Scop Harp The harp known as hear pe or in old English was sometimes used by the scop during the Anglo-Saxon time period. The kind of harp a scop used had a triangular frame, known as a “triangular harp.” The triangular harp made its first appearance in Scotland during the 9 th Century, and was normally made from animal bones instead of wood. A scop’s harp however was always made from wood; it would have between 9 to 20 strings and range in height from 14 to 30 inches high. The strings would usually be horsehair, but sometimes would be bronze wire if the scop could afford it.
Scops used triangular harps over any other type because they produce a louder sound, which benefited them and their audience, since they normally performed in large open areas. The harp’s sound box helped the harp produce a more solid sound and was made from one piece of wood instead of many pieces like the modern harp. Scops who used harps had good singing voices and normally performed by song instead of reciting poetry. Unfortunately there are no surviving harps from the scop’s time period, but there are numerous picture references to the instrument. Other instruments commonly used by musicians during this time period were the rebec, a violin type instrument, the cithara, a guitar-like instrument, the lyre, the mother instrument to the harp, and the bone whistle, a instrument similar to a penny whistle.
The Term Paper on Kundt's Tube: Velocity Of Sound In Solid
METHODOLOGY Two experiments were done last time due to some circumstances that made the class to lack time and to be late compared to the official class syllabus. The students were able to accomplished the job by equally dividing the time into two. The first experiment was about Kundt’s tube. In this experiment, longitudinal sound waves will be produced in a metal rod and an air column. Using the ...
These were instruments used by musicians not stops, but I mentioned them anyway because they were still widely used during this time period.