Surname
Radulphi
Given Name
Bonus
Variant Name
Raoul
Rodulpphi
Bon
Role
Musician
Singer
Active period
1494 - 1509
Workplace
Milano
Roma
Thérouanne
Institution
Capella pontificalis
Cappella ducale di Milano
Biography
Ducal chapel, Milan, 1494-1496. Bonus Rodulphus, cleric of the diocese of Thérouanne and singer in the chapel of Ludovico Sforza is mentioned in several documents discovered by Paul and Lora Merkley (Merkley & Merkley 1999). This must be the same person as the papal singer (see below).
• Papal chapel, 1500-1509. Bon Raoul (Bonus Radulphi in Vatican documents), cleric of the diocese of Thérouanne, is first attested in the papal chapel by a motu proprio dated 1 February 1500 in which Alexander VI orders that he and Gaspar van Weerbeke be given their salaries as “recently” accepted singers (actually, Weerbeke was returning from a long absence beginning in 1489). Raoul is in all extant lists of the papal chapel from 1501-1507. There are many gaps in these lists, but beneficial documents attest to his membership in the chapel in 1504, when he attempted to use the Indult of Innocent VIII which allowed the magister capellae to present singers for the benefices of deceased former singers to gain possession of a canonry and prebend in the cathedral of Cambrai vacant on the death of the former papal singer Rogerius de Lignoquercu*, a member of the chapel from 1479-1483 and in 1493 (Sherr 1975; it is possible that the listing of “Ro. de Lignoquercu” refers to different people) and a canonry and prebend in the collegiate church of St Géry in Cambrai, vacant on the death of the former singer Jean de Monstreuil*, a member of the chapel from 1479-1493 (Haberl 1887, Sherr 1975; RS 1183, fol. 271v: supplication dated 20 April 1504; RS 1191, fols. 221v-222r : supplication dated 23 October 1504-on the Indult see Sherr 1998). He appears to have used the Indult again in 1505 when he asked for a chaplaincy in the church of Our Lady in Antwerp which had been vacated by the death of Jacob Obrecht (RS 1214, fol. 135r: supplication dated 30 September 1505). Obrecht had died in Ferrara probably at the end of July 1505, but that Raoul activated the Indult is an indication that Obrecht had either been or had was to have been a member of the papal chapel before his move to Ferrara (Sherr 1994). Raoul was unable to take possession of any of these benefices. He was no more successful in his attempt to gain possession of the church of Ste Croix in Cambrai, vacant on the death of the former singer Jean Jorlandi alias Corbie*, a member of the chapel from 1456-1484 (Starr 1987) which he also claimed in 1504; the church was eventually ceded to Pierre Briquet, canon of Cambrai (ASR, Camerale I 1141 [Quietanze per minuti servizi], fol. 77r: entry dated 12 June 1504; RS 1253, fols. 109r-109v: supplication dated 20 April 1507). The difficulties that Raoul’s claims entailed may be the reason he asked to be allowed to take an extended leave from the chapel in 1506 (RS 1230, fols. 265v-266r: supplication dated 23 March 1506). He probably departed sometime in 1507 and returned in July 1509 (RS 1321, fol. 118r: supplication dated 25 July 1509), but after then he is no longer traceable in Vatican documents.
• Papal chapel, 1500-1509. Bon Raoul (Bonus Radulphi in Vatican documents), cleric of the diocese of Thérouanne, is first attested in the papal chapel by a motu proprio dated 1 February 1500 in which Alexander VI orders that he and Gaspar van Weerbeke be given their salaries as “recently” accepted singers (actually, Weerbeke was returning from a long absence beginning in 1489). Raoul is in all extant lists of the papal chapel from 1501-1507. There are many gaps in these lists, but beneficial documents attest to his membership in the chapel in 1504, when he attempted to use the Indult of Innocent VIII which allowed the magister capellae to present singers for the benefices of deceased former singers to gain possession of a canonry and prebend in the cathedral of Cambrai vacant on the death of the former papal singer Rogerius de Lignoquercu*, a member of the chapel from 1479-1483 and in 1493 (Sherr 1975; it is possible that the listing of “Ro. de Lignoquercu” refers to different people) and a canonry and prebend in the collegiate church of St Géry in Cambrai, vacant on the death of the former singer Jean de Monstreuil*, a member of the chapel from 1479-1493 (Haberl 1887, Sherr 1975; RS 1183, fol. 271v: supplication dated 20 April 1504; RS 1191, fols. 221v-222r : supplication dated 23 October 1504-on the Indult see Sherr 1998). He appears to have used the Indult again in 1505 when he asked for a chaplaincy in the church of Our Lady in Antwerp which had been vacated by the death of Jacob Obrecht (RS 1214, fol. 135r: supplication dated 30 September 1505). Obrecht had died in Ferrara probably at the end of July 1505, but that Raoul activated the Indult is an indication that Obrecht had either been or had was to have been a member of the papal chapel before his move to Ferrara (Sherr 1994). Raoul was unable to take possession of any of these benefices. He was no more successful in his attempt to gain possession of the church of Ste Croix in Cambrai, vacant on the death of the former singer Jean Jorlandi alias Corbie*, a member of the chapel from 1456-1484 (Starr 1987) which he also claimed in 1504; the church was eventually ceded to Pierre Briquet, canon of Cambrai (ASR, Camerale I 1141 [Quietanze per minuti servizi], fol. 77r: entry dated 12 June 1504; RS 1253, fols. 109r-109v: supplication dated 20 April 1507). The difficulties that Raoul’s claims entailed may be the reason he asked to be allowed to take an extended leave from the chapel in 1506 (RS 1230, fols. 265v-266r: supplication dated 23 March 1506). He probably departed sometime in 1507 and returned in July 1509 (RS 1321, fol. 118r: supplication dated 25 July 1509), but after then he is no longer traceable in Vatican documents.
Bibliography
Haberl 1887
Merkley & Merkley 1999
Sherr 1975
Sherr 1988
Sherr 1994
Sherr AP
Starr 1987