Maria Anna Mozart
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Maria Anna Mozart
Maria Anna Walburga Ignatia Mozart, called Marianne or Nannerl, was born on July 30, 1751, in Salzburg. She was the older sister of the famous composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Like her brother, Nannerl was a very talented musician.
Her father, Leopold, taught her to play the keyboard when she was very young, and she became an outstanding player.
As a child, Nannerl traveled with her parents and brother on concert tours across Europe. She was celebrated as a child prodigy. When she was 17, she stopped traveling but kept playing music at home, teaching piano, and performing sometimes.
She got married at age 33 and moved to a village far from Salzburg, where she had children of her own.
After her husband passed away in 1801, Nannerl returned to Salzburg. She began teaching and performing music again. She is believed to have written music, though none of her works survive today.
In her later years, she helped share stories about her famous brother. She passed away on October 29, 1829.
Life
Maria Anna Mozart, also called Marianne or Nannerl, was born in Salzburg to Leopold Mozart and Anna Maria Mozart. She learned to play the keyboard very well from her father. By age 13, she was one of the best pianists in Europe.
When she was young, Marianne traveled across Europe with her parents and her brother, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. They played music in Munich, Vienna, and other places. These trips helped people know her and her brother as great musicians.
Later, Marianne stopped performing because of the rules for women at that time. She began teaching piano instead. She married Johann Baptist Franz von Berchtold zu Sonnenburg and moved to St. Gilgen. There, she kept playing the piano and wrote letters to her family.
Marianne stayed close to her brother Wolfgang. She often played his music. After Wolfgang died, she told stories about him to his son, Franz Xaver Mozart. Marianne died in 1829 at age 78.
Personality, character, and appearance
Marianne Mozart was known for her strong sense of duty and deep religious faith. She often put others' needs before her own, like giving up chances to travel or marry someone she liked. She regularly attended church and once spent a whole day visiting sixteen churches to honor Good Friday.
Marianne enjoyed reading, going to the theater, and making music with her brother Wolfgang. Friends and family said she was beautiful and lively. She faced many hard times and often felt unwell, but she kept a diary that showed many parts of her daily life in Salzburg.
Her role in Mozart biography
Marianne helped share important details about her brother, Wolfgang. After he died in 1791, she spoke with a writer named Friedrich Schlichtegroll. She also encouraged a family friend, Johann Andreas Schachtner, to share his memories. These stories gave us useful information about Wolfgang’s early life.
Later, in 1820, Marianne shared her collection of Mozart letters and keepsakes with her sister-in-law Constanze and her husband Georg Nikolaus Nissen. They were working on a full biography of Mozart. Marianne’s help was very important for their work and for all future studies about Mozart.
Iconography
A study by Christoph Großpietsch looked at many pictures thought to be of Marianne Mozart. He found that only three are truly real. These are the Lorenzoni portrait, a picture by Carmontelle of three people, and a family picture by della Croce from around 1780. In that family picture, Wolfgang and Marianne are playing music together, Leopold holds his violin, and their mother Anna Maria looks down from her picture. Many other pictures were thought to be of Marianne, but they often did not look right or come from clear sources.
In literature and on screen
Marianna Mozart has inspired many stories and films. Some books and a film tell her life story, while others use her as a character in different tales. These stories are made up and should not be taken as true facts about her life.
Some of these stories include:
- The Secret Wish of Nannerl Mozart (1996) by Barbara Kathleen Nickel
- Mozart's Sister, a 2005 novel by Alison Bauld
- La sorella di Mozart (Italian: "Mozart's sister"), a 2006 novel by Rita Charbonnier
- Ann Turnbull's 2007 novel Mary Ann and Miss Mozart
- Carolyn Meyer's 2008 novel In Mozart's Shadow: His Sister's Story
- A 2010 French film Nannerl, la sœur de Mozart (Mozart's Sister)
- Mozart's Last Aria, a 2011 novel by Matt Rees
- The TV series Mozart in the Jungle
- The Kingdom of Back, a 2020 novel by Marie Lu
- A 2024 documentary film Mozart's Sister by Madeleine Hetherton-Miau and Rebecca Barry
Notes and references
(This section contains only references and notes, which are not suitable for younger readers. No content is included here.)
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