You couldn't use Beethoven's hair to obtain his DNA; DNA is only contained in the living cells of the follicle, and doesn't last long.
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Beethoven's daughter?
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Originally posted by Philip View PostHello handsome. That leer is not a smile, as you say. Maybe it was just a bad painter?
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Originally posted by Preston View PostChris, are you sure? If Beethoven's DNA cannot be discovered, then, I am glad. I do not want these cloners (Kamino)* to try and create a new Beethoven.
*Chris, did you catch the joke?
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Originally posted by Roehre View PostIt is not impossible, and the surviving photographs showing this lady in old age do have a striking resemblance with Beethoven's portraits.
See Rita STEBLIN, "Auf dieser Art mit A geht alles zu Grunde". A new look at Beethoven's Diary Entry and the "Immortal Beloved", in: Bonner Beethoven Studien 6, (Beethoven Haus Bonn/Carus Verlag, 2007), pp. 147-180.
IMO a must for people interested in this question.
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Originally posted by Bonn1827 View PostObviously this isn't available in translation, and my fledgling German won't help me! Any chance, therefore, of a condensed appraisal of the general thesis from you?
Short:
The Deym/Stackleberg archives are being ordered and made public.
Diary fragments of Josephine have resurfaced;
recollections of Josephine's eldest son ditto, both clearifying some dubious or questionable entries in Therese Brunsvik's published recollections from the 1840s.
Putting next to each other the places where B and J stayed in the beginning of July 1812 these fit brilliantly; both mention that something had happened causing the necessity to change some previously made plans.
The early July 1812 diary pages of J's are written with pencil, contrary to the fast majority of the other surviving pages - Beethoven refers to a pencil in the letter to the IB (yours...).
J was exceptionally fertile (there was an illegimitate child already e.g.). In the one night stand with B (in Prague) Minona was conceived.
She was born April 8th 1813. B knew she was. There is a cryptic remark in a letter of his dated April 8th 1813. There is a hint to her in the first conversation booklet as well.
The similarities between Beethoven's portraits and the photos made of Minona are striking (though she wasn't as musical as sometimes is said).
B started the procedures to get custodianship over Karl April 12th 1813, before it was needed (his brother was ill, but the end was far from near), again cryptically mentioning he was (a kind of) father too.
The "A" in Beethoven's diary can easily be interpreted as such as a misreading /misinterpretation for St., which in B's handwriting is nearly identical, but hardly appears in his letters. Steblin documents this beyond any doubt. The diary only has survived in the form of two copies in other people's handwriting. A misreading is easily made, and other misreadings are documented.
St then is to be interpreted as Stackelberg.
As he and Josephine after J's faux pas were cuddling up (avoiding a scandal, of which neither B, nor J nor Stackelberg would have escaped unscathed), this remark "Auf dieser Art mit St. geht alles zu Grunde" makes sense.
It all fits, more and better than the Antonie hypothesis (which I still don't find unconvincing).
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Thanks for that summary and very interesting detail. As the primary sources don't change - except when some new ones comes to light - all this can only be speculative, of course. Rather like looking into the eyes of a bird and trying to figure out, from that information alone, a bird's total physical appearance.
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Originally posted by Bonn1827 View PostThanks for that summary and very interesting detail. As the primary sources don't change - except when some new ones comes to light - all this can only be speculative, of course. Rather like looking into the eyes of a bird and trying to figure out, from that information alone, a bird's total physical appearance.
That changes the picture in terms of available primary sources considerably.
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Originally posted by Roehre View Postthis publication is in English .
Short:
The Deym/Stackleberg archives are being ordered and made public.
Diary fragments of Josephine have resurfaced;
recollections of Josephine's eldest son ditto, both clearifying some dubious or questionable entries in Therese Brunsvik's published recollections from the 1840s.
Putting next to each other the places where B and J stayed in the beginning of July 1812 these fit brilliantly; both mention that something had happened causing the necessity to change some previously made plans.
The early July 1812 diary pages of J's are written with pencil, contrary to the fast majority of the other surviving pages - Beethoven refers to a pencil in the letter to the IB (yours...).
J was exceptionally fertile (there was an illegimitate child already e.g.). In the one night stand with B (in Prague) Minona was conceived.
She was born April 8th 1813. B knew she was. There is a cryptic remark in a letter of his dated April 8th 1813. There is a hint to her in the first conversation booklet as well.
The similarities between Beethoven's portraits and the photos made of Minona are striking (though she wasn't as musical as sometimes is said).
B started the procedures to get custodianship over Karl April 12th 1813, before it was needed (his brother was ill, but the end was far from near), again cryptically mentioning he was (a kind of) father too.
The "A" in Beethoven's diary can easily be interpreted as such as a misreading /misinterpretation for St., which in B's handwriting is nearly identical, but hardly appears in his letters. Steblin documents this beyond any doubt. The diary only has survived in the form of two copies in other people's handwriting. A misreading is easily made, and other misreadings are documented.
St then is to be interpreted as Stackelberg.
As he and Josephine after J's faux pas were cuddling up (avoiding a scandal, of which neither B, nor J nor Stackelberg would have escaped unscathed), this remark "Auf dieser Art mit St. geht alles zu Grunde" makes sense.
It all fits, more and better than the Antonie hypothesis (which I still don't find unconvincing).
1)Beethoven referred in a letter of 1816 to having met the love of his life five years previously in 1811 - he met Josephine in 1799.
2)It would have been impossible for Beethoven to be discussing marriage or living with her, as divorce was most unlikely to have been granted.
3)Would Beethoven knowing his daughter to be Minona have made no provision for her in his will?
