
Michael Praetorius
ABOUT MICHAEL PRAETORIUS
Remembered for works such as Musae Sioniae (1605–1610) and Terpsichore (1612), this prominent German composer of the early 17th century is also well known for his 1609 setting of the hymn "Lo, How a Rose E'er Blooming."
After studying philosophy and religion at the University of Frankfurt, he became a church organist and subsequently worked in the court of Henry Julius, Duke of Brunswick-Luneburg.
A musical scholar as well as a composer, he penned a multi-volume work titled Syntagma Musicum.
Born Michael Schultze to a Lutheran minister father, he spent his early days in Creuzburg, Germany. He passed away in Wolfenbuttel, Germany on his fiftieth birthday.
He and fellow German composer Paul Gerhardt both wrote popular church hymns during the early 1600s.