Psaltery

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PSALTERY.—See Music, etc., § 4.
Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible
Edited by James Hastings, D.D. Published in 1909


A stringed instrument played by the hand to accompany the voice, Hebrew nebel. In Psa_33:2 omit "and," translated "sing with the psaltery an instrument of ten strings." Josephus (Ant. 7:12, sec. 3) mentions that ordinarily it had 12 strings; nebel means literally, a leather bottle, the psaltery was named so from its shape (Psa_92:3; Psa_144:9). The king, or, "lyre," had ten strings, but was played with a quill, not with the hand.
Fausset's Bible Dictionary
By Andrew Robert Fausset, co-Author of Jamieson, Fausset and Brown's 1888.


Psaltery. This was a stringed instrument of music to accompany the voice. The Hebrew, nabel or nebel is so rendered, in the Authorized Version, in all passages where if occurs, except in Isa_5:12; Isa_14:11; Isa_22:24, marg.; Amo_5:23; Amo_6:6, where it is translated viol. The ancient viol was a six-stringed guitar. In the Prayer Book version of the Psalms, the Hebrew word is rendered "lute."
This instrument resembled the guitar, but was superior in tone, being larger, and having a convex back, somewhat like the vertical section of a gourd, or more nearly resembling that of a pear. These three instruments, the psaltery or sautry, the viol and lute, are frequently associated in the old English poets and were clearly instruments resembling each other though still different. The Greek psalterium (psalterion), from which our word is derived, denotes an instrument played with the fingers instead of a plectrum or quill, the verb being used of twanging the bow-string.
It is impossible to say positively with what instrument the nebel of the Hebrew exactly corresponded, From the fact that nebel in Hebrew also signifies a wine-bottle or skin, it has been conjectured that the term, when applied to a musical instrument, denotes a kind of bagpipe. The psalteries of David were made of cypress, 2Sa_6:5, those of Solomon of algum or almug trees. 2Ch_9:11. Among the instruments of the band, which played before Nebuchadnezzar's golden image on the plains of Dura, we again meet with the psaltery. Dan_3:6; Dan_3:10; Dan_3:15, Chaldaic, pesanterin.
Smith's Bible Dictionary
By Dr. William Smith.Published in 1863


sôl?tẽr-i. See MUSIC.

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
PRINTER 1915.


[MUSIC]




The Popular Cyclopedia of Biblical Literature
by John Kitto.


