'Kryštof Harant z Polžic a Bezdružic' (
1564 –
June 21,
1621) was a
Czech nobleman, soldier, writer and composer.
As a composer he represented the school of
Franco-Flemish polyphony in
Bohemia. His activity in revolt of
Protestants resulted in his execution by
Catholic forces after the
Battle of White Mountain during the
Thirty Years' War.
Life
He was born at
Klenová Castle, near
Klatovy, Bohemia, and received some early education at
Innsbruck, at the court of
Archduke Ferdinand II. Between 1593 and 1597 he served as a soldier, and fought against the Turks. In 1598 and 1599 he went to the
Holy Land as a pilgrim, writing about his experiences in a book entitled ''
Journey from Bohemia to the Holy Land, by way of Venice and the Sea'' which was published in Prague in 1608. During 1614-15 travelled into Spain with diplomatic mission.
In
1618 he converted to Protestantism, and joined the forces arrayed against the Catholics as an officer of
artillery. During the rebellion he bombarded the imperial palace in
Vienna—with the emperor inside—which proved to be a bad move. After the defeat of the Protestant Czechs at White Mountain in
1620 by the combined arms of
Maximilian and
Tilly, and the subsequent sack of
Prague by Imperial troops, he was captured, unsuccessfully pled for mercy, and was beheaded on June 21, 1621 in the Old Town Square, Prague, along with all the other leaders of the insurrection.
Music and influence
Harant's music was conservative, and in the style of the Netherlands composers of the previous generation. He used archaic techniques such as
cantus firmus mass composition. Seven separate works survived, all sacred vocal compositions (the rest were lost when his property was confiscated as being that of an executed traitor). One of his pieces is a cantus firmus mass based on a
madrigal by
Marenzio (Missa quinis vocibus super Dolorosi martir) —an amusing musical irony in that it combines a technique which went out of fashion a hundred years before with the music of one of Italy's most popular and progressive composers.
Harant had a reputation as a fine instrumentalist and singer in addition to being a composer. In another interesting irony, one of his Roman Catholic masses was performed in 1620, just before his execution, in a Catholic church in Prague, to great ceremony.
Trivia
Kryštof's Czech name is often translated in joke to English ''half-word by half-word''. The result is: Christopher, the Bastard from After Spoons and Without Satellites.
References and further reading
★ Book ''Kryštof Harant z Polžic a Bezdružic: Cesta intelektuála k popravišti'' (''Path of intellectual to the gallows''): biography and legacy, written by Marie Koldinská, in Czech. ISBN 8071855375
★ Article "Kryštof Harant z Polžic a Bezdružic", in ''The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians'', ed. Stanley Sadie. 20 vol. London, Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 1980. ISBN 1561591742
★
Gustave Reese, ''Music in the Renaissance''. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1954. ISBN 0393095304
★ Museum in the
Bezdružice Castle holds a pernament exposition about Harant
[1].
External links
★
Biography (in Czech)
★
Recordings of K.Harant Opera Omnia
★
Partial recording of cantus-firmus mass based on Marenzio madrigal