Andrea Stefani (composer)

Last updated
Andrea Stefani
Bornc. 1375
DiedAfter 1460

Andrea Stefani (fl. 1400s) was an Italian monk, flagellant, poet, singer and composer. He was active in Florence and Lucca during the late medieval and early renaissance periods, and was a late member of the Trecento movement. [1]

Contents

Life

Florence

Stefani was a member of the Order of the Bianchi Gesuati, or the "White Jesuits". [a] He took part in public processions of the Bianchi movement in Florence in 1399, and was a leading singer. [2] [3]

Lucca

Stefani settled in Lucca in 1406. He contributed three surviving musical works to the Lucca Codex, or "Codex Mancini" (Archivio di Stato 184)(c. 1410 - 1430). He also wrote five lauds without music. From 1445-1446, Stefani was treasurer of the Monastery of St Fregionaia di Lucca.

Stefani's longevity is notable. Stefani's will, dated 1460, is preserved in the archive of St Fregionaia, in which he left his inheritance to the monastery. A memoir was also included that details his life from his arrival in Lucca, to the time of its writing. It has been deduced that Stefani must have been 24 or 25 at the time of his processions in Florence, making his estimated age exceed 80. [4]

Works

Ballate

Madrigal

Notes

  1. Not related to the modern Jesuit order

References

  1. Fischer, Kurt von; D’Agostino, Gianluca (2001). Stefani, Andrea. Oxford Music Online. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.26598.
  2. "La Trobe University - Library: Medieval Music Database - Annual cycle of feasts of liturgical chant, liturgical polyphony and secular music of the late middle ages". www.lib.latrobe.edu.au. Retrieved 2025-07-19.
  3. Lee, Alexandra R. A. (June 2022). "Plague and Popular Revival: Ecclesiastical Authorities and the Bianchi Devotions in 1399". Studies in Church History. 58: 68–90. doi:10.1017/stc.2022.4. ISSN   0424-2084.
  4. "Andrea Stefani - Apple Music Classical". Apple Music Classical - Web Player. Retrieved 2025-07-19.