The rabel (or arrabel,[1]robel, rovel[2]) is a bowed stringed instrument from Spain, a rustic folk-fiddle descended from the medieval rebec,[citation needed] with both perhaps descended from the Arab rabab.[3] The instrument generally has two or three strings of gut or steel, or sometimes twisted horse-hair.[4][5] The instrument is first mentioned in the 12th century,[citation needed] and it is still used in parts of Latin America, as well as the Spanish provinces of Cantabria and Asturias.
Spanish bowed stringed instrument
Rabel
Galician Rabel
String instrument
Classification
String instrument
Hornbostel–Sachs classification
(Composite chordophone)
Related instruments
Rebec, Rabeca
Rabelista (Rabel player)
The rebel is often associates with secular instrumental music, and the most common rabel used in the Middles ages was the soprano.[6]
See also
Rebec
References
Robert Williams Dale; James Guinness Rogers (1874). The Congregationalist. Hodder and Stoughton. pp.219–. Retrieved 15 June 2013.
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