English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From French orphéon.

Noun edit

orphéon (plural orphéons)

  1. A French male choral society.
    • 1997, John Sandys Cornell, Social Harmony: Music, Modernism and the Mass Public in Nineteenth-Century France, University of Michigan, →ISBN, page 50:
      It was but a short step, therefore, from the harmony of the orphéons to an ideal of harmony in the workshops and factories, and within the social body as a whole.
    • 2015, Sophie-Anne Leterrier, “Choral Societies and Nationalist Mobilization in Nineteenth-Century France”, in Krisztina Lajosi, Andreas Stynen, editors, Choral Societies and Nationalism in Europe (National Cultivation of Culture; volume 9), Brill, →ISBN, page 51:
      Every orphéon had its emblems, uniforms (an expression of uniformity, as in schools), banners, medals, conviviality, and shared memories.
    • 2019, Janet Sturman, editor, The SAGE International Encyclopedia of Music and Culture, SAGE Publications, →ISBN:
      For example, the orphéon of Algiers is recounted to have had, at one point, approximately 600 members.

Related terms edit

References edit

French edit

Pronunciation edit

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Noun edit

orphéon m (plural orphéons)

  1. (music) choral society

Derived terms edit

Further reading edit