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Benoist Stehlin : ウィキペディア英語版
Benoist Stehlin

Benoist Stehlin (c.1732 – 11 July 1774) was a French harpsichord builder.
Stehlin was born in the Alsatian village of Jettingen; by 1750 he was living and working in Paris. He married Françoise Lemaire, daughter of a merchant from Péronne, on 13 September 1753. He was elected juror of his district on 23 November 1762, and at the end of 1773 rented an apartment on the Quai des Augustins. He died the following year. He had kept at the apartment several harpsichords and some tools, but the important goods were stored in his shop in the rue des Cordeliers. All of it was sold by his widow on 19 December 1774; he had no children. Woodworking seems to have run in the family; not only was his father Georg a joiner, but his uncle, Jean-Baptiste Keiser (sometimes called L’Empereur) was also a harpsichord maker.
The inventories of Stehlin’s shop and apartment were made shortly after his death. In the apartment we find a woodworker’s bench and significant assortment of tools, along with two instruments by Stehlin and a 1630 Ruckers instrument he rebuilt and enlarged. The Ruckers was valued at 800 ''livres,'' while one of Stehlin’s instruments was valued at 390 and an unpainted one at 300. The inventory of Stehlin’s shop lists another woodworker’s bench, fifteen instruments in progress, a quantity of lumber, and instruments by fellow harpsichord makers Nicholas Dumont and Louis Denis. We also find “four bad spinets all dilapidated,” three harpsichord stands, and various tools.
Sheridan Germann maintains that the 1750 and 1760 instruments were both decorated by the same artist; she also believes this artist decorated five other surviving French harpsichords, the last of which was built in 1771. She describes the style of the decorator thus:
The three instruments by Stehlin that have survived have the range FF – f´´´ (five octaves), and are disposed 2 × 8´, 1 × 4´ with a shove coupler and buff stop. These specifications are typical for 18th-century French harpsichords. The 1750 harpsichord was owned at one time by Bernard Jumentier (1749-1829), composer, music teacher and ''maître de chapelle'' at the cathedral of Saint-Quentin, where the instrument is now in the Musée Antoine Lécuyer.
The 1760 instrument was purchased by the Smithsonian Institution in 1966 and has been restored to playing condition. The bottom 4´ jack is inscribed “Benoist Stelle”; the date 1760 is painted on the soundboard.
Stehlin’s 1767 harpsichord is currently in the Berlin Musical Instrumental Museum (MIM).
==Discography==

* ''Premier livre de pièces de clavecin.'' BNL 112939 DSR (2005) (1750 harpsichord)
* ''Music for Harpsichord.'' Smithsonian Collection N004 (1978) (1760 harpsichord)
* ''Plaisir du clavecin.'' SIMPK KM 2011-2 (2005) (1767 harpsichord)

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