Juan de Triana

1460 – 1490, died 28 January 1494) was a Spanish composer of the Renaissance period, active in the second half of the 15th century during the reign of the Catholic Monarchs.

Pope Sixtus IV issued a bull on 9 February 1478 that listed De Triana as Prebendary of the Cathedral of Sevilla for at least a year before.

[1] He died in Seville on 28 January 1494, and was buried near the gate of the chapel of the Virgen de la Antigua.

In his will, he left a bequest to endow a chaplaincy to sing twenty-five masses a month for his soul at the altar of San Juan Bautista, near his place of burial.

One of the religious pieces is a fragment of the Song of the Sibyl in Castilian, and the others are liturgical texts in Latin.