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Milanese mandolin (6 courses) Back of

Giuseppe Presbler

Sforzesco Castle

Sforzesco Castle
Milan, Italy

The instrument is a Milanese mandolin that features six double courses and a sickle-shaped pegbox. The pear-shaped deeply vaulted body is made up of fifteen ribs of unidentified wood; the sound board is a single piece of spruce with a layered wood and parchment rosette. Fingerboard decorative motifs are in bone and ivory. This specimen presents original conditions in its entirety, with the exception of the bridge that was replaced at a later date. Presbler was a family of German lute-makers, whose forefather Valentino (1658 - post 1726) settled down in Milan early in the 18th century. Here he continued to produce musical instruments most likely with the assistance of his sons, Michele and Mattia, and later assuredly with the work of Francesco (1730-1780) and his son Giuseppe, who made this mandolin.

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  • Title: Milanese mandolin (6 courses) Back of
  • Creator: Giuseppe Presbler
  • Date Created: 1797
  • Location: Comune di Milano - Museo degli Strumenti Musicali
  • Physical Dimensions: w15,1 x h58.7 x d9,6 cm (Complete)
  • Type: Musical instrument
  • Rights: Comune di Milano - Raccolte Artistiche del Castello Sforzesco.
  • External Link: http://strumentimusicali.milanocastello.it/
  • Medium: Spruce, ebony, bone
  • Art Form: Musical instrument
  • Original title: Mandolino milanese (a sei ordini)
  • Artist Nationality: Italian (?)
  • Artist Death Date: 1814
  • Artist Birth Date: Known since 1778
Sforzesco Castle

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