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| 1540s . 1550s in music . 1560s | 
| . Music timeline | 
This is a list of notable events in music that took place in 1552.
Events
- Injunctions of Robert Holgate, Archbishop of York, silence the organs of York Minster.[1]
 
Publications
Music
- Martin Agricola – Hymns, collected by Georg Thym
 - Giovanni Animuccia – First book of motets for five voices (Rome: Valerio & Aloisio Dorico)
 - Bálint Bakfark – Intabulatura Valentini Bacfarc transilvani coronensis liber primus (Lyon: Jacques Moderne), a collection of lute intabulations of works by various composers
 - Pierre Certon – First book of chansons for four voices (Paris: Le Roy & Ballard)
 - Adrianus Petit Coclico – Musica reservata for four voices (Nuremberg: Johann vom Berg & Ulrich Neuber), a collection of psalm settings
 - Hans Gerle – Ein Newes sehr Künstlichs Lautenbuch (Nuremberg: Hieronymous Formschneider), a collection of pieces by various Italian lutenists in German lute tablature
 - Claude Goudimel – Missa Il ne se treuve en amitié for four voices (Paris: Nicolas du Chemin)
 - Jean de Latre – Chansons for four voices (Leuven: Pierre Phalèse & Martin Rotaire)
 - Claude Le Jeune – 4 chansons
 - Guillaume de Morlaye
- First book of lute tablature (Paris: Michel Fezendat)
 - Fourth book of guitar tablature (Paris: Michel Fezendat)
 
 - Diego Pisador – Libro de música de vihuela (Salamanca: Diego Pisador), a collection of transcriptions for the vihuela of songs by various composers
 
Theory
- Adrianus Petit Coclico – Compendium musices (Musical compendium)
 
Births
- December 21 – Richard Day, music printer (died before 1607)
 - date unknown – Girolamo Belli, Italian composer and music teacher (died c.1620)
 
Deaths
- January 8 – Eustorg de Beaulieu, French poet and composer[2]
 - January 10 – Johann Cochlaeus, humanist and music theorist (born 1479)
 - February 26 – Heinrich Faber, German music theorist, composer, and Kantor (born c.1500)[3]
 
References
- ↑ Peter Aston, "Thorne, John", The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell (London: Macmillan Publishers, 2001).
 - ↑ Hélène Harvitt (1966). Eustorg de Beaulieu, a Disciple of Marot, 1495(?)-1552. AMS Press, Incorporated. p. 26.
 - ↑ Randel Don (1996). The Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music. Harvard University Press. p. 256. ISBN 978-0-674-37299-3.
 
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