Minstrel
Related Category: Music: Theory, Forms, and Instruments
professional secular musician of the Middle Ages. The modern application of the term is general and includes the
jongleurs. Certain very able jongleurs ceased their wanderings and were attached to a court to play or sing the songs of the
troubadours or
trouvères who employed them. To these and to some itinerant musicians was applied in the 14th cent. the term
ménétrier and later
ménestrel, from which the word
minstrel is derived, to indicate a higher social class than jongleur. Increasing in number and influence, these minstrels were organized and given protection of the law. Their function was at times similar to that of the Welsh
bard.
See E. Duncan, The Story of Minstrelsy (1907, repr. 1969).