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organe1 (s.xii1)

The form orgyn is a cross reference to the following entry:

organe1 (s.xii1)

organ,  orgene,  orghene,  orgyn  (organo  Oxf Ps1 231.CL.4)  
  FEW:  organum 7,410b Gdf:  organ 5,632c / orguene 5,636a GdfC:  organe 10,241a TL: orgene 6,1256 DEAF:  orgene  DMF:  organe  TLF:  organe  OED:  organ n.1  MED:  organ(e n.  DMLBS:  organum 2053a

The Latin root organum can be traced back to Greek ὀργανον, which originally referred to a tool or instrument to work with (cf. ἐργον, Greek for ‘work, task’), and more specifically to a musical instrument that can be tuned. Whereas the modern musical sense of ‘organ’, i.e. an instrument using pipes sounded by keys, is already well-attested in medieval Latin organum and Middle English organ(e, but no unambiguous examples have been found in Anglo-Norman. Here all occurrences (both as a singular and a plural noun) seem to refer to a stringed instrument or lyre. The single (and late) attestation of the word in Rot Parl1 cannot be defined more specifically, as the word appears, without further context, in an itemized list of goods in possession of William Somercote, along with references to a tabard, a gold flask, a mother-of-pearl tablet a gilded writing desk and a chrismatory. PROME translates the word as an ‘organ mounted in silver’.

Other senses associated with Latin organum (and also well-attested in medieval and modern English), such as ‘bodily organ’ or ‘instrument of speech’ or ‘device’, currently have no attestations in Anglo-Norman.

The condensed spelling orgne, previously listed as a variant here in AND1 has now been moved under orgues (see commentary on that article).

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s. sg. and pl.

music stringed musical instrument, lyre
( s.xii1; MS: c.1145 )  Sur les flums de Babilone, iluec seimes [...]; Es salz [...] suspendimes noz organes  Oxf Ps ANTS 126. 136.2
( s.xii2; MS: s.xii3/3 )  David sunout une maniere de orgenes ki esteient si aturnés ke l'um les liout as espaldes celi kis sunout  Liv Reis1 71.14
( 1266-1300; MS: c.1300 )  Et les Helenis, quant voloient [...] avoic les estrumens de musique - harpe, vielle ou orghene - solacier, bon vin usoient, car lors soi trovoient de milhor sens et de plus soutil contretroveure a faire dittees et contretroveures et melodies  Waterford busby 257.S57.24
( s.xivin; MS: s.xiv1 )  Sa bele chambre est la preste Ou chaunt e orgyn ert a la feste  boz Seven Poems 95.72
musicmusical instrument, i.e. lyre or organ (?)
( 1423 )  Item, .j. pair des organes, garniz d'argent  Rot Parl1 iv 225.451

[gdw]

See also:

orgues  organal  organel  organer1  organer2  organistre  orgues 
This is an AND2 Phase 4 (N-O/U-P-Q) entry. © 2013-17 The Anglo-Norman Dictionary. All rights reserved. Funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council of the United Kingdom.
orgyn