<u>The answer is Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina</u>, an Italian Renaissance composer of sacred music that was born in 1525. In 1562, when he was 37 years old, the Council of Trent was about to suppress choral music in the Catholic Church when Palestrina presented three masses he had written with the hope of introducing a new style of music that would be more appropriate for the liturgy. One of them, <em><u>the famous Missa Papae Marcelli (Mass of Pope Marcellus, who occupied the throne of San Pedro only three weeks) was elected by the Council of Cardinals</u></em> who considered that it perfectly responded to his purposes, and when it was sung in the presence of the Pope Pius IV, he also accepted it and the Council proposal was abandoned. <u>This is the reason why Palestrina is called "Saviour of Church Music" during the reforms of the Council of Trent.</u>
 
        
             
        
        
        
Hitler ordered a conquest of the Low Countries to be executed at the shortest possible notice to forestall the French and prevent Allied air power from threatening the vital German Ruhr Area. It would also provide the basis for a longterm air and sea campaign against Britain.
        
             
        
        
        
Autocracy, political belief system, and mass development that overwhelmed numerous pieces of focal, southern, and eastern Europe somewhere in the range of 1919 and 1945 and that additionally had followers in western Europe, the United States, South Africa, Japan, Latin America, and the Middle East. Europe's first extremist pioneer, Benito Mussolini, took the name of his gathering from the Latin word fasces, which alluded to a heap of elm or birch poles (as a rule containing a hatchet) utilized as an image of a correctional expert in old Rome.
 
        
             
        
        
        
Nope Apollo did not teach people how to play instruments