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- Minstrel | Definition, History, Facts | Britannica
Minstrel, between the 12th and 17th centuries, a professional entertainer of any kind, including jugglers, acrobats, and storytellers; more specifically, a secular musician, usually an instrumentalist
- Minstrel show - Wikipedia
Blackface minstrelsy was the first uniquely American form of theater, and for many minstrel shows emerged as brief burlesques and comic entr'actes in the early 1830s in the Northeastern states They were developed into full-fledged art form in the next decade
- MINSTREL Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of MINSTREL is one of a class of medieval musical entertainers; especially : a singer of verses to the accompaniment of a harp How to use minstrel in a sentence
- The Minstrel: Musician of the Middle Ages - Medieval History
In medieval times, a minstrel was a versatile performer who entertained audiences with music, storytelling, and poetry They were often considered to be an itinerant class of entertainers, traveling from town to town to perform for a living
- The Medieval Minstrel - Medieval History
A medieval minstrel was much more than just a musician Who were they, who was their audience, and what stories did they tell?
- Minstrel: Overview - Ballad of America
Minstrel shows were America’s most popular form of live entertainment from the 1840s into the 1870s, and they enjoyed continued success well beyond that Minstrelsy was the first uniquely American theatrical form and one of the building blocks on which American music and entertainment is based
- Minstrel - definition of minstrel by The Free Dictionary
min•strel (ˈmɪn strəl) n 1 a medieval poet, singer, and musician, who was either an itinerant or a member of a noble household 2 a musician, singer, or poet 3 a performer in a minstrel show
- minstrel - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
minstrel (plural minstrels) (also attributively) (historical) Originally, an entertainer employed to juggle, play music, sing, tell stories, etc ; a buffoon, a fool, a jester; later, a medieval (especially travelling) entertainer who would recite and sing poetry, often to their own musical accompaniment
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