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  1. Oct 12, 2015 · Beethoven never married, but in his early forties he feel deeply in love with a mysterious woman who remains known as “immortal beloved” — the eternally enchanting term of endearment by which the great composer addressed her in his letters.

  2. Mar 17, 2017 · Beethoven's love letter, found after his death, is very famous and often quoted, and will give the reader a glimpse of Beethoven's romantic nature.

  3. Jul 15, 2019 · Beethoven’s romantic life was rocky, and he never married. He developed a series of romantic attachments, which may have remained unrequited and unconsummated. Despite his musical success, his...

  4. One possible candidate could be Josephine Brunsvik de Korompa, who became Beethoven’s piano pupil in 1799 but then married Count Deym, with whom she had four children. After Deym’s sudden death in 1804, Josephine was thought to have been Beethoven’s lover for several years.

  5. Josephine Brunsvik (1779-1821): Beethoven's great love. Beethoven first met Josephine and her sister Therese when the two visited Vienna with their mother in 1799. Later that year Josephine married Count Joseph Deym, but was widowed five years later.

  6. Dec 1, 2023 · 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.”

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  8. 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.

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