Hothby, John

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Hothby, John

Hothby, John, English music theorist and composer; b. c. 1415; d. 1487. He was a student at Oxford. He was a member of the Carmelite order. He lived in Florence, Italy, about 1450, and was known there under the Italianized name Ottobi. Hothby was then in Lucca (1467–86), where he taught in canonic schools. In 1486 he was recalled to England by Henry VII. A. Seay ed. The Musical Works of John Hothby in Corpus Mensurabilis Musicae, XXXIII (1964).

Writings

Ars plane musice; Calliope legale; De canto figurato; De musica intervallosa; Dialogus; Epistola; Excitato; Quid est proportio?; Regule cantus mensurati; Regule contrapuncti; Regule de monocordo; Regule super proportionem; Regule supra contrapunctum; Tractatus quarundam regularum.

Bibliography

A. Schmidt, Die Calliopea legale des J. H. (Leipzig, 1897).

—Nicolas Slonimsky/Laura Kuhn/Dennis McIntire