Digitisation and Contextualisation of the Solesmes Musical Heritage

From nineteenth-century manuscript copies to early photographic negatives, the Solesmes archive encapsulates generations of musicological endeavour.
By bringing this material into the digital domain, REPERTORIUM connects foundational research—by scholars such as Eugène Cardine, Dom Jean Claire, and Michel Huglo—with modern computational methods, ensuring that this unique heritage continues to inform study, teaching, and discovery for years to come.

Within the REPERTORIUM project, one of the major musicological outcomes has been the digitisation, documentation, and online dissemination of the vast documentary heritage preserved at the Musical Palaeography Workshop of Solesmes Abbey.
Built over more than a century through manuscript copies and early photographic campaigns by the monks of Solesmes, this corpus represents one of the most important reference collections for the study of medieval chant traditions.

 

Through REPERTORIUM, the entire material has been systematically digitised, contextualised, and made available online in the Medieval Music Manuscripts Online (MMMO) platform, extending the infrastructures and expertise of the medieval music research community.

ICCMU UCM 1 - Repertorium AI will revolutionise music scholarship, enhance streaming revenues, and empower musicians
View of the Repertorium Musicology Workspace with a tagged folio of a medieval manuscript.

Digitisation and scientific documentation
  • 1,474 historic reproductions digitised and enriched with structured metadata on provenance, identification, and location of original manuscripts.

  • Integration with international infrastructures such as DIAMM (University of Oxford) and an IIIF-compatible viewer within MMMO.

  • Specialised image filters enhance the readability of degraded or complex notation, supporting detailed analytical and palaeographic study.

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View of the Muret software (University of Alicante) with a tagged folio of an 18th-century manuscript.
  • 138 manuscripts indexed

  • 155,941 chants identified and linked
    to the Cantus Index database.

  • 65 manuscripts known only through Solesmes documentation

    • 34 destroyed,

    • 31 with unknown current location.

  • These reproductions now constitute the only surviving witnesses of otherwise lost or inaccessible sources.

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View from the MMMO website, where the Solesmes manuscripts are accessible

Musicological research and preservation

Provides scholars with unprecedented access to primary chant sources, supporting comparative and transmission studies across centuries.

Digital documentation and interoperability

Ensures all materials are openly accessible, interoperable, and reusable through IIIF, Cantus Index, and musmed.eu.

Cultural heritage continuity

Bridges historical musicological practice with modern digital tools, ensuring long-term availability and sustainability of Europe’s sacred-music corpus.

MMMO Database

As part of REPERTORIUM’s commitment to open science and long-term sustainability, the digitised corpus of the Solesmes musical heritage has been made freely accessible to the international research community.
The platform allows scholars to:

  • Browse the complete Solesmes manuscript collection

  • Consult detailed descriptive and contextual records

  • View high-resolution images via IIIF

  • Search chant data directly at musmed.eu/chants

  • Download structured indexes (CSV)

  • Access the same datasets through the Cantus Index, ensuring full interoperability across major chant databases

This integration within established scholarly infrastructures ensures that REPERTORIUM’s results can be reused, verified, and expanded beyond the project’s lifetime, supporting comparative and large-scale studies in medieval musicology.

Special thanks: Gilles Kagan (CNRS) for his technical support in implementing the digitisation workflow.

ICCMU UCM 3 - Repertorium AI will revolutionise music scholarship, enhance streaming revenues, and empower musicians
Image of the concert of Nereydas orchestra at the Auditorio Nacional de Madrid, 11 May, 2025.
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