
A modern crwth in its case
The 'crwth' is an archaic
stringed musical instrument, associated particularly with
Wales, although once played widely in Europe.
Nomenclature
''Crwth'' is a
Welsh word, pronounced to rhyme with ''tooth'' (
IPA or ). The traditional
English name, little used today, is ''crowd'' or ''crouth''; it is also known as the 'rote' (''rota'', ''rotta'', ''rotte''), and it is cited as such in the ''
Canterbury Tales'' of
Chaucer (in which the
Monk is stated to have played one). In
mediaeval Latin it is called the ''chorus'' or ''crotta''. The Welsh word ''crythor'' means a performer on the crwth. The
Irish word is ''cruit'', although it also was used on occasion to designate certain small
harps. The English surnames (
family names) Crowder and Crowther denote a player of the crowd, as do the
Scottish names MacWhirter and MacWhorter.
The origins of the word ''crwth'' go back into
Antiquity. A variety of string instruments so designated are thought by some to have been played in Wales since
Roman times at least. Continuous, clear records of the use of ''crwth'' to denote an instrument of the
lyre class date from the eleventh century of the
Common Era. The
etymology of this word (literally meaning a swelling out or a protuberance) and related words used to designate string instruments is complex. Perhaps the simplest explanation is that ''crwth'' and related words were generic terms used to designate a number of different string instruments in the
British Isles over a period of at least a thousand years and perhaps twice that long. Exact denotation depended on time, place, and even individual.
From this point onward in this article, ''crwth'' will denote the modern, or most recent, form of the instrument (see picture above).
History
The modern crwth appears to date from only the late fifteenth or early sixteenth century and almost surely is not, as some romanticized accounts imply or declare, the same instrument that was played by the
ancient and
Medieval Welsh bards. In fact, its close ancestors became instruments of the
folk culture of Wales and the
West Country and western
Midlands following the demise of
minstrelsy in
Britain at the close of the
Middle Ages; and in its final form (probably emerging ''ca'' 1485-1510), it seems to have been confined to Wales. Although the modern crwth bears something of a resemblance to the
classical lyre, with the addition of a
bow, it is more closely related to the various plucked and bowed square and round lyres that drawings, paintings, and sculptures show to have existed throughout northern Europe from as far back as the eighth century of the Common Era. While the
Middle-Eastern origin of the early European chordophone bow seems beyond dispute, the connections between the European round and square lyres and Middle-Eastern and
Classical prototypes are tenuous at best.

19th century Crwth (Wales, c. 1800–1825)
The instrument in its final form lingered on in Wales much later than elsewhere, but had gone completely out of fashion by the
18th century, or at the latest the early
19th, supplanted by the more versatile and powerful
fiddle (violin). The crwth received its death-blow during the rise of Welsh evangelical Protestantism in the 1730s, when dancing and musical instruments associated with dance music came to be widely condemned. According to the
National Library of Wales, records of the last traditional crwth player, John Morgan, are found in
Newborough, Anglesey, around 1740. An unconfirmed account reports that one James Green, of Bron y Garth, was actually the last of the traditional players, and that he died in 1855. Other accounts in oral tradition maintain that among the last of the crwth players were Rhys Grythor and Shawms y Crythor (both almost certainly nicknames).
There are many carvings, manuscript illustrations, and written descriptions of crwth-like instruments, but so complete was the abandonment of the modern crwth in the century after about 1735 that only three 18th-century Welsh examples survive. These are held at the National Library of Wales in
Aberystwyth, the
Museum of Welsh Life at St Fagans, or Sain Ffagan, near
Cardiff, and
Warrington Museum (near
Manchester in the
North of England). An important reconstruction of an
Anglo-Saxon round lyre, a likely early
prototype of the crwth, is part of the collection from the
Sutton Hoo ship's burial, housed in the
British Museum in
London. It closely matches many
iconographic representations.
Physical description and playing technique

Crwth being played by Cass Meurig using a neck strap
The crwth consists of a fairly simple box construction with a flat,
fretless
fingerboard and six gut strings, purportedly tuned GgDdCc. It should be noted that the original report of that tuning (Edward Jones, ''Musical and Poetical Relicks ''[sic]'' of the Welsh Bards''; London: 1784), from which most subsequent others appear to draw their information, uses arbitrary pitch designations for illustrative purposes. Jones also states that the tuning procedure began by tightening the highest string as much as possible without breaking it, subsequently tuning the others to it
intervalically. Such was not an uncommon practice in the days before
standardized pitch and was, in fact, mentioned in other manuals on string instrument playing.
