Phorminx: Difference between revisions
imported>MediaKyle Adding local short description: "Type of musical instrument", overriding Wikidata description "historical stringed music instrument" |
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*[[Kithara]] | *[[Kithara]] | ||
*[[Lyre]] | *[[Lyre]] | ||
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File:Zaragoza - Museo - Estela de Valpalmas.jpg|1250-750 B.C., [[Zargoza]], Spain. Lyre in Spain similar to phorminx, engraved on the Funerary stela of Valpamas. | |||
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==References== | ==References== | ||
Latest revision as of 13:32, 21 June 2025
Template:Short description Template:Italics title
- Phorminx is also a genus of cylindrical bark beetles.
The phorminx (Template:Langx) was one of the oldest of the Ancient Greek stringed musical instruments, in the yoke lutes family, intermediate between the lyre and the kithara. It consisted of two to seven strings, richly decorated arms and a crescent-shaped sound box. It most probably originated from Mesopotamia. While it seems to have been common in Homer's day[1] accompanying the rhapsodes, it was supplanted in historical times by the seven-stringed kithara. Nevertheless, the term "phorminx" continued to be used as an archaism in poetry.
The term "phorminx" is also sometimes used in both ancient and modern writing to refer to all four instruments of the lyre family collectively:
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1250-750 B.C., Zargoza, Spain. Lyre in Spain similar to phorminx, engraved on the Funerary stela of Valpamas.
References
External links
- Ancient Greek Instruments, Homo Ecumenicus
Template:Greek musical instruments
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".