epithalamium

epithalamium
epithalamic /ep'euh theuh lam"ik/, adj.
/ep'euh theuh lay"mee euhm/, n., pl. epithalamiums, epithalamia /-mee euh/.
epithalamion.

* * *

Nuptial song or poem in honour or praise of a bride and bridegroom.

In ancient Greece such songs were a traditional way of invoking good fortune on a marriage and often of indulging in ribaldry. The earliest evidence for literary epithalamiums are fragments by Sappho; the oldest surviving Latin examples are three by Catullus. In the Renaissance, epithalamiums based on classical models were written in Italy, France, and England; that of Edmund Spenser (1595) is considered the finest in English.

* * *

▪ wedding lyric
also spelled  Epithalamion, or Epithalamy,  

      song or poem to the bride and bridegroom at their wedding. In ancient Greece, the singing of such songs was a traditional way of invoking good fortune on the marriage and often of indulging in ribaldry. By derivation, the epithalamium should be sung at the marriage chamber; but the word is also used for the song sung during the wedding procession, containing repeated invocations to Hymen (Hymenaeus), the Greek god of marriage. No special metre has been associated with the epithalamium either in antiquity or in modern times.

      The earliest evidence for literary epithalamiums are the fragments from Sappho's seventh book (c. 600 BC). The earliest surviving Latin epithalamiums are three by Catullus (Catullus, Gaius Valerius) (c. 84–c. 54 BC). In the most original, Catullus tried to fuse the native Fescennine verse (a jocular, often obscene form of sung dialogue sometimes used at wedding feasts) with the Greek form of marriage song.

      Epithalamiums based on classical models were written during the Renaissance by Torquato Tasso in Italy and Pierre de Ronsard in France. Among English poets of the same period, Richard Crashaw, John Donne, Sir Philip Sidney, and Ben Jonson used the form. Edmund Spenser's (Spenser, Edmund) Epithalamion, written for his second marriage in 1595, is considered by some critics to be the finest example of the form in English.

      Anonymous 17th-century epithalamiums are extant. In the 19th century, epithalamiums were written by Gerard Manley Hopkins and Edmund Gosse; and in the 20th century, by Witter Bynner, A.E. Housman, and Dannie Abse. See also Fescennine verse.

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?
Synonyms:

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Epithalamium — (from Greek; epi upon, and thalamium nuptial chamber, sometimes also spelled epithalamion ) specifically refers to a form of poem that is written for the bride. Or, specifically, written for the bride on the way to her marital chamber. The word… …   Wikipedia

  • Epithalamium — Ep i*tha*la mi*um, n.; pl. {Epithalamiums}, L. {Epithalamia}. [L., fr. Gr. ?, orig. an adj., nuptial; epi upon, at + ? bride chamber.] A nuptial song, or poem in honor of the bride and bridegroom. [1913 Webster] The kind of poem which was called… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • epithalamium — 1590s, bridal song, from L. epithalamium, from Gk. epithalamion a bridal song, from epi at, upon (see EPI (Cf. epi )) + thalamos bridal chamber, inner chamber …   Etymology dictionary

  • Epithalamĭum — (gr. u. röm. Ant.), 1) Hochzeitlied, welches vor od. in der Brautkammer der Neuvermählten gesungen wurde, s. Hochzeit; 2) Hochzeitgedicht …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Epithalamium — Epithalamĭum (grch.), bei den Griechen und Römern das Hochzeitslied, gewöhnlich chorweise vor dem Brautgemach (thálamos) abgesungen …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

  • Epithalamium — Epithalamium, griech., die Hochzeitshymne der Alten, Neuvermählten von denen gesungen, welche sie mit Fackeln zum Brautgemache begleiteten …   Herders Conversations-Lexikon

  • epithalamium — [ep΄i thə lā′mēän΄, ep΄i thə lā′mēən] n. pl. epithalamia [ep΄i thə lā′mēəep΄i thə lā′mē əm] n. epithalamiums or epithalamia [ep΄i thə lā′mēə] [L < Gr epithalamion < epithalamios, nuptial < epi , at + thalamos, bridal chamber < IE base …   English World dictionary

  • Epithalamium — Ein Epithalamion (gr.: etwa Lied auf das Brautgemach ; lat. epithalamium; dt. Hochzeitsgedicht, Brautlied; Plur. ien), ist ein üblicherweise pastorales Gelegenheitsgedicht, verfasst und (meist chorisch) vorgetragen zur Feier einer Hochzeit.… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • epithalamium — or epithalamion noun (plural miums or epithalamia) Etymology: Latin & Greek; Latin epithalamium, from Greek epithalamion, from epi + thalamos room, bridal chamber; perhaps akin to Greek tholos rotunda Date: 1588 a song or poem in honor of a bride …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • Epithalamium — Epi|tha|la|mi|um 〈n.; s, mi|en〉 Hochzeitslied der alten Griechen u. Römer [<grch. epi „bei, an“ + thalamos „Brautgemach“] * * * Epi|tha|la|mi|on, Epi|tha|la|mi|um, das; s, ...ien [lat. epithalamium < griech. epithalámion, eigtl. = das zum… …   Universal-Lexikon

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”