yatga

English

A Mongolian yatga

Etymology

From Mongolian ятга (jatga) / ᠶᠠᠲᠤᠭ᠎ᠠ (yatuɣ-a).

Noun

yatga (plural yatgas)

  1. A type of zither played in Mongolia.
    • 2001, Carole Pegg, Mongolian Music, Dance, & Oral Narrative: Performing Diverse Identities, →ISBN:
      In Old Mongolia, the yatga was used in courts to entertain the aristocracy and was also played by the aristocracy.
    • 2009, Timothy Michael May, Culture and Customs of Mongolia, →ISBN, page 89:
      Traditionally yatga performances were reserved only for monasteries and the court, and playing the instrument was considered a sacrosanct rite. This taboo changed over time as new forms of the yatga appeared, ranging from a ten-stringed yatga that anyone could play to a yatga with twenty-one strings.
    • 2017, Robert C. Provine, ‎Yosihiko Tokumaru, & ‎J. Lawrence Witzleben, The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music: East Asia, →ISBN:
      The second and fourth manuscripts have musical notation for the ten-stringed yatga (Erdenechimeg and Shagdarsüren 1995).

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