Seite - 135 - in Die Repräsentation der Habsburg-Lothringischen Dynastie in Musik, visuellen Medien und Architektur - 1618–1918
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Irena Veselá
Venga quel dì felice!
Dynastisch-politische Botschaften in musikalischen Huldigungswerken für Karl VI. und
Elisabeth Christine (1723)∗
During the reign of Emperor Charles VI (1711–1740), the arts (especially the courtly arts) were
an important instrument that underpinned deliberate strategies of the projection of power as
subsumed here under the term ‘representation’. This becomes particularly evident in six works of
musical theatre which paid homage to the Prague Coronation in 1723. First performed in Prague,
the Costanza e Fortezza festival opera by J. J. Fux underscored Charles VI’s proposal of his Prag-
matic Sanction, which provided for his daughter Maria Theresia to succeed to all his territories
should he die without a son. Specifically, with this decree which had the force of law, he wished
to indivisibly continue his line to the monarchy for all time and to annul claims to the Imperial
Crown
made
by
those
Saxon
and
Bavarian
electors
who
were
married
to
the
daughters
of
Joseph
I. After it had publicly been announced in Prague that the Empress was once again at an stage
of pregnancy, the three works (serenate) by G. Porsile (Il Giorno felice), A. Caldara (La Concordia
de’Pianeti) and C. A. Badia (Il bel Genio dell’Austria ed il Fato) underpinned hopes for the safe
delivery of an heir to the throne. The focus shifts, however, in the case of two further works (by
A. Caldara, La Contesa de’ Numi and by F. B. Conti, Il Trionfo della Fama). Here, the overarching
theme or topos is the universal monarchy and the succession of Charles VI as the heir of Charles V.
In all the musical works commissioned to pay homage to the sovereign on State occasions, the
ones for Charles VI and Elisabeth Christine emphasise typical idealised features of the Habsburg
code of virtues. These, in turn, formed the basis for a diverse musical transposition in solo arias.
Also striking is the increased use of metaphors for light in the libretto. Such metaphors were also
emphasised
through
the
medium
of
music.
By
following
F.
W.
Riedel’s
theory
on
a
unified
imperial
style of ‘representation’, we can identify three features of this possible ‘imperial style’ in the ex-
amples
of
these
six
works:
a
close
connection
between
libretto
texts
and
musical-rhetorical
figures
/
affects
/
idioms,
a
strikingly
contrapuntal
movement
for
these
genres,
and
a
high
degree
of
vocal
and instrumental virtuosity (as appears evident in the works of D. Glüxam).
Während der Regierungszeit von Kaiser Karl VI. (1711–1740) stand die Musik- und
Kunstpflege am Wiener Kaiserhof in Hochblüte. Besonders im Hoch- und Spätba-
rock wurden die Künste zum Instrument der Repräsentationsstrategie des Kaisers,
die seine politischen Vorhaben verkünden und widerspiegeln sollten – und zwar mit-
hilfe der allegorischen, biblischen und mythologischen Gestalten sowie der spezifisch
Die Repräsentation der Habsburg-Lothringischen Dynastie in Musik, visuellen Medien und Architektur
1618–1918
Representing the Habsburg-Lorraine Dynasty in Music, Visual Media and Architecture
- Titel
- Die Repräsentation der Habsburg-Lothringischen Dynastie in Musik, visuellen Medien und Architektur
- Untertitel
- 1618–1918
- Herausgeber
- Werner Telesko
- Verlag
- Böhlau Verlag
- Ort
- Wien
- Datum
- 2017
- Sprache
- deutsch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-205-20507-4
- Abmessungen
- 17.0 x 24.0 cm
- Seiten
- 448
- Kategorien
- Geschichte Vor 1918