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  1. Eleonore Magdalene Therese of Neuburg (6 January 1655 – 19 January 1720) was Holy Roman Empress, German Queen, Archduchess of Austria, Queen of Hungary and Bohemia as the third and final wife of Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor. [1]

  2. Some symphonies of uncertain authenticity were included in either the Alte Mozart-Ausgabe or the Neue Mozart-Ausgabe; they are in this list but marked as uncertain or spurious (in the cases of K. 16a and K. 98, which later scholarship demonstrated have nothing to do with Mozart).

  3. The Symphony No. 38 in D major, K. 504, was composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in late 1786. It premiered in Prague on January 19, 1787, [1][2] during Mozart's first visit to the city. Because it was first performed in Prague, it is popularly known as the Prague Symphony.

  4. Aug 22, 2024 · Eleonore Magdalene Therese of Neuburg was Holy Roman Empress, German Queen, Archduchess of Austria, Queen of Hungary and Bohemia as the third and final wife of Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor.

  5. Also known as. Eleonor Magdalene of Neuburg. primary name: primary name: Eleonor Magdalene. other name: other name: Eleonora Magdalena Theresia. other name: other name: Eleonore Magdalene Therese.

  6. Jan 19, 2018 · But the work became a spectacular gift to a city which treated Mozart well- forever earning the nickname, the “Prague Symphony.” Symphony No. 38 is set in three movements rather than the typical four. The minuet is omitted, perhaps because of the monumental scale of the first two movements.

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  8. Mozart’s exposure to Europe’s main musical currents led him to synthesize the playful Italian homophonic and operatic style with serious German polyphony. This is evident in the agitated Symphony in G Minor, K 183 (1773)—a Sturm und Drang work and his first minor-key symphony—and in the cheerful Symphony in A Major, K 201 (1774). In ...