Psaltery
an Anglicism of the Greek ψαλτήριον, is used in the A.V. as the rendering of two Hebrew words, both of which signified stringed instruments of music to accompany the voice. In our treatment of them we observe a strictly archaeological line of investigation. See Kitto's note on Psalms 92, 3, in his Pictorial Bible; Bible Educator, i, 70, 215; and SEE MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS.
1. נֵבֶל, or נֶבֶל, nebel, is so rendered in the A.V. in all passages where it occurs, except in Isa_5:12; Isa_14:11; Isa_22:24 marg.; Amo_5:23; Amo_6:5, where it is translated viol, following the Geneva Version, which has viole in all cases except 2Sa_6:5; 1Ki_10:12 (“psaltery”); 2Es_10:22; Sir_40:21 (“psalterion”); Isa_22:24 (“musicke”); and Wis_19:18 (“instrument of musike”). The ancient viol was a six- stringed guitar. “Viols had six strings, and the position of the fingers was marked on the finger-board by frets, as in the guitars of the present day” (Chappell, Pop. Mus. i, 246). In the Prayer-book version of the Psalms, the Hebrew word is rendered “lute.” This instrument resembled the guitar, but was superior in tone, “being larger, and having a convex back, somewhat like the vertical section of a gourd, or more nearly resembling that of a pear... It had virtually six strings, because, although the number was eleven or twelve, five, at least, were doubled; the first, or treble, being sometimes a single string. The head in which the pegs to turn the strings were inserted receded almost at a right angle” (Chappell, i, 102). These three instruments — psaltery or sautry, the viol, and the lute — are frequently associated in the old English poets, and were clearly instruments resembling each other, though still different. Thus in Chaucer's Flower and Leaf, p. 337
“And before he went minstreles many one,
As harpes, pipes, lutes, and sautry;”
and again in Drayton's Polyolbion, 4:356 —
“The trembling lute some touch,
some strain the viol best.”
The word psaltery in its present form appears to have been introduced about the end of the 16th century, for it occurs in the unmodified form psalterion in two passages of the Geneva Version (1560). Again, in North's Plutarch (Them. [ed. 1595], p. 124) we read that Themistocles, “being mocked... by some that had studied humanitie, and other liberall sciences, was driuen for reuenge and his owne defence, to aunswer with greate and stoute words, saying, that in deed he could no skill to tune a harpe, nor a violl, nor to play of a psalterion; but if they did put a citie into his hands that was of small name, weake, and litle, he knew wayes enough how to make it noble, strong, and great.” The Greek ψαλτήριον, from which our word is derived, denotes an instrument played with the fingers instead of a plectrum or quill, the verb ψάλλειν being used (Eurip. Bach. p. 781) of twanging the bowstring (comp. ψαλμοὶ τόξων, Eurip. Ion, p. 173). But it only occurs in the Sept. as the rendering of the Heorew nebel in Neh_12:27 and Isa_5:12, and in all the passages of the Psalms, except Psa_71:22 (ψαλμός) and Psa_81:2 (κιθάρα), while in Amo_5:23; Amo_6:5, the general term ὄργανον is employed. In all other cases νάβλα represents nèbel or nebel. These various renderings are sufficient to show that at the time the translation of the Sept. was made there was no certain identification of the Hebrew instrument with any known to the translators.
The rendering νάβλα commends itself on account of the similarity of the Greek word with the Hebrew. Josephus appears to have regarded them as equivalent, and his is the only direct evidence upon the point. He tells us (Ant. 7:12, 3) that the difference between the κινύρα (Heb. כַּנּוֹר, kinnor) and the νάβλα was that the former had ten strings and was played with the plectrum, the latter had twelve notes and was played with the hand. Forty thousand of these instruments, he adds (Ant. 8:3, 8), were made of electrum by Solomon for the Temple choir. Rashi (on Isa_5:12) says that the nebel had more strings and pegs than the kinnor. That nabla was a foreign name is evident from Strabo (x, 471) and from Athenaeus (iv, 175), where its origin is said to be Sidonian. Beyond this, and that it was a stringed instrument (Athen. 4:175), played by the hand (Ovid, Ars Amn. iii, 327), we know nothing of it; but in these facts we have strong presumptive evidence that nablo and nebel are the same; and that the nablet and psalterion are identical appears from the glossary of Philoxenus, where nablio = ψάτης, and nablizo= ψάλλω. and from Suidas, who makes psalterion and naula, or nabla, synonymous. Of the psaltery among the Greeks there appear to have been two kinds-the πηκτίς , which was of Persian (Athen. 14:636) or Lydian (ibid. p. 635) origin, and the μαγάδις.
