Tomás Luis de Victoria 1548 – 1611

This Spanish composer was one of the greatest in the sixteenth century. Tomás Luis de Victoria came from a very religious background in a time when Spain was influenced much by Catholicism and the church. It was the time of the Inquisition, a tribunal responsible for purging the society by actually persecuting a great deal of people who refused to be Catholic, as well as many people who did, sometimes just to save their lives. (These new-born Catholics were known in Spain as 'conversos'. ) This great composer was living during a time when the Jesuit Order was in effect, a Roman Catholic order founded by Saint Ignatius of Loyola in 1534 to defend Catholicism against the Reformation and to do missionary work among the heathen, the ones that did not want to submit to religious conversion.
Religion during this time had a great impact on not only the society, but also its music. Tomás Luis de Victoria born in Ávila to a family of eleven children, the seventh child in fact. After the death of his father at nine years of age, he was cared for by his two uncles who happened to be priests. He went to school and sang at the local cathedral. Through his musical ability, he gained quite a reputation. After his voice changed, he was encouraged by everyone around him, including King Philip II of Spain to carry on his music in Rome, Italy at the Collegio Germanico(a boarding school), where he not only studied music but also strived to be a priest, a goal he finally reached at twenty-seven years of age.
His faith is reflected in the music he had written to a great extent. He wrote motets, masses, magnificats and many sacred works. Actually, he dedicated all of his musical ability to the composition of sacred works. It is believed that living in Rome brought him into contact with a great deal of composers during the era, either living or visiting the city. The fact that the great and influential composer of the time, Palestrina, was a choir director (maestro di cappella) at the nearby Seminario Romano leads to the undoubted belief that the two knew each other and frequently exchanged their thoughts and ideas with one another. It may have very well been that Victoria had even taken lessons from him.
After spending fifty years in Rome all together. Victoria finally went back to Spain under the service of the Dowager Empress Maria. It was her that caused him to write one of his best known works, Officium defunctorum, a requium (mass for a deceased person) for her death in 1603.
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