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      • On either July 6 or July 7, 1812, Beethoven penned a passionate letter in which he bestowed upon the addressee the monikers of “my angel” and “my dearest creature,” but most memorably “Immortal Beloved.” He wrote in frustration of travel plans gone awry and the unbearable restlessness he was suffering as a result of separated from the addressee.
      daily-jstor-org-s-99.er.library.nenu.edu.cn › the-mystery-of-beethovens-immortal-beloved
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  2. Feb 14, 2024 · But Beethoven’s Immortal Beloved letter is not particularly spiritual: it is the intimate writing of a man knocked sideways by the unexpected physical consummation of the love of his life.

    • Jessica Duchen
    • 6 min
  3. Explore the enigma of Beethoven's 'Immortal Beloved' in this article, delving into theories and the impact on his legendary music and personal life.

  4. ‘ My angel, my all, my own self’. Written at the age of 41, Beethoven’s famous love letter reads as a breathless expression of despair and hope, of love and devotion for an unnamed woman, his Immortal Beloved, whose identity has sparked two centuries of curiosity, research and debate.

  5. Many scholars, most notably the eminent Beethoven biographer Maynard Solomon, believe that Antonie Brentano was the recipient of the “Immortal Beloved” letter. She, her husband, and one of her children travelled to Prague on July 3rd, 1812, the date of the infamous meeting.

  6. Dec 1, 2023 · Which is why the world is still wondering, centuries after the question was first asked, “Who was Beethoven’s ‘Immortal Beloved?’” Ludwig van Beethoven (1770–1827), German-born genius

  7. www.capesymphony.org › blog-news › blogImmortal Beloved

    Whoever it was seems to have met Beethoven in Prague around July 3 of 1812. He arrived in a nearby spa town on July 5, and while there on July 6 and 7 wrote the “Immortal Beloved” letter to a woman he had seen in Prague. This information helped eliminate some women and made others more likely.

  8. Jun 2, 2013 · After Schmidt-Görg (1957) published 13 then-unknown love letters by Beethoven to Josephine Brunsvik, it became clear that the one to the “Immortal Beloved” was not the only love letter authored by him.

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