I think it means a cousin from the same family. Mace might then be describing a relative MH --- On Mon, 5/11/12, Peter Steur <p.st...@inrim.it> wrote:
From: Peter Steur <p.st...@inrim.it> Subject: [BAROQUE-LUTE] Thomas Mace and Cozen-German To: "Baroque Lute" <baroque-lute@cs.dartmouth.edu> Date: Monday, 5 November, 2012, 8:43 --------------Boundary-00=_BXA0H890000000000000 Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset="utf-8" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Dear collected wisdom, in his very first Sett of Lessons, Thomas Mace gives one of his Lessons a (to me) rather curious name: Cozen-German". Can any of you enlighten me about the possible meaning of this name. Straightforwardly (according to the vocabulary), it would be "cheat-german", but I'm not sure whether it is some pun regarding Germans in general (cheat a german - cheating the german way?) some reference to the political situation of the time, or something else that escapes me. Any help is definitely appreciated! Best regards, Peter Steur Moncalieri (Italy) --------------Boundary-00=_BXA0H890000000000000 Content-Type: Text/HTML; charset="utf-8" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable <HTML><HEAD> <META http-equiv=Content-Type content="text/html; charset=utf-8"> <META content="IncrediMail 1.0" name=GENERATOR> <STYLE> v\:* {behavior:url (#default#vml);} </STYLE> <!--IncrdiXMLRemarkStart> <IncrdiX-Info> <X-FID>81962FC4-3A96-4457-8296-61B8B5A02951</X-FID> <X-FVER>4.000000</X-FVER> <X-FIT>Letter</X-FIT> <X-FILE>Letter\soft_paper.imf</X-FILE> <X-FCOL>Elegante</X-FCOL> <X-FCAT>Cancelleria</X-FCAT> <X-FDIS>Carta morbida</X-FDIS> <X-Extensions>SU1CTDEsNDYsgUmBScGFxZmRODSJTZUkxZlNiYmNnU3BkcWZTZmFMMEwj SSBkcWNhUmBSYFJgSxJTUJMMiwwLCxJTUJMMywwLCw=</X-Extensions> <X-BG></X-BG> <X-BGT>repeat</X-BGT> <X-BGC>#ffffff</X-BGC> <X-BGPX></X-BGPX> <X-BGPY></X-BGPY> <X-ASN></X-ASN> <X-ASNF></X-ASNF> <X-ASH></X-ASH> <X-ASHF></X-ASHF> <X-AN></X-AN> <X-ANF></X-ANF> <X-AP></X-AP> <X-APF></X-APF> <X-AD></X-AD> <X-ADF></X-ADF> <X-AUTO>X-ASN,X-ASH,X-AN,X-AP,X-AD</X-AUTO> <X-CNT>;</X-CNT> </IncrdiX-Info> <IncrdiXMLRemarkEnd--> </HEAD> <BODY bottomMargin=5 bgColor=#ffffff leftMargin=5 topMargin=5 scroll=yes rightMargin=5 marginheight="0" marginwidth="0" webfixed="1"> <TABLE id=INCREDIMAINTABLE height="100%" cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" bgColor=#f5f1e6 background=cid:991EAF04-B740-4FBE-88AE-4DF45B94FE19 border=0> <TBODY> <TR> <TD id=INCREDITEXTREGION style="PADDING-RIGHT: 20px; PADDING-LEFT: 20px; FONT-SIZE: 12pt; PADDING-BOTTOM: 20px; COLOR: #3a2d07; DIRECTION: ltr; PADDING-TOP: 20px; FONT-FAMILY: Verdana; POSITION: relative" vAlign=top> <DIV id=INCREDI_TEXT_AREA style="PADDING-LEFT: 2px"> <DIV>Dear collected wisdom,</DIV> <DIV> </DIV> <DIV>in his very first Sett of Lessons, Thomas Mace gives one of his Lessons a (to me) rather curious name: Cozen-German". Can any of you enlighten me about the possible meaning of this name. Straightforwardly (according to the vocabulary), it would be "cheat-german", but I'm not sure whether it is some pun regarding Germans in general (cheat a german - cheating the german way?), some reference to the political situation of the time, or something else that escapes me.</DIV> <DIV> </DIV> <DIV>Any help is definitely appreciated!</DIV> <DIV> </DIV> <DIV>Best regards,</DIV> <DIV id=INCREDISIGNATUREID ondrag="return false;"> <DIV> </DIV> <DIV> </DIV> Peter Steur</DIV> <DIV ondrag="return false;">Moncalieri (Italy)</DIV></DIV></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><SPAN id=IncrediStamp><A href="[1]http://www.incredimail.com/?id`3560&rui o 898138&sd 121105"><SPAN name="imgCache" border="0"><IMG alt="Animazioni GRATUITE per le tue e-mail - da IncrediMail! Fai clic qui!" src="cid:08FBFB80-CEE3-4589-BE8E-E01D240E68BA" border=0></SPAN></A></SPAN></BODY></HTML> --------------Boundary-00=_BXA0H890000000000000-- -- To get on or off this list see list information at [2]http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html -- References 1. http://www.incredimail.com/?id`3560&rui%E2%80%A2898138&sd%20121105 2. http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html