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A psaltery is a
member of the zither family; its body consists of almost entirely of a
wooden sound board or resonating box. Wire strings are usually attached
to wooden or metal pegs at either end of its body.
It may date
back to 300 B.C. or earlier, when an instrument with the same name was
used for praise and celebration in ancient Greece. Centuries later in
western Europe and Great Britain, psalteries were frequently used by minstrels,
amateurs, and professional musicians at least until the 1600s. During
that century, these instruments inspired new creations such as the hammered
dulcimer and, very possibly, the harpsichord (another form of box zither
which has strings that are similarly attached but operated by a keyboard).
To play the
European psaltery, you hold the body of the instrument against your chest,
which acts as a resonator to amplify the sound. Generally, you pluck the
strings with your fingers or with a plectrum (pick), although some psalteries
are bowed. Comparable instruments found throughout the Islamic world include
the Turkish qanun, which has up to seventy-two strings, and the Javanese
tjelempung (or celempung), a virtuousic improvising instrument used in
the Gamelan. In Asia, the Chinese yang chi'in , which may have originated
as early as 2000 BC, and the Japanese koto , the chief of contemporary
Japanese traditional instruments, are other relatives of the psaltery
and zither.
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