Ignaz von Sonnleithner

Ignaz von Sonnleithner

180px

Ignaz von Sonnleithner in an 1827 lithography by Austrian painter Josef Eduard Teltscher.
Born Ignaz Sonnleithner
Vienna
Died Vienna
Nationality Austrian
Other names Ignaz Edler von Sonnleithner
Occupation Solicitor, jurist, writer
Known for Franz Schubert's friend

Ignaz Sonnleithner, from 1828 Ignaz Edler von Sonnleithner (30 July 1770 – 27 November 1831), was an Austrian jurist, writer and educator. He also founded the Society of Music Friends of the Austrian Imperial State in 1812.[1]

Life

Family

Sonnleithner was born on 30 July 1770 in Vienna to Christoph Sonnleithner, a lawyer and composer of church music, symphonies and quartets,[2][n 1][3] and Anna Maria Franziska Sonnleithner Doppler, née Dobler (1739–1810). His brother was Joseph Sonnleithner and his sister Maria Anna Sonnleithner (1767–1819), married to Dr. Wenzel Grillparzer (1760–1809) from 12 January 1789, was the mother of Franz Grillparzer. He was married to Anna Putz (1773–1824) and one of his sons was Leopold von Sonnleithner.[4]

Career

Sonnleithner was an Imperial Council, a solicitor from 1795, a civil law notary since 1803 and in 1801 professor of Trade and Exchange law at the University of Vienna. He also was a writer and founder of the General Pension Institution. He was in Vienna on 20 April 1828 with a nobility diploma dated 14 June 1828 stating that he was raised by the Austrian nobility.

Sonnleithner led from 1815 to 1824 a musical salon, where many songs were premiered by Franz Schubert. His witty sayings were legendary and circulated long after his death in Vienna. Eduard von Bauernfeld writes in his memoirs: "Grillparzer's uncle from maternal side was a famous Viennese wit." He died on 27 November 1831 and was buried in the Matzleinsdorfer cemetery at Wiener Gemeindebezirk 5 (Stadtbezirk). In 1890, the Sonnleithnergasse in Vienna-Favoriten was named after him.

Additional informations

Notes

  1. Sonnleithner composed excellent musical pieces, among them 36 quartets much admired by Austrian Emperor Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor, who used to call him his favorite composer, and a few symphonies played by his friend Franz Bernhard Ritter von Kees and his orchestra.

References

  1. Johannes Ebert; Knut Görich; Detlef Wienecke-Janz (2008). Neuordnung Europas und Restauration. Chronik Verlag. p. 165. ISBN 3-577-09072-3.
  2. Elson, Louis Charles (1912). University musical encyclopedia, Volume 10. The University society. p. 631. OCLC 454367993
  3. Grove, Sir George (2010). A Dictionary of Music and Musicians (A. D. 1450–1889), Vol. 3 of 4 (Classic Reprint). Forgotten Books. p. 632. ISBN 1-4400-4525-9.
  4. Clive, H.P. (1997). Schubert and his world: a biographical dictionary. Oxford University Press. p. 216. ISBN 0-19-816582-X.
Attribution

Sources

Bibliography

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.