Sigmund Salminger Explained

Sigismund Salminger (ca. 1500 in Munich  - ca. 1554) was a former Franciscan who was baptised by Hans Hut and married. Having just arrived in Augsburg the second time he became a leader of the Augsburg Anabaptists in 1526, before imprisonment in 1527, and finally recantation and release in 1530.[1] His name also appeared as Sigmund Salminger, Sigismund Salblinger, and Sigismund Slablinger.[2]

He remained in Augsburg after his release and rehabilitation, penning several German hymns. In 1539 Augsburg's Fugger family arranged for Salminger to be granted a printer's license. Among his editions the most notable was that in 1548, which Salminger sponsored, edited, and published the works of the Capilla Flamenca composers Cornelius Canis, Thomas Crecquillon, Nicolas Payen and Jean L'Héritier as a tribute to the Habsburg emperor Charles V - as Cantiones selectissimae quatuor vocum, ab eximiis et praestantibus caesareae maiestatis capellae musicis.[3] This was the first time Payen had been published, and spread the reputation of Charles' chapel further across Europe.[4]

Notes and References

  1. University of Rochester. James. Charles Aaron. Transforming the motet: Sigmund Salminger and the adaptation and reuse of Franco-Flemish polyphony in Reformation Augsburg. September 2016. 1802/31275. Aaron James (organist).
  2. New Grove
  3. http://www.musicologie.org/Biographies/s/salminger_sigismund.html musicologie
  4. Book: Bossuyt, Ignace. Boydell Press. 978-1-84383-139-6. 121–134. Juan José Carreras López . Tess Knighton . The Royal Chapel in the time of the Habsburgs: music and ceremony in the early modern European court. Nicolas Payen, an unknown chapelmaster of Charles V and Philip II. Woodbridge, Suffolk. Studies in medieval and Renaissance music. 2005.