Anna Maria Mozart (1720-1778) was the mother of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Maria Anna Mozart. Image File history File linksMetadata Anna_Maria_Mozart. ... Image File history File linksMetadata Anna_Maria_Mozart. ... // Events January 6 - The Committee of Inquiry on the South Sea Bubble publishes its findings February 11 - Sweden and Prussia sign the (2nd Treaty of Stockholm) declaring peace. ... 1778 was a common year starting on Thursday (see link for calendar). ... W. A. Mozart, 1790, portrait by Johann Georg Edlinger, see also: face only Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (January 27, 1756 â December 5, 1791) is among the most significant and enduringly popular composers of European classical music. ... Maria Anna Mozart (30 July 1751-29 October 1829), nicknamed Nannerl Mozart. ...
She was born in St. Gilgen, Austria to Eva Rosina and Nicolaus Pertl, deputy prefect of Hildenstein. She married Leopold Mozart in 1747. They had seven children of which five did not survive infancy. Their daughter, Maria Anna "Nannerl" Mozart, was a talented musician whose abilities were quickly overshadowed by the achievements of her younger brother. Both children were taken on tour around Europe by their father. St Gilgen is a town by the Wolfgangsee in the Austrian state of Salzburg, in a region known as the Salzkammergut. ... Johann Georg Leopold Mozart Johann Georg Leopold Mozart (November 14, 1719 â May 28, 1787) was a composer, music teacher and violinist. ... // Events January 31 - The first venereal diseases clinic opens at London Dock Hospital April 9 - The Scottish Jacobite Lord Lovat was beheaded by axe on Tower Hill, London, for high treason; he was the last man to be executed in this way in Britain May 14 - First battle of Cape... Maria Anna Mozart (30 July 1751-29 October 1829), nicknamed Nannerl Mozart. ...
Anna Maria Mozart accompanied her son on several tours, including when her husband was not given leave to travel by the Archbishop of Salzburg.
She was not noted for her own musical talent although she was married to a composer and violin teacher of international repute and the mother of two prodigiously talented children.
Anna Maria Mozart died of a fever on July 3, 1778, during a tour of Paris with her son. July 3 is the 184th day of the year (185th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar, with 181 days remaining. ... 1778 was a common year starting on Thursday (see link for calendar). ... The neutrality and factual accuracy of this article are disputed. ...
Mozart was born to Leopold and AnnaMariaPertlMozart, in the front room of 9 Getreidegasse in Salzburg, the capital of the sovereign Archbishopric of Salzburg, in what is now Austria, then part of the Holy Roman Empire.
Mozart in 1767 as an 11-year-old boy was fleeing from Vienna due to a smallpox epidemic and wrote his Sixth Symphony in F Major in Olomouc.
Mozart was much taken by the sound of Benjamin Franklin's glass armonica, and composed two works for it: an Adagio in C (K. 617a [K. 356]) and an Adagio and Rondo for armonica, flute, oboe, viola, and cello (K. 617), both composed in 1791 after he heard the instrument played by the virtuoso Marianne Kirchgaessner.