Bells and whistles: listening between the lines in sixteenth-century Exeter
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Published:2023-11-10
Issue:
Volume:
Page:1-17
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ISSN:0963-9268
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Container-title:Urban History
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Urban History
Abstract
Abstract
In an attempt to counteract the silence of Exeter’s late sixteenth-century cartographic representation and to explore further the idea of urban social relations expressed in auditory terms, this article investigates the issues involved in the ringing of Exeter’s civic bells, some of which may reflect a fractious relationship between two sources of authority within the city walls. It sets out some of the challenges to recreating this city’s broader sonic identity and outlines the results of initial attempts to do so.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Urban Studies,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),History,Geography, Planning and Development
Reference4 articles.
1. The city of Exeter and the property of the dissolved monasteries;Youings;Transactions of the Devonshire Association,1952
2. Bell on Trial: The Struggle for Sound after Savonarola
3. Hooker’s synopsis chorographical of Devonshire;Blake;Transactions of the Devonshire Association,1915
4. The perspective plan in the sixteenth century: the invention of a representational language;Nuti;The Art Bulletin,1994