zampognahttp://www.oed.com/dictionary/zampogna_n%3Ftab%3Dmeaning_and_usezampogna, n.
First published 1986; not fully revised

zampognanoun

Music.
  1. 1740–
    A traditional wind-blown bagpipe of southern Italy having two chanters and two drones; also, any wood-wind instrument.
    1. 1740
      Zampogna, sometimes written Sampogna..is..any instrument that sounds like a Flute and particularly a Bag-pipe, being an assemblage of divers pipes of different sizes.
      J. Grassineau, translation of S. De Brossard, Musical Dictionary 343
    2. 1786
      Zampogna, or Sampogna, the Flute-à-Bec, or common flute.
      T. Busby, Complete Dictionary of Music
    3. 1826
      The peasantry and shepherds from Abruzzo, Calabria, and Apulia,..come from the mountains in their sheepskin dresses, playing on their various instruments, some on the Zampogna, (a kind of bagpipe), others on the Colascione.
      M. Kelly, Reminisc. (1975) ii. 30
    4. 1876
      A rough-toned reed instrument without a bag is also called Zampogna or Zampugna.
      J. Stainer & W. A. Barrett, Dictionary of Musical Terms 455/1
    5. 1954
      Italian pipers..make a practice of coming into the towns at the Christmas season to serenade the images of the Infant Christ, which are set up at the roadside. They also formerly visited Britain as strolling musicians, but they appear to have abandoned this habit many years ago; they were all players of the zampogna.
      Grove's Dictionary Music (ed. 5) vol. I. 351/1
    6. 1977
      It was..good to see no less than two sets of zampognas, from the early 19th century.
      Early Music vol. 5 555/2
    7. 1983
      Vocalists will be accompanied on such classic Old World instruments as the zampogna.
      New York Times 26 June xi. (Westchester Weekly section) 13/1

zampogna, n. was first published in 1986; not fully revised.

zampogna, n. was last modified in June 2024.