Re: Delphin gut 3

2004-11-20 Thread Ed Durbrow
Artists in Medieval and Renaissance Europe produced some interesting variations on Asian and African creatures from 2nd+ hand accounts, many of them wonderful. I think there is a theory that the Unicorn was actually a Rhinoceros? One can imagine, back then, when someone coupled a description of

Re: Delphin gut

2004-11-19 Thread Bernd Haegemann
Dear all, keeping an eye on his cows (Guardame las vacas), and Mouton with his sheep (mouton). Best music ewe heifer herd. :-) Wasn't the title song of the TV serial Flipper based on a courante by Mouton? ;-) best wishes Bernd To get on or off this list see list information at

Re: Delphin gut 2

2004-11-18 Thread Bernd Haegemann
Dear Lex, 1) are there more pictures around with people playing lute or vihuela Is there a place where one can watch the two title pages (Narvaez, Mouton)? I think I saw the Narvaez once, but unfortunately without really concentrating on the picture.. best regards Bernd To get on or off

Delphin gut 3

2004-11-18 Thread Stewart McCoy
- From: Lex Eisenhardt [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Stewart McCoy [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: Lute Net [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, November 18, 2004 7:41 AM Subject: Re: Delphin gut 2 Dear Stewart, Thanks for your enlightning answer. I could indeed have formulated the question in a more serious way

Re: Delphin gut 3

2004-11-18 Thread Carl Donsbach
Artists in Medieval and Renaissance Europe produced some interesting variations on Asian and African creatures from 2nd+ hand accounts, many of them wonderful. I think there is a theory that the Unicorn was actually a Rhinoceros? -Carl --On Thursday, November 18, 2004 2:01 PM +0100 Manolo

Re: Delphin gut 3

2004-11-18 Thread Howard Posner
Zoology was not much of a science in the renaissance, and Europeans still relied heavily on the Natural History of the first-century Roman Pliny the Elder (who in turn based most of his writings about animals on Aristotle four centuries earlier). Much of it is a bizarre collection of inaccurate

Delphin gut

2004-11-17 Thread Lex Eisenhardt
Has anyone noticed that both Luis de Narvaez and Charles Mouton were active in the same watersports? They are both pictured (or was it a plucker from Greece?) on the back of a large fish, presumably a delfin. cheers, L. -- To get on or off this list see list information at

Delphin gut

2004-11-17 Thread Stewart McCoy
] To: Lute list [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, November 17, 2004 1:09 PM Subject: Delphin gut Has anyone noticed that both Luis de Narvaez and Charles Mouton were active in the same watersports? They are both pictured (or was it a plucker from Greece?) on the back of a large fish, presumably

Re: Delphin gut

2004-11-17 Thread Roman Turovsky
They were certainly in the same field of music, what with Narvaez keeping an eye on his cows (Guardame las vacas), and Mouton with his sheep (mouton). Best music ewe heifer herd. :-) I'm afraid this doesn't work too well in American pronunciation. RT To get on or off this list see list

Re: Delphin gut

2004-11-17 Thread Carl Donsbach
heifer herd. :-) Best wishes, Stewart McCoy. - Original Message - From: Lex Eisenhardt [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Lute list [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, November 17, 2004 1:09 PM Subject: Delphin gut Has anyone noticed that both Luis de Narvaez and Charles Mouton were active

Re: Delphin gut

2004-11-17 Thread bill kilpatrick
Stewart McCoy wrote: Best music ewe heifer herd. :-) fowl! = and thus i made...a small vihuela from the shell of a creepy crawly... - Don Gonzalo de Guerrero (1512), Historias de la Conquista del Mayab by Fra Joseph of San Buenaventura. go to:

Delphin gut 2

2004-11-17 Thread Stewart McCoy
- From: Lex Eisenhardt [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Stewart McCoy [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: Lute Net [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, November 17, 2004 4:14 PM Subject: Re: Delphin gut More precisely, is the animal on the frontpage of Mouton's Pices de Luth a descendant of Narvaez' sea horse. In other

Re: Delphin gut 2

2004-11-17 Thread Lex Eisenhardt
Dear Stewart, Thanks for your enlightning answer. I could indeed have formulated the question in a more serious way. For us (the rest of the world) it is hard to be funny (deliberately) in English. I am willing to learn more about those fishy mammals. (I am doing research for an article in