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Two polyphonic endowments

Reinhard Strohm

So far, only two endowments at St Stephen’s from this period are known which, in unmistakable terms, call for mensural – that is, artfully polyphonic – music: from 1506 and from 1521. Since such music was not only cultivated but even prescribed from no later than 1460, this seems to require explanation. It is likely that polyphonic singing was also customary in endowed services – not only on high feast days in the high choir – but the documented contracts rarely specified this. The exceptions to be explained here are probably due to the particular musical interests and ambitions of their benefactors.

Dr Leonhart Wulfing, chaplain at St Stephen’s since 1479 and later canon and dean, bequeathed in his 1506 will an annual memorial on St Agnes’s Day at the St Agnes Altar, with three requiem masses and a “loblichen gesungen ambt von sannd agnesen mit dem cantor in figurativis und organis” (laudable sung mass of St Agnes with the cantor in figurativis and organis).[108] The patron saint was the protectress of the famous Viennese “Himmelpfort Convent” (also called St Agnes Convent) of the Premonstratensian canonesses in the Himmelpfortgasse near the cathedral, with whom connections presumably existed.

Georg Slatkonia (1456–1522), magister capelle of Maximilian I and, since 1513, Bishop of Vienna, established in 1521 extensive memorial endowments for himself, for which financial preparations had already been made since 1518 with the support of the Emperor. Slatkonia endowed, firstly, 500 thalers for a weekly mass, an eternal light, and an annual memorial at his grave to be erected in the Lady Choir beneath the altar of Saints Nicephorus, Primus, and Felicianus (charter dated 18 July 1521, A-Wda, Charter 15210718), and secondly, 500 Rhenish guilders for a mass on the Feast of the Assumption of Mary. This was to be sung “in mensuris” by the cantor with his fellows and by a canon with the organ, following the requiem of the memorial day and a procession (charter dated 19 July 1521: A-Wda, Charter 15210719). In addition, there were numerous provisions for the distribution of alms and the payment of priests and musicians. Clearly, a richly developed and far-reaching musical tradition was assumed, which was to be surpassed for the sake of the founder’s renown.

[108] A-Wda, Charter 15060119; see http://monasterium.net/mom/AT-DAW/Urkunden/15060119/charter [02.06.2016].