Juan de anchieta biography template

Juan de anchieta biography template Garaiko usadioaren arabera, familiako bigarrena zenez, eliz-karrera egitera bideratua izan zen. He spent his last years from in Azpeitia, near his home town, amid long-lived family quarrels that included attacks and assassinations. Errege Katolikoen seme Don Juan Printzearen kapera-maisu izan zen, eta, ondoren, haren emaztearena Flandesko Margarita printzesa. The different historiographical layers that converge in his biography have been disentangled in Knighton and Kreitner

Juan de Anchieta

Spanish composer (–)

Juan de Anchieta

Born

Azpeitia, Spain

Died (aged&#;60&#;61)

Azpeitia, Spain

OccupationComposer

Juan de Anchieta ( &#; ) was a leading SpanishBasquecomposer of the Renaissance, at the Royal Court Chaplaincy in Granada of Queen Isabel I of Castile.

History

Born in Azpeitia, Spain in to a leading Basque family, his mother was a great-aunt of Ignatius of Loyola, founder of the Society of Jesus.[1] In , he was appointed to the chapel of Queen Isabella and in , became maestro di capilla to Prince Don Juan, returning to the Queen's service after the Prince's death in , and in , to that of the new Queen, Joanna the Mad.

He held various church benefices, from , as Abbot of Arbós, town located at the province of Tarragona, as a chaplain at Granada Cathedral, spending his final years in a Franciscan convent he had founded in Azpeitia.[citation needed]

Sacred Music

Some thirty of Juan de Anchieta's compositions survive, among them two complete Masses, two Magnificats, a Salve Regina, four attributed Passion settings, with other sacred works and four compositions with Spanish texts.

The two Masses and many motets which survived, show extensive use of plainsong and much chordal writing.[1] He was among the leading Spanish composers of his generation, writing music for the ample resources of the court chapel of the Catholic Monarchs.[2] Anchieta might be the author of the motetEpitaphion Alexandri Agricolae symphonistae regis Castiliae (published in ), which contains important details of the Agricola's biography.[3]

References

External links