ABSTRACT This article examines the use of musical notation as a pedagogical tool in early modern language teaching, focusing on Latin, Greek, Hebrew, and briefly, Turkish. While musical notation is typically associated with performance and composition, the sources discussed here demonstrate its broader application as a visual and conceptual system for representing sound—specifically pronunciation, rhythm, accentuation and metre. Drawing on a wide range of printed grammar books, annotated texts and instructional manuals from the late fifteenth to the mid‐sixteenth century, the study shows how notation was employed to guide vocal delivery, support mnemonic strategies and mediate between reading and oral performance. Central case studies include humanist Latin grammars with metrical examples and ode settings, Philipp Melanchthon's Greek grammar, Christian Hebrew grammars incorporating notated cantillation and instructional materials for liturgical recitation. Situating these sources within wider debates on orality, literacy and humanist education, the article argues that the inclusion of musical notation in language manuals presupposed a degree of musical literacy and reflects a pedagogical culture in which linguistic and musical competencies were closely intertwined. Ultimately, musical notation emerges not as an ancillary embellishment but as a structurally significant means of visualising and teaching the sound of language in early modern Europe.
Elisabeth Giselbrecht (Wed,) studied this question.
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