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  1. 12 de oct. de 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.

    • Beethoven

      Beethoven - Immortal Beloved: Beethoven’s Passionate Love...

    • Albert Einstein

      Thus I am trying to protect my parents without compromising...

    • Franz Kafka

      “Relationships are probably our greatest learning...

    • Music

      Music - Immortal Beloved: Beethoven’s Passionate Love...

    • Love

      Love - Immortal Beloved: Beethoven’s Passionate Love Letters

  2. The Immortal Beloved (German "Unsterbliche Geliebte") is the addressee of a love letter which composer Ludwig van Beethoven wrote on 6 or 7 July 1812 in Teplitz in what would be today Czech Republic. The unsent letter is written in pencil on 10 small pages.

  3. This letter is one of the most famous documents in the legacy of the great German composer Ludwig van Beethoven (1770--1827). Written in pencil, it is addressed to an unknown woman with whom Beethoven was apparently in a love relationship and to whom he refers at one point as his "Immortal Beloved."

  4. If you’ve ever seen the 1994 fea­ture film where Gary Old­man plays Lud­wig van Beethoven, you know the sig­nif­i­cance of the words “Immor­tal Beloved” from which it takes its title. But have you seen the actu­al arti­fact that inspired it?

  5. LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN. (Written on the Outside.) Thus, then, I take leave of you, and with sadness too. The fond hope I brought with me here, of being to a certain degree cured, now utterly forsakes me. As autumn leaves fall and wither, so are my hopes blighted. Almost as I came, I depart.

  6. In summer 1812 Ludwig van Beethoven wrote his most passionate love letter. “My angel, my all, my own self,” he began in an ecstatic tone. “While still in bed my thoughts rush to you, my Immortal Beloved, sometimes joyfully, other times sadly, waiting to see whether Fate will listen to us.

  7. Careful analysis shows that certain words have been gone over again in pencil, in an attempt to make them more legible, without doubt by Anton Schindler, who used part of the letter in facsimile in the third edition of his biography of Beethoven.