The ionian mode is a
musical mode or
diatonic scale. It was part of
the
music theory of
ancient Greece, and was based
around the relative natural scale in G (that is, the same as
playing all the 'white notes' of a piano from G to G). This simple
scale was called the
hypophrygian mode in Greek
theory, and the ionian mode must have been a different, perhaps
chromatic, variation of this.
The term ionian mode fell into disuse in
mediaeval Europe, as church music was based around eight
musical modes: the relative
natural scales in D, E, F and G, each with their
authentic and
plagal counterparts.
In
1547,
Heinrich Glarean published his
Dodecachordon. Central to its premise was the idea that there
were twelve diatonic modes rather than eight. It seems that the
additional modes were used in popular folk music, but were not
part of the official church repetoire. Galrean borrowed the Greek
term ionian for a quite different mode. He added ionian
as the name of the new eleventh mode: the relative natural
mode in C with the
perfect fifth as its dominant,
reciting note or tenor.
The twelfth mode was the plagal version of the ionian mode, called
hypionian (under ionian), based on the same relative scale,
but with the
major third as its tenor,
and having a melodic range from a
perfect fourth below the tonic,
to a
perfect fifth above it.
As mediaeval monophonic church music was
replaced by
polyphonic music, the folk
modes added by Glarean became the basis of the
minor/major
division of classical European music: the ionian mode being the
major mode.
The ionian mode of Glarean is effectively the
same as the ancient Greek
Lydian mode and the modern
major mode.