Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Margarethe_Stockhausen> ?p ?o }
- Margarethe_Stockhausen abstract "Margarethe Stockhausen (29 March 1803 – 1877), born Margarethe Schmuck, was a soprano singer who had a distinguished career in Europe and Britain during the 1820s and 1830s. She was wife of the harpist Franz Anton Adam Stockhausen, and mother of the eminent musicians Julius, Franz and Henri Stockhausen.Margarethe Schmuck was born in Guebwiller, Alsace, the daughter of a notary. She studied singing in Paris under Giuseppe Catrufo. Her niece Josephine Bildstein also had a singing career. While in Paris Margarethe met the young harpist Franz Stockhausen (b. 1789), who was then living by teaching and performing. Franz was a friend of Sébastien Érard and a correspondent of Beethoven's, in the circle of François-Antoine Habeneck, and shared lodgings with the violinist Christian Urhan. She married Franz in Paris in 1822 and they began a family, and they also began giving concerts together, often with Franz accompanying her on the harp. At first she became well known for her recitals of songs of Alsace, which were warmly received in Paris, and she was noted for the beauty and pearl-like quality of her voice and its spiritual conviction. She was a devout Roman Catholic.After a year in Alsace in 1825, she returned to Paris where her son, the famous singer Julius Stockhausen, was born in 1826. In January 1827 she was named an Honorary Singer of the (French) King's Chapel, through Rochefoucauld influence. However it soon became necessary for the family to look elsewhere for an income, so they moved to London, and in May 1827 gave their first concert at the Royal Academy of Music in a recital at which Giuditta Pasta also sang. After this they received many bookings for soirees and private parties. They befriended Ignaz Moscheles there. The Swiss songs made her the darling of English audiences. During the second year in London she sang a good deal in oratorio, especially in the works of Handel, in which she was strongly encouraged by Sir George Smart.In January 1829 Margarethe toured in Scotland with Angelica Catalani. At this time her repertoire extended to works of Handel, Haydn, Beethoven, Mozart, Spohr, Carl Maria von Weber, Mendelssohn, Cherubini, Sapienza, Cimarosa, Fioravanti, Mercadante, Rossini and Meyerbeer. In the summer she sang in Manchester and Oxford before returning to Alsace. She came back to sing in concerts of the Philharmonic Society in London in January 1830, and over the next decade spent a great deal of time in Britain, including entire seasons in 1830, 1831, 1834 and 1835. During this time she was also having further children and, in the meantime, singing in tours of Switzerland, Alsace, the Rhineland, South Germany, and France. In October 1830 she toured the English Midlands with Maria Malibran and the violinist Charles de Bériot, refusing to join her husband in an early journey by train, between Manchester and Liverpool, but following in the post carriage. At Manchester she was singing duets with Malibran.In 1831, during a further tour in Scotland, she sang at Holyrood House for the Queen of the United Kingdom, and before the Duke of Devonshire and the Duke of Wellington. In that year the family acquired its own permanent home at Tannenfels (Baden-Württemberg), and Margerethe's parents oversaw the upbringing of her children, who attended school at Guebwiller. In 1833 Franz and Margerethe made their first German concert tour, visiting Darmstadt, Karlsruhe, Cologne and Frankfurt am Main.Margerethe's career continued in a similar vein until 1840. In January 1839 she made a major tour of Switzerland, visiting Genf, Lausanne, Neuchâtel, Bern, and Solothurn. After the birth of her son Henri she made her last British tour, first giving concerts in Paris and then in April moving on to London for the start of a punishing schedule. Having seen Pauline Garcia as Desdemona in Rossini's Otello, in London, she went to Glasgow and Edinburgh, and travelled across England in all directions by rail to give concerts, except where cities such as Nottingham and Lincoln still demanded coach travel. In September 1839 she sang under Spohr's direction in his oratorio Calvary at the Norwich Festival, afterwards travelling back to London with him in the same carriage. She died at Colmar.".
- Margarethe_Stockhausen birthDate "1803-03-29".
- Margarethe_Stockhausen birthYear "1803".
- Margarethe_Stockhausen deathDate "1877".
- Margarethe_Stockhausen deathYear "1877".
- Margarethe_Stockhausen thumbnail Margarethe_Stockhausen.jpg?width=300.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageExternalLink juliusstockhausen.html+Julius+Stockhausen+autograph&cd=2&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=uk&client=firefox-a.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageID "16266999".
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageLength "5763".
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageOutDegree "61".
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageRevisionID "697555465".
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Angelica_Catalani.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Wellesley,_1st_Duke_of_Wellington.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Bern.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Calvary_(oratorio).
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Carl_Maria_von_Weber.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Category:1803_births.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Category:1877_deaths.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Category:19th-century_singers.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Category:Operatic_sopranos.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Charles_Auguste_de_Bériot.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Chrétien_Urhan.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Colmar.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Cologne.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Darmstadt.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Domenico_Cimarosa.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Felix_Mendelssohn.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Frankfurt.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Franz_Stockhausen.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Franz_Stockhausen,_senr..
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink François_Habeneck.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Geneva.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink George_Frideric_Handel.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink George_Thomas_Smart.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Giacomo_Meyerbeer.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Gioachino_Rossini.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Giuditta_Pasta.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Giuseppe_Catrufo.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Guebwiller.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Holyrood_Palace.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Ignaz_Moscheles.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Joseph_Haydn.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Josephine_Bildstein.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Julius_Stockhausen.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Karlsruhe.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Lausanne.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Lincoln,_England.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Liverpool.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Liverpool_and_Manchester_Railway.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Ludwig_van_Beethoven.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Luigi_Cherubini.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Manchester.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Maria_Malibran.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Neuchâtel.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Norwich.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Nottingham.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Oratorio.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Otello_(Rossini).
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Oxford.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Pauline_Viardot.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Rhineland.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Royal_Academy_of_Music.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Saverio_Mercadante.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Scotland.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Solothurn.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Soprano.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Spohr.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Sébastien_Érard.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Valentino_Fioravanti.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink William_Cavendish,_6th_Duke_of_Devonshire.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink Wolfgang_Amadeus_Mozart.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLink File:Margarethe_Stockhausen.jpg.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLinkText "Margarethe Schmuck".
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageWikiLinkText "Margarethe Stockhausen".
- Margarethe_Stockhausen dateOfBirth "1803-03-29".
- Margarethe_Stockhausen dateOfDeath "1877".
- Margarethe_Stockhausen name "Stockhausen, Margarethe".
- Margarethe_Stockhausen shortDescription "Singer".
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Persondata.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen description "Singer".
- Margarethe_Stockhausen description "Singer".
- Margarethe_Stockhausen subject Category:1803_births.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen subject Category:1877_deaths.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen subject Category:19th-century_singers.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen subject Category:Operatic_sopranos.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen hypernym Singer.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen type Agent.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen type MusicalArtist.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen type Person.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen type Singer.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen type Person.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen type Singer.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen type Agent.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen type NaturalPerson.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen type Thing.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen type Q215627.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen type Q5.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen type Person.
- Margarethe_Stockhausen comment "Margarethe Stockhausen (29 March 1803 – 1877), born Margarethe Schmuck, was a soprano singer who had a distinguished career in Europe and Britain during the 1820s and 1830s. She was wife of the harpist Franz Anton Adam Stockhausen, and mother of the eminent musicians Julius, Franz and Henri Stockhausen.Margarethe Schmuck was born in Guebwiller, Alsace, the daughter of a notary. She studied singing in Paris under Giuseppe Catrufo. Her niece Josephine Bildstein also had a singing career.".