This
blog project is something I have had in mind to do for a couple of
years. It originally started, in my mind, as a project for classical
composers - I don’t listen to a lot of classical music, and thought
“hey, maybe I should change that.” Then my brain saw a squirrel.
SQUIRREL!
Anyway,
I was kicking the idea around again, and thought, why not expand it
because more ladies is always better? So I wittered some more
(SQUIRREL) and finally decided on the categories, which are:
- Composers
- Scientists
- Artists
- Authors
- Film-makers
Five
ladies in each category, spanning (I hope) a wide range of human
history and diversity.
So
this is the first awesome ladies post, and I’m starting in 8th
century Armenia.
Shall
we? :)
Sahakdukht:
Armenian composer; 8th century.
I started out by googling women composers, and Sahakdukht is, chronologically, the first on my list.
According
to the very short Wikipedia entry, Sahakdukht lived in a cave in the
Garni Valley, near present-day Yerevan. She composed ecclesiastical
poems as well as liturgical chants. The only remaining work of hers
is Srbuhi Mariam (St Mary), a nine-stanza acrostic poem, dedicated to
the Virgin Mary.
I
dug around, but the only versions I could find came from this blog
post:
https://coloraturaconsulting.com/2014/06/16/composer-biography-byzantine-women-composers-8th-and-9th-century/
which
links a couple of YouTube performances of, presumably, the work in
Armenian.
Sahakdukht
was the sister of music theorist Stepannos Syunetsi.
According
to this blog post,
https://armenianwomen.wordpress.com/2012/03/21/sahaktukht-8th-century-4-2/
Sahakdukht
fell into a deep grief when her brother was assassinated, which is
when she retired to live in a cave in the Garni valley.
However,
others followed her in her retreat, and she played music and taught
from behind a curtain in her cave. She played her lyre to help those
suffering from nervous disorders, and this is believed to be the
start of music therapy. Her fame was so great that, after she died,
people still made their way to her cave on pilgrimage.
Admittedly
my scrapings around the internet yielded little beyond what I’ve
linked to here, but I find Sahakdukht fascinating nonetheless. Her
grief at the loss of her brother drove her to seek retreat, but she
still composed music, and is believed to be one of the forerunners of
hymnal writing as well as the first music therapist. She also reached
out through her music to others who were suffering, and I can imagine
she gave many people a sense of peace and hope.
I'm hoping to do one awesome lady a week. Next week, the first scientist of the series – Merit-Ptah, a physician in Ancient Egypt and, apparently, the first woman physician known by name.
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