While Jones's report was widely read and used as the basis of a number of subsequent accounts, and therefore today is often considered to be evidence of a standard tuning, it is more likely that a variety of tunings were experimented with and in some cases employed, as was and still is the case with many other string instruments, particularly those within
folk cultures. A second tuning, reported by William Bingley (''A Tour Round North Wales''; London: 1800), features the drones tuned in octaves, with the strings over the fingerboard tuned in paired fifths rather than seconds. This tuning has been shown to have been more practical than the more widely reported tuning for both the playing of chords and the performance of melodies.
Traditionally the
soundbox, or resonator, and a surmounting yoke in the shape of an inverted U (see picture of player), were carved as a single unit from a block of
maple or
sycamore. The
soundboard, or
belly, a separate piece (the upper surface, nearest the strings), was most often made of
deal or some other soft wood, and the
bridge was usually made of
cherry or some other fruitwood. Two
soundholes, or circular openings about an inch to an inch and a quarter in diameter, were cut into the soundboard to allow pulsating air from the soundbox to escape and strengthen the tone. The two G strings (to use Jones's terminology - see above) ran parallel to the fingerboard, but not over it, so those strings were used as fixed-pitch drones that were usually, if not always, plucked by the player's left thumb. The remaining strings, which were tightened and loosened with metal
harp wrest-pins and a tuning key or
wrench, were usually bowed with a
horsehair and wood bow. One characteristic feature of the crwth is that one leg of the
bridge goes through a soundhole (see picture of player) and rests on the
back of the instrument (the bottom of the soundbox). Although it has been conjectured that this is a primitive attempt at a
sound post, or ''anima'', something the instrument lacks, it is equally likely that it is designed to take some of the downward pressure of the tightened strings off the soundboard. Since that piece is flat, unbraced, and usually made of soft wood, it is much weaker than the belly of a violin.
The crwth can be played on the shoulder like a violin, between the knees like a
cello, on the lap held either upright or at a slightly oblique angle across the player's torso against the left shoulder, or braced against the chest, supported with a strap around the player's neck (see picture). While the crwth can be held at the shoulder, it is difficult to work the
drones, or bourdons, with it in that position. The sloping bridge strongly suggests that the oblique-upright position across the upper body (which greatly facilitates the plucking of the drones) was often employed to allow the bow to be pulled slightly upward without rubbing against the bridge as it often would have done had the bridge been set straight across the soundboard. The acute angle of the bow to the strings would have produced the harsh, often squeaky, "glassy" sound that practitioners seemed to prefer. However, since the art of crwth-playing died out so completely, and since it was an instrument of the folk culture rather than part of the academic musical world, the exact manner - if, indeed, there ever was one exact manner - in which the instrument was traditionally played, like the tunings employed, will probably never be known for certain.
The tone of the crwth can seem rough compared to that of the modern violin, as well as lacking in power, and the crwth can be played with ease only in what string players refer to as first position, with the left hand at the far end of the fingerboard rather than moving up towards the bridge. However, it is capable of a delicate and gentle sound that goes well with the
timbres of the
harp and
pibgorn (
hornpipe). For all its technical limitations, the crwth has great charm, and is much more than a historical curiosity. Research over about the last thirty-five years, and particularly experimentation with tunings, have shown it to have been much more versatile and facile than was once assumed, although it definitely was not a prototype of modern orchestral bowed string instruments, which emerged from an altogether different branch of the complex string family tree. Historically, it represents the logical end of a line of development, not an early stage of another.
The crwth today
A number of modern reconstructions of the crwth have been made; makers include Guy Flockhart, Nial Cain, Hank Taylor and
Gerard Kilbride. A handful of folk musicians are reviving the tradition of playing this instrument, among them
Cass Meurig (who also plays with the groups
Fernhill and
Pigyn Clust), Bob Evans (
Bragod), and Dan Morris (
Cilmeri). The repertoire of surviving crwth tunes is very small, although many other traditional tunes can be adapted for the instrument and new tunes are being written for it.
Recordings
Cass Meurig has brought out a CD of crwth music on the
Fflach:tradd label, entitled ''Crwth'' (CD272H), also featuring
Nigel Eaton (
hurdy-gurdy) and Bob Evans (crwth). MP3 samples of three of the tracks can be downloaded (and copies of the CD purchased) from http://www.creightonscollection.co.uk/index.html?Pages/Albums/tl/A0041-TL.htm~mainFrame
Related instruments
★
Jouhikko
★
Talharpa
External links
★ http://www.crwth.info
★
Cass Meurig's site
★
website of Bob Evans (Bragod)
★
pictures of the crwth down the ages
★
more crwth pictures
★
Fflach record label
★
Crwth maker (England)
★
Crwth pages - links to a bibliography and scholarly literature by J. Marshall Bevil
★
Sedayne, Storyteller and crwth player