Answer:
This is because polyphonic music can only be composed by using two-voiced settings of soloistics chants.
This was first credited to Leonin(active between 1165 - 1185), who used two-voiced settings of soloistic chants to composed music during church mass.
Step-by-step explanation:
The preexisting chants, also known as "a cantus firmus" OR "fixed song" is the basis of a polyphonic composition.
Early polyphonic compositions almost always involved a cantus firmus, typically a Gregorian chant, although by convention the term is not applied to music written before the 14th century.
The earliest surviving polyphonic compositions, in the Musica enchiriadis (around 900 AD), contain the chant in the top voice, and the newly composed part underneath; However this usage changed around 1100, after which the cantus firmus typically appeared in the lowest-sounding voice.
Later, the cantus firmus appeared in the tenor voice (from the Latin verb 'tenere', to hold), singing notes of longer duration, around which more florid lines, instrumental and/or vocal, were composed or improvised