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Music, Imagination and Experience in the Medieval World

Medieval Music: The Lands of the Bell Tower by Professor Christopher Page. Many thousands of visitors to London each year return home thinking that Big Ben is the name of the great clock tower at Westminster. Londoners know that this is the name of the bell. This is a legacy from the Middle Ages when bells had names, 'tongues' and 'mouths'. They could be baptized and might even be taken down, and filled with thorns, as a punishment if they did not ring of their own accord in a time of crisis. Where the bell-towers on the skyline ended, there Christian Europe had its frontiers.

This final lecture of the series, given in the church whose bells are commemorated in nursery rhyme as the 'bells of the Old Bailey', will explore the place of the bell tower and its inhabitants in the medieval imagination.
(from gresham.ac.uk)

Medieval Music: The Lands of the Bell Tower


Go to the Series Home or watch other lectures:

1. Medieval Music: The Stations of the Breath
2. Medieval Music: Chant as Cure and Miracle
3. Medieval Music: To Sing and Dance
4. Medieval Music: To Chant in a Vale of Tears
5. Medieval Music: The Mystery of Women
6. Medieval Music: The Lands of the Bell Tower