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Beethoven's last recorded words were "Pity, pity—too late!", as the dying composer was told of a gift of twelve bottles of wine.<ref name="ThayerV3_307">[[#ThayerV3|Thayer (1921) volume 3]], p. 307</ref> One common belief was that his last words were "Plaudite, amici, comedia finita est" ("Applaud, my friends, the comedy is over"), the typical conclusion to performances of Italian ''[[Commedia dell'arte]]''; this was specifically denied by Hüttenbrenner in 1860.<ref name="ThayerV3_306">[[#ThayerV3|Thayer (1921) volume 3]], p. 306</ref> Some sources have listed his last words as, "I shall hear in heaven", but this is also almost certainly [[apocryphal]].
Beethoven's last recorded words were "Pity, pity—too late!", as the dying composer was told of a gift of twelve bottles of wine.<ref name="ThayerV3_307">[[#ThayerV3|Thayer (1921) volume 3]], p. 307</ref> One common belief was that his last words were "Plaudite, amici, comedia finita est" ("Applaud, my friends, the comedy is over"), the typical conclusion to performances of Italian ''[[Commedia dell'arte]]''; this was specifically denied by Hüttenbrenner in 1860.<ref name="ThayerV3_306">[[#ThayerV3|Thayer (1921) volume 3]], p. 306</ref> Some sources have listed his last words as, "I shall hear in heaven", but this is also almost certainly [[apocryphal]].


Beethoven biographer [[Alexander Wheelock Thayer|A. W. Thayer]], in his notebook, recorded Hüttenbrenner's account of Beethoven's death.<ref name="ThayerV3_308" /> Hüttenbrenner's eye-witness report is sometimes recast to imply that Beethoven "shook his fist at the heavens" in the moment before death. Since any imputations as to the dying man's emotional state are impossible to verify, they tend to be glossed over or ignored as irrelevant by modern-day Beethoven scholars.
Beethoven biographer [[Alexander Wheelock Thayer|A. W. Thayer]], in his notebook, recorded Hüttenbrenner's account of Beethoven's death.<ref name="ThayerV3_308" /> Hüttenbrenner's eye-witness report is sometimes recast to imply that Beethoven "shook his fist at the heavens" in the moment before death. Since any imputations as to the dying man's emotional state are impossible to verify, they tend to be glossed over or ignored as irrelevant by modern-day Beethoven scholars. nananan bnanana babay


==Preparation of the body==
==Preparation of the body==

Revision as of 15:36, 7 October 2009

Beethoven's funeral as depicted by Franz Stöber (1795–1858)

The Death of Ludwig van Beethoven on 26 March 1827 followed a prolonged illness. It was witnessed by his sister-in-law and by his close friend Anselm Hüttenbrenner, who provided a vivid description of the event. Beethoven's funeral was held three days later, and the procession was witnessed by a large crowd. He was buried in the cemetery at Währing, although his remains were moved in 1888 to Vienna's Zentralfriedhof.

Hüttenbrenner's account has been used to ascribe motivations of resistance and anger to Beethoven in his final moments. Beethoven's last words, and the exact cause of Beethoven's death have also been the subject of some disagreement.

Final illness

Beethoven suffered declining health throughout the last years of his life, including the so-called "Late period" when he produced some of his most-admired work. The last work he was able to complete was the substitute final movement of the Thirteenth String Quartet, deemed necessary to replace the difficult Große Fuge. Shortly thereafter, in December 1826, illness struck again, with episodes of vomiting and diarrhea that nearly ended his life.

As it became apparent that Beethoven would not recover, his friends gathered to help and to pay their final respects. Beethoven's doctors conducted four minor operations to relieve ascites (abdominal swelling), of which the first resulted in infection, the others not. On 24 March, he was given his last rites, and two days later slipped into an unconscious state and then died the same day, 26 March 1827. While others, including Beethoven's brother and some friends were probably in the house, Hüttenbrenner reports in his 1860 account that only he and Beethoven's sister-in-law were present in the room at the time of death.[1]

Final words

At this startling, awful peal of thunder, the dying man suddenly raised his head from Hüttenbrenner's arm, stretched out his own right arm majestically—like a general giving orders to an army. This was but for an instant; the arm sunk back; he fell back; Beethoven was dead.