The former had only two (ibid. 4:183) or three (ibid.) strings; the latter as manly as twenty (ibid. 14:634), though sometimes only five (ibid. p. 637). They are sometimes said to be the same, and were evidently of the same kind. Both Isidore (De Origg. iii, 21) and Cassiodorus (Proef. in Psal. c. 4) describe the psaltery as triangular in shape, like the Greek Δ, with the sounding-board above the strings, which were struck downwards. The latter adds that it was played with a plectrum, so that he contradicts Josephus if the psaltery and nebel are really the same. In this case Josephus is the rather to be trusted. St. Augustine (on Psalms 32 [33]) makes the position of the sounding-board the point in which the cithara and psaltery differ; in the former it is below, in the latter above the strings. His language implies that both were played with the plectrum. The distinction between the cithara and psaltery is observed by Jerome (Prol. in Psal.). From these conflicting accounts it is impossible to say positively with what instrument the nebel of the Hebrew exactly corresponded. It was probably of various kinds, as Kinmchi says in his note on Isaiah 22, 21, differing from each other both with regard to the position of the pegs and the number of the strings. In illustration of the descriptions of Isidorus and Cassiodorus reference may be made to the drawings from Egyptian musical instruments given by Sir Gard. Wilkinson (Anc. Eg. ii, 280, 287), some one of which may correspond to the Hebrew nebel. Munk (Palestine, pl. 16, figs. 12, 13) gives an engraving of an instrument which Niebuhr saw. Its form is that of an inverted Delta placed upon a round box of wood covered with skin. Abraham de Porta-Leone, the author of Shilte Haugibborim (c. 5), identifies the nebel with the Italian liuto (the lute), or rather with the particular kind called liuto chitarronnato (the German mandolinle), the thirteen strings of which were of gut or sinew, and were struck with a quill. SEE HARP.
The nebel asor (Psa_33:2; Psa_92:3 [4]; Psa_144:9) appears to have been an instrument of the psaltery kind of a peculiar form or number of strings (Forkel, Gesch. der Mus. i, 133). Aben-Ezra (on Psa_150:3) says the nebel had ten holes; so that he must have considered it to be a kind of pipe. As the latter term signifies ten, and never occurs but in connection with the nebel, the conjecture is natural that the two instruments may have differed from each other only in the number of their strings, or the openings at the bottom. Hence we meet with the Sept. translation ἐν δεκαχόρδῳ, and in the Chaldee, Syriac, and Arabic words expressing an instrument of ten strings, which is also followed in the A.V. (Psa_33:21; Psa_44:1). We see no reason to dissent from this conclusion. Pfeiffer was inclined to think that the asor may have been the quadrangular lyre which is represented in different varieties in ancient monuments (figs. 1 and 2 of the accompanying cut), and which has usually ten strings, though sometimes more. SEE VIOL.
From the fact that nebel in Hebrew also signifies a wine-bottle or skin, it has been conjectured that the term when applied to a musical instrument denotes a kind of bagpipe — the old English cornamute, French cornemuse; but it seems clear, whatever else mav be obscure concerning it, that the nebel was a stringed instrument. In the Mishna (Kelim, 16:7) mention is made of a case ( תיק= θήκη) in which it was kept. SEE BOTTLE.
The first appearance of the nebel in the history of the Old Test. is in connection with the “string” of prophets who met Saul as they came down from the high place (1Sa_10:5). Here it is clearly used in a religious service, as again (2Sa_6:5; 1Ch_13:8) when David brought the ark from Kirjath-jearim. In the Temple band organized by David were the players on psalteries (1Ch_15:16; 1Ch_15:20), who accompanied the ark from the house of Obed-edom (1Ch_15:28). They played when the ark was brought into the Temple (2Ch_5:12); at the thanksgiving for Jehoshaphat's victory (2Ch_20:28); at the restoration of the Temple under Hezekiah (2Ch_29:25), and the dedication of the walls of Jerusalem after they were rebuilt by Nehemiah (Neh_12:27). In all these cases, and in the passages in the Psalms where allusion is made to it, the psaltery is associated with religious services (comp. Amo_5:23; 2Es_10:22). But it had its part also in private festivities, as is evident from Isa_5:12; Isa_14:11; Isa_22:24; Amo_6:5, where it is associated with banquets and luxurious indulgence. It appears (Isa_14:11) to have had a soft, plaintive note. The psalteries of David were made of cypress (2Sa_6:5), those of Solomon of algum or almug trees (2Ch_9:11). SEE PSALMODY.
2. Among the instruments of the band which played before Nebuchadnezzar's golden image on the plains of Dura, we again meet with the ‘psaltery' (פְּסנְתֵּרַין, Dan_3:5; Dan_3:10; Dan_3:15; פְּסִנְטֵרַין, pesunterin). The Chaldee word appears to be merely a modification of the Greek ψαλτήριον. Attention is called to the fact that the word is singular (see Gesenius, Thesaur. p. 1116), the termination אּ יןcorresponding to the Greek - ιον. This, in a more narrow and exact sense, denotes an instrument like the cithara (Lemprid. Al Sever), played with both hands, and called the magadis, μαγάδις ῥ(Athen. 14:636); but according to Jerome (Proem. in Psalm.) it was the later Greek name for the nabla or nebel above. See Music.

CYCLOPEDIA OF BIBLICAL, THEOLOGICAL AND ECCLESIASTICAL
press 1895.





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