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Hildegard of Bingen (c. 1098 – 1179), also known as Saint Hildegard and the Sibyl of the Rhine, was a German Benedictine abbess and polymath active as a writer, composer, philosopher, mystic, visionary, and as a medical writer and practitioner during the High Middle Ages. She is one of the best-known composers of sacred monophony, as well as the most recorded in modern history. She has been considered by scholars to be the founder of scientific natural history in Germany. Hildegard’s convent elected her as Magistra (mother superior) in 1136. She founded the monasteries of Rupertsberg in 1150 and Eibingen in 1165. Hildegard wrote theological, botanical, and medicinal works, as well as letters, hymns, and antiphons for the liturgy. She wrote poems and supervised miniature illuminations in the Rupertsberg manuscript of her first work, Scivias.
There are more surviving chants by Hildegard than by any other composer from the entire Middle Ages, and she is one of the few known composers to have written both the music and the words. One of her works, the Ordo Virtutum, is an early example of liturgical drama and arguably the oldest surviving morality play. She is noted for the invention of a constructed language known as Lingua Ignota.
St. Stanislav Girls’ Choir of the Diocesan Classical Gymnasium is located in Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Conductor: Helena Fojkar Zupančič
Soloist: Julija Skobe
Running time: 11 minutes

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That was beautiful, but I honestly also found it a little creepy.
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I know what you mean. I think great art, rather than feel-good art, creates a mix of thoughts and feelings, not all of them pleasant.
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Hildegard!!! Beautiful.
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She was the shining genius of her age, as Mozart and Shakespeare were later.
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