I couldn't say without looking. I'm remembering a reference by Diana Poulton to 
an ornament where there are two tablature letters (in brackets if I remember 
correctly) of which only the first is plucked. Best wishes, Denys

Sent from my iPhone

> On 6 Mar 2017, at 16:23, Rainer <rads.bera_g...@t-online.de> wrote:
> 
> Libro ottavo?
> 
> If so, which piece?
> 
> Rainer
> 
> 
>> On 06.03.2017 15:58, jo.lued...@t-online.de wrote:
>>   Dear Rainer, dear list
>> 
>> 
>>   There is an ornament indication which can be interpreted as an
>>   appogiatura sign in Francesco da Milano & Pietro Paulo Borrono:
>>   Intavolatura di Lauto, Milano 1548. That is the earliest occurence in
>>   print of ornament signs I know of at the moment.
>> 
>> 
>>   All best,
>> 
>> 
>>   Joachim
>>   -----Original-Nachricht-----
>>   Betreff: [LUTE] Earliest printed tablature with ornaments
>>   Datum: 2017-03-06T11:50:43+0100
>>   Von: "Rainer" <rads.bera_g...@t-online.de>
>>   An: "Lute net" <lute@cs.dartmouth.edu>
>>   Dear lute netters,
>>   According to Wikipedia
>>   "According to Frederick Neumann,[2] Vallet may have been among the
>>   first to introduce ornaments into lute tablature."
>>   Of course this is nonsense.
>>   Anyway, does anybody know of printed tablature with ornaments before
>>   1596?
>>   Rainer
>>   To get on or off this list see list information at
>>   http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
>>    --
> 
> 


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