LUR - Definition. Was ist LUR
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Was (wer) ist LUR - definition

LONG NATURAL BLOWING HORN WITHOUT FINGER HOLES
Lurer

lur         
[l??]
(also lure)
¦ noun a Scandinavian S-shaped bronze trumpet dating from the Bronze Age.
Origin
from Dan. and Norw.
Lur (deity)         
  • Bronze Mirror of Tinia, Lur and another unknown young man found in Vulci. Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts, Moscow. Ca, 350 BCE
  • Piece of shard found during an excavation in Cetamura
GOD OF THE ETRUSCAN RELIGION OF ANCIENT ITALY
User:Kcw16d/sandbox; Draft:Lur
Lur (Lurs, Luridus, Lurmitla) is an Etruscan deity with not much known history. Lurs does not have many depictions but the ones that have been found show the deity as a male.
Lur Blowers         
  • Carlsberg's victory column seen in an illustration from ''[[Illustreret Tidende]]''
  • The two lur blowers
  • The 1901 mock-up
  • Rosen's 1911 plan for placement of the column
  • The final Lurblæserne monument photographed by [[Peter Elfelt]] in 1930
STATUE IN COPENHAGEN
The Lur Blowers (Danish: Lurblæserne) is a monument located next to City Hall in Copenhagen, Denmark, consisting of a bronze sculpture of two lur players mounted on top of a tall terracotta column. The monument was a gift to the City of Copenhagen from the Carlsberg Foundation and New Carlsberg Foundation on the occasion of the centenary of the birth of Carlsberg founder J.

Wikipedia

Lur

A lur, also lure or lurr, is a long natural blowing horn without finger holes that is played with a brass-type embouchure. Lurs can be straight or curved in various shapes. The purpose of the curves was to make long instruments easier to carry (e.g. for marching, like the modern sousaphone) and to avoid directing the loud noise at nearby people.

The name lur is used for to two distinct types of ancient wind instruments. The more recent type is made of wood and was in use in Scandinavia during the Middle Ages. The older type, named after the more recent type, is made of bronze, dates to the Bronze Age and was often found in pairs, deposited in bogs, mainly in Denmark and Germany. It consists of a mouthpiece and several pieces and/or pipes. Its length can reach between 1.5 and 2 metres. It has been found in Norway, Denmark, South Sweden, and Northern Germany. Illustrations of lurs have also been found on several rock paintings in Scandinavia.