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The Sacrament endowment of King Frederick III

Reinhard Strohm

In 1445, the Stephanskantorei was entrusted with perhaps the best-known duty of its early history, through a foundation by Frederick III, in which clerics from both St Stephen’s and St Michael’s were involved. Contrary to earlier assumptions, this royal foundation did not concern a “Corpus Christi procession”,[93] but rather the traditional priestly visits (Versehgänge) with the sacrament to sick parishioners within and outside the city. From now on, four poor boys (almsmen), dressed in brown choir robes and hoods, were to accompany each procession; they were to carry four small bells, two banners, and two glass lanterns with burning candles, and sing the hymn Pange lingua and the responsory Homo quidam fecit cenam magnam “hin und wider” (on the outward and return journey). In the church choir, during the daily Fronamt, two pupils were also to begin the verse Tantum ergo sacramentum (from the hymn Pange lingua) or Ecce panis angelorum (from the sequence Lauda Sion salvatorem), which was then to be sung by the school choir (cf. also » E. Transmission of Viennese church music).

And so that everything might be carried out “dester löblicher und ordenlicher” (all the more commendably and orderly), 32 choir robes and hoods, 32 banners in the Austrian colours (red-white-red), and 16 glass lanterns were to be kept ready and repaired or newly made as needed. These were provided by the founder; the city was responsible for maintaining the clothing and equipment.[94] Naturally, not all 32 boys accompanied each procession—whose number varied according to need—but only four at a time. The foundation income was transferred to the city by the king as a tax exemption on the treasury or “court tax” and amounted annually to between 44 and 54 tl., of which the cantor of St Stephen’s usually received between 40 and 47 tl., and the sacristan of St Michael’s (for bell-ringing) between 4 and 7 tl. Frederick III established similar foundations between 1441 and 1467 in Graz, Ljubljana, Wiener Neustadt and Linz.[95] A similar foundation was probably established in Bolzano in 1463 and is attested from 1472 onwards (» E. Corpus Christi Procession).

[93] As often stated in older literature, e.g. Strohm 1993, 507. Corrected in Rumbold/Wright 2009, 47.

[94] Camesina 1874, 78–80, no. 364 (1445, undated).