4)Why is there no evidence of further correspondence or meeting between the two, especially after the Stackelberg separation? Even had the affair finished, it couldn't have been so bitter that they had nothing to do with each other after so many years of intimate association.
5)There is no evidence of a great reaction from Beethoven to her death in 1821.'Man know thyself'
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Originally posted by Peter View PostI have to say I have always found the Antonie Brentano hypothesis unconvincing for several reasons. However there are still problems with the Josephine theory -
1)Beethoven referred in a letter of 1816 to having met the love of his life five years previously in 1811 - he met Josephine in 1799.
2)It would have been impossible for Beethoven to be discussing marriage or living with her, as divorce was most unlikely to have been granted.
3)Would Beethoven knowing his daughter to be Minona have made no provision for her in his will?
4)Why is there no evidence of further correspondence or meeting between the two, especially after the Stackelberg separation? Even had the affair finished, it couldn't have been so bitter that they had nothing to do with each other after so many years of intimate association.
5)There is no evidence of a great reaction from Beethoven to her death in 1821.
"1)Beethoven referred in a letter of 1816 to having met the love of his life five years previously in 1811 - he met Josephine in 1799" . This has now IMO convincingly been addressed by Steblin (but it requires full understanding of the German language, otherwise the very simple but effective address gets lost in translation, very literally). [Btw: are you pointing at a letter, or an overheard conversation?]
5)There is no evidence of a great reaction from Beethoven to her death in 1821.
Literally that is true.
But there isn't ANY written source covering the March 31st 1821:
-Letters: Brandenburg 1429 (to Simrock in Bonn) is dated March 14th. Bb 1430 (original has not survived, but is known to be sent to Schlesinger in Berlin) arrived at Schlesinger's May 12th 1821;
-Conversation booklets: Between no.16 (ending mid-September 1820) and no.17 (beginning June 1822) no booklets have survived
-Scores made ready for publication: none (opus 109 was sent to the publisher Autumn 1820)
-Desktop Sketchbooks: Artaria 195, the pages at the end, for the Benedictus of opus 123, cannot be dated exactly, but are likely to be sketched at the end of 1820 (though a date as late as February or March 1821 cannot be fully excluded). For the following one, Artaria 197, the existing evidence provides no solid clues as to the date of the first sketches (but it may have been as early March 1821)
-Pocket sketchbooks: DSB Grasnick 5 can only be dated "sometime" during 1821, its predecessor Bonn BH 109 used in the fall of 1820, its successor the Pocket Sketchbook of late 1821( that is how it really is called in the literature ) being used from August 1821 onwards.
Therefore, apart from the possibillity that some sketches were made during March/April 1821, no other written sources seem to have survived (assuming these once existed).
It is known however, that B was not in the best of health during the first quarter of 1821, and also that after some recovery he relapsed early April (!), not to recover "fully" until early summer.
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for the rest:
2)It would have been impossible for Beethoven to be discussing marriage or living with her, as divorce was most unlikely to have been granted.
3)Would Beethoven knowing his daughter to be Minona have made no provision for her in his will?
4)Why is there no evidence of further correspondence or meeting between the two, especially after the Stackelberg separation? Even had the affair finished, it couldn't have been so bitter that they had nothing to do with each other after so many years of intimate association.
I am afraid there is still something to answer for.
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Originally posted by Roehre View PostPeter,
"1)Beethoven referred in a letter of 1816 to having met the love of his life five years previously in 1811 - he met Josephine in 1799" . This has now IMO convincingly been addressed by Steblin (but it requires full understanding of the German language, otherwise the very simple but effective address gets lost in translation, very literally). [Btw: are you pointing at a letter, or an overheard conversation?]
5)There is no evidence of a great reaction from Beethoven to her death in 1821.
Literally that is true.
But there isn't ANY written source covering the March 31st 1821:
-Letters: Brandenburg 1429 (to Simrock in Bonn) is dated March 14th. Bb 1430 (original has not survived, but is known to be sent to Schlesinger in Berlin) arrived at Schlesinger's May 12th 1821;
-Conversation booklets: Between no.16 (ending mid-September 1820) and no.17 (beginning June 1822) no booklets have survived
-Scores made ready for publication: none (opus 109 was sent to the publisher Autumn 1820)
-Desktop Sketchbooks: Artaria 195, the pages at the end, for the Benedictus of opus 123, cannot be dated exactly, but are likely to be sketched at the end of 1820 (though a date as late as February or March 1821 cannot be fully excluded). For the following one, Artaria 197, the existing evidence provides no solid clues as to the date of the first sketches (but it may have been as early March 1821)
-Pocket sketchbooks: DSB Grasnick 5 can only be dated "sometime" during 1821, its predecessor Bonn BH 109 used in the fall of 1820, its successor the Pocket Sketchbook of late 1821( that is how it really is called in the literature ) being used from August 1821 onwards.
Therefore, apart from the possibillity that some sketches were made during March/April 1821, no other written sources seem to have survived (assuming these once existed).
It is known however, that B was not in the best of health during the first quarter of 1821, and also that after some recovery he relapsed early April (!), not to recover "fully" until early summer.
====
for the rest:
2)It would have been impossible for Beethoven to be discussing marriage or living with her, as divorce was most unlikely to have been granted.
3)Would Beethoven knowing his daughter to be Minona have made no provision for her in his will?
4)Why is there no evidence of further correspondence or meeting between the two, especially after the Stackelberg separation? Even had the affair finished, it couldn't have been so bitter that they had nothing to do with each other after so many years of intimate association.
I am afraid there is still something to answer for.'Man know thyself'
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