Extensive Definition
The kithara was an ancient
Greek musical
instrument in the lyre
family. In Latin it is spelled
cithara, and in modern Greek
the word kithara has come to mean guitar.
The kithara was a professional version of the
seven-stringed lyra (lyre).
As opposed to the simpler lyra, which was a folk-instrument, the
kithara was primarily used by professional musicians (see kitharode, citharoedus). (The
barbitos was a bass
version of the kithara popular in the eastern Aegean and
ancient Asia
Minor.)
The kithara had a deep, wooden sounding box
composed of two resonating tables, either flat or slightly arched,
connected by ribs or sides of equal width. At the top, its strings
were knotted around the transverse tuning bar (zugon) or to rings
threaded over the bar, or wound around pegs. The other end of the
strings was secured to a tail-piece after passing over a flat
bridge, or the tail-piece and bridge were combined. It was played
with a rigid plectrum
held in the right hand, with elbow outstretched and palm bent
inwards, while the strings with undesired notes were damped with
the straightened fingers of the left hand. The kithara was played
primarily to accompany dances and epic recitations, rhapsodies,
odes, and lyric songs. It was also played solo at the receptions,
banquets, national games, and trials of skill. The music from this
instrument was said to be the lyre for drinking parties and is
considered an invention of Terpander.
Aristotle said that these string instruments were not for
educational purposes but for pleasure only.
Sappho is closely
associated with music, especially string instruments like the
kithara and the barbitos. She was a woman of
high social standing and composed songs that focused on the
emotions. A Greek
mythology story goes that she ascended the steep slopes of
Mount
Parnassus where she was welcomed by the Muses. She wondered
through the laurel grove and
came upon the cave of Apollo, where she
bathed in the Castalian
Spring and took Phoebus' plectrum to play skillful
music. The sacred nymphs
danced while she stroked the strings with much talent to bring
forth sweet musical melodies from the resonant kithara.
Giovanni
Boccaccio compiled images of women notable and famous
throughout history. One of his images was Sappho playing a kithara.
See also
kithara in German: Kithara
kithara in Estonian: Kitara
kithara in Luxembourgish: Kithara
kithara in Macedonian: Китара
kithara in Japanese: キタラー
kithara in Latin: Cithara
kithara in Norwegian Nynorsk: Kithara
kithara in Polish: Kitara
kithara in Portuguese: Cítara
kithara in Russian: Кифара
kithara in Finnish: Kithara
kithara in Swedish: Kithara
kithara in Turkish: Kitara