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==Seating arrangement==
[[File:Orchestra sections
The most common seating arrangement in the
In the 19th century it was standard<ref>{{author missing|date=September 2013}} (1948). "Orchestra" in ''Encyclopedia Americana'', {{oclc|1653189}} {{asin|B00M99G7V6}} {{page needed|date=September 2013}}.</ref> to have the first and second violins on opposite sides (violin I, cello, viola, violin II), rendering obvious the crossing of their parts in, for example, the opening of the finale to [[Tchaikovsky]]'s [[Symphony No. 6 (Tchaikovsky)|Sixth Symphony]]. If space or numbers are limited, cellos and basses can be put in the middle, violins and violas on the left (thus facing the audience) and winds to the right; this is the usual arrangement in [[orchestra pit]]s.<ref>{{ill|Ferdinand Simon Gaßner|de}}, [https://books.google.com/books?id=8GCpcQCTDagC ''Dirigent und Ripienist''] (Karlsruhe, Ch. Th. Groos, 1844){{page needed|date=February 2024}}. [[Rousseau]]'s ''Dictionnaire de musique'' (1768), however, has a figure showing second violins facing the audience and principals facing the singers, reflecting the [[concertmaster]]'s former role as [[Conductor (music)|conductor]].</ref> The seating may also be specified by the composer, as in [[Béla Bartók]]'s ''[[Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta]]'', which uses [[antiphony|antiphonal]] string sections, one on each side of the stage.
==="Desks" and divisi===
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[[Category:String section| ]]
[[Category:
[[Category:Sections of the orchestra]]
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