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Two-sided Drum (dvuchbakovy baraban) |
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Marching Drum (pachodny baraban) |
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A percussion instrument in the form of a flat brass or bronze disc, suspended vertically by means of 1-2 cords, which is played with beaters or a hand. According to iconographic sources, it is known in Belarus since the 16th c.
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| A gong by Master Andrej Kapuśnikaŭ, 2005 |
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| A demon with a bowl gong, a fragment of a miniature of the Radziviłs’ chronicle "Demons play in Monk Isaiah’s cell, 15th-16th c. |
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| A singer with a bowl gong, a fragment of the miniature "David plays, scribes write, and people blow", Explanatory Psalter, early 16th c., Vilnia School. |
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The Goblet drum (also Chalice drum, Darbuka, or Doumbek) is a goblet shaped hand drum, a percussion instrument of Arab origin. Prototypes of Goblet drums are known since the times of Neolithic. In Belarus, they are known thanks to the Tartars whom Vitaŭt brought to the GDL in the 15th c.
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| Goblet drums made in Cyprus and Turkey. |
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| Siarhiej Tapčeŭski playing. |
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| A fragment of the fresco "Christ In Praetorium" of St. Trinity Chapels, 15th c., Lublin, Poland, painted by Belarusan masters under auspices of Artist Andrej |
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| A Neolithic clay Goblet drum, Apatovicy, Poland, reconstruction |
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The Bagpipe D is a wind reed instrument which consists of a leather bag, a melody pipe (žalejka, pierabor [chanter, pipe]), a drone pipe (huk [sound], bas [bass]), and a pipe to pump air (sapiel [blowpipe]). In old Belarusan literature, it is mentioned since the 15th c.
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| A bagpipe by Master Todar Kaškurevič, 2005 |
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| A bagpipe by Master Todar Kaškurevič, 2005 |
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| Źmicier Sasnoŭski playing. |
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| The oldest preserved Belarusan bagpipe, 1872, Lepiel Regional Museum. |
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Helmet-shaped psaltery (kryłapadobnyja huśli) |
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Hurdy Gurdy (kołavaja lira) |
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The hurdy gurdy, or hurdy-gurdy (also known as a wheel fiddle; lira karbova, stareckaja skrypka) is a stringed bowed instrument that produces sound by a crank-turned rosined wheel rubbing against the strings. It is known in Belarus since early 17th c. (Nobleman S. Maskievič’s diary, Navahradak, 1611), but indirect sources allow us to believe that it was known here already in the late 16th c. (I. Nazina, Belarusan National Musical Instruments: Stringed. Мinsk, 1982).
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| Latgalian hurdy gurdy, 20th c., restored by Źmicier Sasnoŭski. |
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| "Belarusan Lirnik (hurdy gurdyist)", a drawing by M. Andriolli, 1872 |
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| Illa Kublicki playing. |
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| A Belarusan hurdy gurdy of the 16th c., reconstructed by I. Nazina. |
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The rebec is a stringed bowed instrument with a teardrop-shaped body and 3-4 strings. According to iconographic sources, it is known in Belarus since the 15th c.
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| A rebec by Master Valeryj Zinkievič, 2007 |
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| A fragment of the fresco "Christ In Praetorium" of St. Trinity Chapels, 15th c., Lublin, Poland, painted by Belarusan masters under auspices of Artist Andrej |
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| Aleś Čumakoŭ playing. |
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| A fragment of the miniature "David plays, scribes write, and people blow", Explanatory Psalter, early 16th c., Vilnia School. |
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Tromba marina (trombamaryna) |
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The cittern D is a stringed plucked instrument of a lute group. It differs from the lute by its longer fingerboard, flat back sounding-board, and a less number of strings.
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| A cittern by Master Siarhiej Smuta, 2006 |
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| Frescos of St. Sofia Cathedral in Kyiv, the South-Western Tower, the wall of the circular corridor with stairs, 11th c. |
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| Illa Kublicki playing. |
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| A fragment of the miniature "David plays, scribes write, and people blow", Explanatory Psalter, early 16th c., Vilnia School. |
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Strona 1 z 2 |
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