Sigmund Salminger
Appearance
Sigismund Salminger (ca. 1500 in
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
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]
References
- hdl:1802/31275.
- ^ New Grove
- ^ musicologie 10 janv. 2009 – Une analyse de certains éléments de la mystique rhénane du 14 siècle transmis dans la production littéraire de Sigmund Salminger (ca. 1562). Répertoire International des Sources Musicales RISM1548
- ISBN 978-1-84383-139-6.