennirano tuttal...] et serviranno Laltezza sua
Serrenissima in tutto quello ch{...] et sapperano fare. Ma che il venir solo, suplical
sua a perdonarle, perche non vuole lasciar la [..] alla quale ha promesso la sua parola,
Jrdo, et Messer Battista Com|...] Serrenissima intendera minutamente, come passa