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词条 Johannes Vodnianus Campanus
释义

  1. Works

  2. Poems

  3. Death and legacy

  4. Sources

  5. External links

{{For|other people named Johannes Campanus|Campanus (disambiguation)}}{{no footnotes|date=March 2012}}

Jan Campanus Vodňanský (Johannes Vodnianus Campanus, Jan Vodňanský Campanus; also Jan z Vodňan, Jan Kampánus Vodňanský, Ionnes Campanus Vodnianus) (27 December 1572{{Fact|date=January 2019}}– 13 December 1622) was a Czech humanist, composer, pedagogue, poet, and dramatist. He was born in Vodňany (hence his surname), in southern Bohemia. He studied at the University of Prague and in 1596 and was made Master of Liberal Arts there. He became a teacher in Prague and Kutná Hora. From 1603 he taught Greek and Latin at the University of Prague. He also taught history and Latin poetry. He was repeatedly appointed as dean, prorector, and rector of this university.

Campanus was a Hussite before renouncing this faith and becoming a Catholic in 1622.

Works

Campanus usually wrote his works in Latin, but also wrote occasionally in Czech, Greek, and German. Some of his works, like the play Břetislav und Jitka (Bretislaus) (1614), were forbidden, because they were critical of the dukes of Bohemia. His works were recognized in Europe for their metrical perfection.

Campanus' first collection of musical works, Sacrarum odarum libri duo, was published in Frankfurt in 1613. The Sacrarum odarum, which includes Rorando coeli, contains primarily short vocal works set in a simple, homorhythmic style.

  • Turcicorum tyrannorum qui inde usque ab Otomanno rebus Turcicis praefuerunt, descriptio (1597)
  • Heilige Oden/Posvátné ódy (Umdichtung der Psalmen Davids/Přebásnění Davidových žalmů)
  • Cechias (a history of Bohemia in verse form)
  • Bretislaus (play)
  • Elegie der Angst (Elegie o strachu)
  • Bitte um Frieden (Prosba o mír)

His chants include:

  • Ad Jehovam
  • Ad puelli Jesuki cunas
  • Rorando coeli: Rorando coeli has two choirs. They imitate one another throughout. The double choir technique utilized in this motet evokes the more complex antiphonal works of Campanus' contemporaries in Venice.

Poems

  • Tristitia (In lectulo quaero meo)
  • Surge iam linquens (Surge iam linquens thalamum tepentem)

These were published in 1612, and can be found in the Cantica canticorum in Odaria, LIII, od. 17. They were set to music by Jan Novák in the twentieth century.

Death and legacy

  • He died in Prague.
  • A historical novel was published about him in 1909 by Zikmund Winter, called Mistr Kampanus: historický obraz.

Sources

  • University of Mannheim biographical source {{de icon}}
  • University of Mannheim source {{de icon}}
  • Lawrence Kaptein, Rorando Coeli
  • The Lied and Art Song Texts Page{{dead link|date=November 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
  • Medieval literature
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20061201012942/http://www.pef.zcu.cz/pef/khi/Laudatio.htm Laudatio Mansfeldiana aneb "Zrádci Plzáci"] {{cs icon}}
  • World Catalogue Libraries

External links

{{commons category|Jan Campanus Vodňanský}}
  • {{ChoralWiki|Jan Campanus Vodnansky}}
{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Campanus, Johannes Vodnianus}}

20 : 1572 births|1622 deaths|16th-century Bohemian people|17th-century Bohemian people|16th-century Bohemian writers|17th-century Bohemian writers|16th-century classical composers|17th-century classical composers|Czech Renaissance humanists|Hussite people|Czech poets|Male poets|Czech male writers|Czech composers|Male composers|Vocal music|Charles University in Prague faculty|Charles University in Prague alumni|People from Vodňany|Renaissance composers

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