Hymnology
Hymnology (from Greek ὕμνος hymnos, "song of praise" and -λογία -logia, "study of") is the scholarly study of religious song, or the hymn, in its many aspects, with particular focus on choral and congregational song. It may be more or less clearly distinguished from hymnody, the creation and practice of such song. Hymnologists, such as Erik Routley, may study the history and origins of hymns and of traditions of sung worship, the biographies of the women and men who have written hymns that have passed into choral or congregational use, the interrelationships between text and tune, the historical processes, both folk and redactional, that have changed hymn texts and hymn tunes over time, and the sociopolitical, theological and aesthetic arguments concerning various styles of sung worship.
Hymnology is sometimes more strictly construed, as in A Dictionary of Hymnology,[1] edited by John D. Julian, which concerns itself very largely with the history, textual changes, and translations of hymns, and with the biographies of hymnographers, and very little with the poetic metres of these hymns, or with the hymn tunes to which these are sung.
See also
- Foot (prosody)
- Hymn tune
- Hymnal
- Hymn Society in the United States and Canada
- Hymn Society of Great Britain and Ireland
- Hymnographer
- Hymns and hymn tunes
- Metre (hymn)
- Metre (poetry)
References
- ↑ John Julian, ed., (1902/1985), A Dictionary of Hymnology, Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel.
External links
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- A Dictionary of Hymnology on Google Books.
- The Hymn Society of Great Britain and Ireland
- The Hymn Society in the United States and Canada
- Internationale Arbeitsgemeinschaft für Hymnologie (in German).
- Dictionary of American Hymnology at Oberlin College
- A list of periods, areas and genres of hymnody
- Catholic Encyclopedia