Phonurgia nova, sive conjugium mechanico-physicum artis & natvrae paranympha phonosophia concinnatum . . .
Athanasius Kircher, Jesuit theologian, mathematician, and music theorist, received court appointments in mathematics from Emperor Ferdinand II in Vienna and patronage from Pope Urban VIII. Kircher's "Phonurgia nova," dedicated to Leopold I, is a work on acoustics, dealing primarily with the reflection, dispersion, and focusing of sound. In an appendix, Kircher describes several musical instruments invented by his contemporary Michele Todini. One of Todini's keyboard instruments, constructed and first exhibited in Rome about 1676 and similar to the one show here, is on display in the Museum's André Mertens Galleries for Musical Instruments.
Illustrated: p. 168, a composite keyboard instrument designed by Michele Todini, from Phonurgia nova
Illustrated: p. 168, a composite keyboard instrument designed by Michele Todini, from Phonurgia nova
Artwork Details
- Title: Phonurgia nova, sive conjugium mechanico-physicum artis & natvrae paranympha phonosophia concinnatum . . .
- Author: Athanasius Kircher (German, 1602–1680)
- Date: 1673
- Culture: Campidonae: Rudolphum Dreherr, 1673
- Medium: Illustrated book
- Dimensions: H: 13 3/8 in. (34 cm)
- Credit Line: Purchased with income from the Jacob S. Rogers Fund and Bought with the income from the bequest of Nathaniel I. Bowditch, of Boston, (Class of 1812)
- Object Number: 221.1 K63
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