Biblia

Cornet

Cornet

CORNET

A wind instrument of music, of a curved form, 1Ch 15:28 Dan 3:5,7 . See MUSIC.

Fuente: American Tract Society Bible Dictionary

Cornet

properly , shophar’ (prob. from , to be bright, with reference to the clearness of sound; comp. , Psa 16:6), Gr. , Lat. buccina, a loud-sounding instrument, made of the horn of a ram or of a chamois (sometimes of an ox), and used by the ancient Hebrews for signals, for announcing the , jubilee (Lev 25:9), for proclaiming the new year (Mishna, Rosh Hashanah, 3 and 4), for the purpose of war (Jer 4:5; Jer 4:19; comp. Job 39:25), as well as for the sentinels placed at the watch-towers to give notice of the approach of an enemy (Eze 33:4-5). Shophar is generally rendered in the A.V. trumpet, but cornet is used in 1Ch 15:28; 2Ch 15:14; Psa 98:6; Hos 5:8. Cornet is also employed in 2Sa 6:5, for , menaanim’, sistra, a musical instrument or rattle, which gave a tinkling sound on being shaken (used in Egypt in the worship of Isis; see Wilkinson, 2:323 sq.). Finally, in Dan 3:5; Dan 3:7; Dan 3:10; Dan 3:15, for the Chald. (and Heb.) term , ke’ren, a horn (as elsewhere rendered) or simple tube.

Oriental scholars for the most part consider the shophar and the keren to be one and the same musical instrument; but some Biblical critics regard the shophar and the , chatsotserah’ (invariably rendered trumpet in the A.V.), as belonging to the species of the keren, the general term for a horn (Joel Brill, in preface to Mendelssohn’s version of the Psalms). Jahn distinguishes keren, the horn or crooked trumpet, from chatsotserah, the straight trumpet, an instrument a cubit in length, hollow throughout, and at the larger extremity so shaped as to resemble the mouth of a short bill (Archaolog. 95, 4, 5); but the generally received opinion is, that keren designates the crooked horn, and shophar the long and straight one. The cornet properly denotes a shrill wind military instrument of wood, now mostly superseded by the oboe. It was blown with a mouth-piece, and varied in size and tone (Mersenne’s Harmonie Universelle). The sounds emitted from the cornet in modern times are exceedingly harsh, although they produce a solemn effect. SEE MUSIC.

The silver trumpets ( ) which Moses was charged to furnish for the Israelites were to be used for the following purposes: for the calling together of the assembly, for the jdurneying of the camps, for sounding the alarm of war, and for celebrating the sacrifices on festivals and new moons (Num 10:1-10). The divine command through Moses was restricted to two trumpets only, and these were to be sounded by the sons of Aaron, the anointed priests of the sanctuary, and not by laymen. It would seem, however, that at a later period an impression prevailed that while the trumpets were suffered to be sounded only by the priests within the sanctuary, they might be used by others, not of the priesthood, without the sacred edifice’ (Conrad Iken’s Antiquitates Hebraicae, par. 1, sec. 7, Sacerdotum cum instrumentis ipsorum’). In the age of Solomon the silver trumpets’ were increased in number to 120 (2Ch 5:12); and, independently of the objects for which they had been first introduced, they were now employed in the orchestra of the Temple as an accompaniment to songs of thanksgiving and praise.

Yobel’, , used sometimes for the year of Jubilee’ ( ; comp. Lev 25:13; Lev 25:15, with Lev 25:28; Lev 25:30), generally denotes the institution of Jubilee; but in some instances it is spoken of as a musical instrument, resembling in its object, if not in its shape, the keren and the shophar. Gesenius pronounces yobel to be an onomato-poetic word, signifying jubilum or a joyful sound, and hence applied to the sound of a trumpet signal, like , ‘ (alarm,’ Num 10:5); and Dr. Munk is of opinion that the word YOBEL is only an epithet’ (Palestine, p. 456 a, note). Still it is difficult to divest yobel of the meaning of a sounding instrument in the following instances: When the trumpet () soundeth long, they shall come up to the mount’ (Exo 19:13); And it shall come to pass that when they make a long blast with the ram’s horn’ ( , Jos 6:5); And let seven priests bear seven trumpets of rams’ horns’ ( , Jos 6:6). SEE JUBILEE.

The sounding of the cornet ( ) was the distinguishing ritual feature of the festival appointed by Moses to be held on the first day of the seventh month, under the denomination of a day of blowing trumpets’ ( , Num 29:1), or a memorial of blowing of trumpets’ ( , Lev 23:24); and that rite is still observed by the Jews in their celebration of the same festival, which they now call the day of memorial’ ( ), and also New Year’ ( ). Some commentators,’ says Rosenmller, have made this festival refer to the preservation of Isaac (Genesis 22), whence it is sometimes called by the Jews the Binding of Isaac’ ( ). But it is more probable that the name of the festival is derived from the usual kind of trumpets (ram’s horns) then in use, and that the object of the festival was the celebration of the new year and the exhortation to thanksgivings for the blessings experienced in the year just finished. The use of cornets by the priests in all the cities of the land, not in Jerusalem only (where two silver trumpets were added, while the Levites chanted the 81st Psalm), was a suitable means for that object’ (Morgenland, vol. 2, No. 337, on Lev 23:24).

