Nuper rosarum flores

Nuper rosarum flores ("Recently Flowers of Roses/The Rose Blossoms Recently"), is a motet composed by Guillaume Dufay for the 25 March 1436 consecration of the Florence Cathedral, on the occasion of the completion of the dome built under the instructions of Filippo Brunelleschi. Technically, the dome itself was not finished until five months later, at which time a separate consecration was celebrated by Benozzo Federighi, the bishop of Fiesole, substituting for the newly appointed archbishop of Florence, Cardinal Vitelleschi. The title of the piece stems from the name of the cathedral itself: Santa Maria del Fiore, or St. Mary of the Flower. The opening lines refer to Pope Eugene IV's gift (a week before the dedication) of a golden rose to decorate the high altar.

It has been argued that the motet presents 'homographic' tenors and is therefore not an isorhythmic motet as it often classified, since there are no isorhythms in its compositional proceedings. The two tenors are notated as a mensural canon enploying the rhythmic ratios 6:4:2:3. These appear to be derived from the proportions of Solomon's Temple, if not those of Florence's Cathedral as sometimes assumed. Regardless, the motet is striking for its synthesis of the older isorhythmic style and the new contrapuntal style that Dufay himself would explore further in the coming decades, as would successors such as Ockeghem and Josquin des Prez. The work has "come to be treated as an icon in the history of Western musical culture".