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subs: via Youtube caps (cc) ; if not visible: check settings. https://culture.wursten.be/teutoniam-... Teutoniam dudum belli (SWV 338) is a 7-part song in Latin (5 singers, 2 violins and b.c.), celebrating the flourishing of peace after a period of war’s destruction in Silesia (= central European area, part of the history of Germany, Czechia, Poland). Date (with high probability) November 1621. A peace ceremony took place in Breslau/Wroclaw, at which the Duke of Saxony (Schütz's employer) presided, and for which Schütz provided the official music. The song (in partbooks) was published in 1641 by Ambrosius Profe (a Breslau musician) in a florilegium of 'Italianate' concerto's (published in Leipzig). It's the colloquial counterpart of Schütz' official music for the Ceremony: Syncharma Musicum (SWV 49). The city 'Budorgis' in the text refers to Breslau, the name appears in Ptolemaeus Geographica. At one place the singers sing 'filium' (son): should be 'Silium' (a reference to Silesia). MORE BACKGROUND: https://culture.wursten.be/teutoniam-... Images in video Battle at Bílá hora (the White Mountain, near Prague), 1620 (beginning Thirty Years War) - painting Pieter Snayers (Louvre) Siege of Bautzen (Lausitz/Lusitania) by the Duke of Saxony, 1620 (Schütz's employer) - engraving after Matthäus Merian Portrait of Henrich Schütz as Kapellmeister (engraving August John, 1627/8 ) Pages of the first Publication of this music (Ambrosius Profe, Leipzig 1641)Park Den Brandt Further: Apollo with his Lyre, the 9 Muses, and the 3 Graces (at 03:36 statue/fountain by Walter Schott (ca. 1910) in "Park Den Brandt", Antwerp La Primavera by Botticelli Score: James Gibb (www.cpdl.org) Musicians: Gerlinde Sämann, Isabel Schicketanz, Georg Poplutz, Tobias Mäthger, Martin Schicketanz, Margret Baumgartl, W. von Kessinger, Stefan Maass, Stephan Rath, Matthias Müller, Michaela Hasselt. Direction: Hans-Christoph Rademann Dick Wursten