Thayer's summary of Hüttenbrenner's account of Beethoven's death[1]

Beethoven's last recorded words were "Pity, pity—too late!", as the dying composer was told of a gift of twelve bottles of wine.[2] One common belief was that his last words were "Plaudite, amici, comedia finita est" ("Applaud, my friends, the comedy is over"), the typical conclusion to performances of Italian Commedia dell'arte; this was specifically denied by Hüttenbrenner in 1860.[3] Some sources have listed his last words as, "I shall hear in heaven", but this is also almost certainly apocryphal.

Beethoven biographer A. W. Thayer, in his notebook, recorded Hüttenbrenner's account of Beethoven's death.[1] Hüttenbrenner's eye-witness report is sometimes recast to imply that Beethoven "shook his fist at the heavens" in the moment before death. Since any imputations as to the dying man's emotional state are impossible to verify, they tend to be glossed over or ignored as irrelevant by modern-day Beethoven scholars. nananan bnanana babay

Preparation of the body

An autopsy was performed on March 27 by Dr. Johann Wagner. While it is unclear who ordered the autopsy, a specific request by Beethoven in his Heiligenstadt Testament may have played a role in the decision.[4] The autopsy revealed a severely damaged and shrunken liver, of which ascites is a common consequence. Scholars disagree over whether Beethoven's liver damage was the result of heavy alcohol consumption.

In the days immediately preceding and following his death, a number of people, including Anton Schindler and Ferdinand Hiller, cut locks of hair from Beethoven's head. Most of Hiller's lock is now in the Center for Beethoven Studies at San José State University.[5] One of Beethoven's friends incorrectly thought that "strangers had cut all of his hair off"; in fact, the apparent lack of hair was due to a cloth cap that covered the hair while the body was lying in state.[6]

On March 28, castings for a death mask were taken.[5] The body was clothed and placed in an oaken coffin, with the head given a wreath of white roses. Its hands held a wax cross and a lily.[6]

Funeral and burial

The funeral was held on 29 March 1827 at the parish church in Alsergrund, and he was buried in the Währing cemetery, northwest of Vienna. Many thousands of citizens lined the streets for the funeral procession. As with all crowds, estimates vary, with witnesses reporting anywhere from 10,000 to 30,000 onlookers.[7] Theaters were closed, and many notable artists participated in the funeral procession as pallbearers or torch bearers, including Johann Nepomuk Hummel, Franz Grillparzer, Carl Czerny, and Franz Schubert.[7]

In the days following the funeral, one of the grave-diggers was reportedly offered a substantial sum of money to remove the head from the grave. As a result, Beethoven's friends had a watch put on the grave.[6]

In 1863 Beethoven's body (and also that of Schubert, who was buried nearby) was exhumed, studied and reburied, in proceedings paid for by the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde.[8] At that time, fragments from the back of his skull, which had been separated during the autopsy, were acquired by the Austrian doctor Romeo Seligmann, which are also now in the Center for Beethoven Studies. His remains were moved in 1888 to the Zentralfriedhof.[9]

Lead poisoning overdose

In 2008, Austrian pathologist Christian Reiter asserted that Beethoven's doctor, Andreas Wawruch, accidentally killed the composer by giving him an overdose of a lead-based cure. According to Reiter, Wawruch used the cure to alleviate fluid in the abdomen; the lead penetrated Beethoven's liver and killed him.[10] Reiter's hypothesis however is at odds with Dr. Wawruch's written instruction "that the wound was kept dry all the time". Furthermore human hair is a very bad biomarker for lead contamination and Reiter's hypothesis must be considered dubious as long as proper scholarly documentation remains unpublished.[11]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Thayer (1921), volume 3, p. 308
  2. ^ Thayer (1921) volume 3, p. 307
  3. ^ Thayer (1921) volume 3, p. 306
  4. ^ Meredith, p. 1
  5. ^ a b Meredith, p. 2
  6. ^ a b c Meredith, p. 3
  7. ^ a b Gibbs (2000), p. 139
  8. ^ Meredith, p. 4
  9. ^ Meredith, pp. 5–6, 17
  10. ^ Jahn, George (28 August 2007). "Pathologist: Doctor Killed Beethoven". The Washington Post. Retrieved 29 December 2008.
  11. ^ Eisinger, Josef (1 January 2008). "The lead in Beethoven's hair". Toxicological & Environmental Chemistry. Volume 90: pp. 1–5. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help); |volume= has extra text (help)

References