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Institutions, scribes and patrons

Ian Rumbold and Reinhard Strohm

The conclusion that the institutional background for the Leopold codex is likely to have been the parish church of St Jacob at Innsbruck may be reached in various ways. One of these is that Nicolaus Leopold, schoolmaster in 1511, may have inherited all this music from his predecessors at St Jacob’s. Admittedly, the political and cultural affiliations of the repertory, which are reflected in the musical concordances, point to a Habsburgian courtly background – which is why the manuscript has often been associated with a Habsburg court repertory or even with ‘the Imperial court’.[50] But the Leopold codex has, to start with, no known connections with the court music of Emperor Friedrich III, who resided at Graz and later at Linz, where he died in 1493.[51] The entire first section originated before c.1490, when Innsbruck was the residence of Archduke Siegmund, Count of Tyrol. During this period, Siegmund used the church of St Jacob, on his doorstep, for ceremonial sacred services, with music provided by the schoolmaster and his choirboys, occasionally together with singing chaplains (cantors) in his employ.[52] The court organists – Nicolaus Krombsdorfer from 1463, Paul Hofhaimer from 1478 – doubled as church organists. The prince paid individual musicians, including many visitors, and sponsored secular music – but the official liturgical repertory must have been recorded at the church itself. Scribe ‘A’, who copied most of the sacred music in the first section of the codex, is to be sought among the musicians of the church and the court. The leading musician was the cantor and organist Krombsdorfer, who in his later years was court chaplain, and ultimately parish priest of St Jacob’s, although precisely because of his many functions and high-ranking position he seems less likely to have acted as a humble music scribe.[53] This activity rather befitted the schoolmaster himself, who in 1466-1478 was Wolfgang Unterstetter. His successor (or deputy) in 1478-1486 was Matthias Sekeresch, but in 1485 Unterstetter received a pension because of illness, implying that he had been serving in some capacity in the intervening years.[54] Thus we may tentatively propose the identification of Unterstetter with scribe ‘A’, whose work on the codex in fact ceases in c.1482-85.

What appears to be a scribe’s name – ‘Quest’ (or Huest) ‘Frölich’ – is recorded in the manuscript itself on fol. 195r. The scribal hand (‘J’) associated with this signature (if that’s what it is) appears only in gatherings 19 and 20 (c. 1487), in a copy of Isaac’s Missa Wol auff gesell. The following 28 gatherings were compiled by altogether 31 scribes who supplied individual gatherings or sequences of gatherings dedicated to single larger works, often with smaller additions. These gatherings, which were originally kept unbound, are not consistently arranged in chronological order.[55] They seem to have been acquired from individuals outside the main establishment who came and went. In this way, the repertory may reflect the varied musical life of the courtly and commercial city as well as the regular liturgical needs of its main church. In the early 1490s, scribal activity focuses on new works by Jacob Obrecht (gatherings 22, 24 and 25), which may well have been imported by musicians of King Maximilian who then partly resided at Innsbruck.

            After 1492, however, Innsbruck was no longer the main residence of a Habsburg prince. The king was more often in Augsburg or on campaigns further afield. His marriage to Bianca Maria Sforza (1493, celebrated in Hall, 1494)[56] had the effect of keeping at least one royal figure in or near Innsbruck, where her husband sometimes left her behind; she and Siegmund’s wife Katharina of Saxony (until 1496) used the Hofburg and various castles in Tyrol, probably frequenting St Jacob’s for ceremonies.

Most importantly, the repertory which research has associated with Maximilian’s chapel(s) after 1492 is conspicuously absent from Leopold. There is no new work by Isaac, who in 1496 was (re-?)engaged by Maximilian in Italy and was soon to compose sumptuous service music for him. Concordances with typical sources of the royal household repertory are strikingly rare. Not a single composition in the codex is attributable to Paul Hofhaimer, who in 1489 joined Maximilian’s service, or to Pierre de la Rue, who in 1503 visited Innsbruck and Hall with his employer, Philip the Fair, or to younger musicians of Maximilian’s entourage such as Adam Rener.

This is not to say that Habsburgian links are absent. The penultimate composition to be entered (no. 173: 1509-11) is the anonymous five-voice motet Ave mundi spes Maria, dedicated to Maximilian’s councillor Matthäus Lang, then Bishop of Gurk. But the Leopold repertory in its later years has no consistent connection with a Habsburg chapel. The schoolmasters acquired what they could, and probably instigated some new compositions to cover ceremonial needs. New research may explore the possible patronage of the princesses, the music-loving Katharina of Saxony, and the oft-forgotten Bianca Maria Sforza, in shaping the musical heritage of the Leopold codex.

[50] There was no Holy Roman Emperor in 1493-1508.

[51] See » D. Hofmusik. Albrecht II und Friedrich III. The composer abbreviation ‘Ar. fer.’ on no. 64 (gathering 11: 1483-84) could refer to Emperor Friedrich’s chaplain Arnold Fleron: it so happens that an ‘Arnold’, probably Fleron, is recorded at Innsbruck as ‘componist’ in both 1483 and 1484: see Strohm 1993, 518 and 531 n. 478

[52] Further on the organisation of the courtly music, see » D. Hofmusik. InnsbruckSenn 1954.

[53] Rifkin 2003, 285 n. 103, rejects the identification of scribe ‘A’ with Krombsdorfer because of the ‘Italianate’ features of a letter he sent in 1472 to Duke Ercole d’Este (» G. Kap. Ferrara): but this calligraphy was surely chosen for the benefit of the addressee.

[54] Wolfgang Unterstetter, suffering from podagra, received from the court a weekly measure of salt: HHSt Wien (A-Whh), Kopialbuch H. Nr. 7, 1485, fol. 170v-171r.

[55] See » Abb. Synopsis, and Noblitt 1987-96IV, 341-57; Rumbold 2018, 287-89.

[56] » I. Music and Ceremony in Maximilian’s Innsbruck (Helen Coffey)