Although the festival of the first day of the seventh month is denominated by the Mishna New Year,’ and notwithstanding that it was observed as such by the Hebrews in the age of the second temple, there is no reason whatever to believe that it had such a name or character in the times of Moses. The Pentateuch fixes the vernal equinox (the period of the institution of the Passover) as the commencement of the Jewish year; but for more than twenty centuries the Jews have dated their new year from the autumnal equinox, which takes place about the season when the festival of the day of sounding the cornet’ is held. Rabbinical tradition represents this festival as the anniversary of the creation of the world, but the statement receives no direct support from Scripture. On the contrary, Moses expressly declares that the month Abib (the moon of the spring) is to be regarded by the Hebrews as the first month of the year: This month shall be unto you the beginning () of months; it shall be the first () month of the year to you’ (Exo 12:2) (Munk, Palestine, p. 184 b). SEE YEAR.

The intention of the appointment of the festival of the sounding of the cornet,’ as well as the duties of the sacred institution, appear to be set forth in the words of the prophet, Sound the cornet () in Zion, sanctify the fast, proclaim the solemn assembly’ (Joe 2:15). Agreeably to the order in which this passage runs, the institution of the festival of sounding the cornet’ seems to be the prelude and preparation for the awful day of atonement. The divine command for that fast is connected with that for the day of sounding the cornet’ by the conjunctive particle . Likewise on the tenth day of this seventh month is the day of atonement’ (Lev 23:27). Here (likewise) unites the festival of the day of sounding the cornet’ with the solemnity of the day of atonement precisely as the same particle connects the festival of tabernacles’ with the observance of the ceremonial of the fruit of the hadar-tree, the palm branches,’ etc. (Lev 23:34-40). The word solemn assembly’ () in the verse from Joel quoted above applies to the festival eighth day of solemn assembly’ ( ) (Lev 23:36), the closing rite of the festive cycle of Tisri (see Marks, Religious Discourses, 1:291- 2).

Besides the use of the cornet on the festival of blowing the trumpets,’ it is also sounded in the synagogue at the close of the service for the day of atonement, and, among the Jews who adopt the ritual of the Sephardim, on the seventh day of the feast of tabernacles, known by the post-biblical denomination of the Great Hosannah’ ( ). SEE TRUMPET.

Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature

Cornet

Heb. shophar, “brightness,” with reference to the clearness of its sound (1 Chr. 15:28; 2 Chr. 15:14; Ps. 98:6; Hos. 5:8). It is usually rendered in the Authorized Version “trumpet.” It denotes the long and straight horn, about eighteen inches long. The words of Joel, “Blow the trumpet,” literally, “Sound the cornet,” refer to the festival which was the preparation for the day of Atonement. In Dan. 3:5, 7, 10, 15, the word (keren) so rendered is a curved horn. The word “cornet” in 2 Sam. 6:5 (Heb. mena’an’im, occurring only here) was some kind of instrument played by being shaken like the Egyptian sistrum, consisting of rings or bells hung loosely on iron rods.

Fuente: Easton’s Bible Dictionary

Cornet

A horn trumpet used for war, for signals, for proclaiming the Jubilee and new year. The shophar was long and straight; the qeren (Daniel 3) crooked. Shophar is generally translated “trumpet,” qeren “cornet” (Daniel 3). God appointed the making of two silver trumpets. They were 120 in Solomon’s time (2Ch 5:12), and were employed for other purposes besides those originally contemplated, namely, in the temple orchestra. The first day of the seventh month was “the memorial of blowing of trumpets” (Lev 23:24; Num 29:1).

The beginning of the civil new year was thus ushered in with joyful thanksgivings for the mercies of the old year, the Levites chanting Psalm 81. This usage, however, cannot be proved so early as Moses’ time, when the beginning of the (religious) year was fixed at the spring equinox, the period of the institution of the Passover, the month Abib (Exo 12:2). The rabbis represent the seventh month as the anniversary of creation. The first day “memorial of blowing of trumpets” preluded the tenth day yearly great “atonement.”

Fuente: Fausset’s Bible Dictionary

Cornet

CORNET.See Music and Musical Instruments.

Fuente: Hastings’ Dictionary of the Bible

Cornet

kornet, kornet. See MUSIC.

Fuente: International Standard Bible Encyclopedia

Cornet

In Dan 3:5-15 the word is qeren and signifies ‘horn or cornet.’ In 2Sa 6:5 the word is manaanim, and signifies an instrument that makes a tinkling sound on being shaken, as a ‘sistrum.’ In the four other places the word is shophar, which is often translated ‘trumpet.’ 1Ch 15:28; 2Ch 15:14; Psa 98:6; Hos 5:8.

Fuente: Concise Bible Dictionary

Cornet

See Trumpet

Trumpet

Fuente: Nave’s Topical Bible

Cornet

Cornet (Heb. shphr). A loud-sounding instrument, made of the horn of a ram or of a chamois (sometimes of an ox), and used by the ancient Hebrews for signals, Lev 26:9, R. V. “trumpet,” and much used by the priests. 1Ch 15:28.

Fuente: People’s Dictionary of the Bible

Cornet

Cornet. (Hebrew, shophar). A loud-sounding instrument, made of the horn of a ram or a chamois (sometimes of an ox), and used by the ancient Hebrews for signals, Lev 25:9, and much used by the priests. 1Ch 15:28.

Fuente: Smith’s Bible Dictionary