Maria Wilhelmine von Thun und Hohenstein
Maria Wilhelmine von Thun und Hohenstein, born Uhlfeldt was a Viennese countess. She is remembered as the sponsor of a musically and intellectually outstanding salon and for her patronage of music, notably that of Mozart and Beethoven.
Biography
Maria Wilhelmina Ulfeldt was the daughter of Imperial Count Anton Corfiz Ulfeldt, who "held several high political and court appointments" and his second wife, Princess Maria Elisabeth von Lobkowitz.In the 1750s, the young Countess Uhlfeld studied keyboard with imperial court organist Wenzel Raimund Birck, a respected teacher and composer. A manuscript book of simple keyboard pieces and exercises that he prepared for her survives. Whether, as has been suggested, she also studied with Joseph Haydn is difficult to determine, since the source indicating this only gives the title "Countess Thun;" this name was also held by other women over time. The Countess evidently became a very skilled musician. The visiting English musicologist Charles Burney praised her harpsichord playing in print, saying that she "possesses as great skill in music as any person of distinction I ever knew."
The salon that developed in her home is described by Clive as "a focal point of the musical and social life of the Viennese aristocracy."
She was a "fine pianist" and was a patron of both Mozart and Beethoven.
Marriage and issue
On 30 July 1761, at the age 17, in Vienna, she married Count Franz Josef Anton von Thun und Hohenstein, who later became an Imperial Chamberlain. Together, they had six children, of whom four survived into adulthood:- Maria Theresia
- Maria Elisabeth on 4 November 1788 married Prince Andrei Kyrillovich Razumovsky, member of the Razumovsky family, who became Russian ambassador in Vienna and was a patron of Beethoven.
- Maria Christiane Josepha on 24 November 1788 married Prince Karl Alois von Lichnowsky-Woschütz / Karel Alois Lichnovský z Voštic / Książę Karol Alojzy Lichnowsky, member of the Lichnowsky family. He was as his mother-in-law Maria Wilhelmine of Thun and Hohenstein a patron of both Mozart and Beethoven.
- Ferdinand Joseph
- Joseph Johann succeeded his father as Count.
- Maria Carolina Anna, or Caroline, Countess Thun married 16 October 1793 an Anglo Irish aristocrat, Lord Gillford, better known as Richard Meade, 2nd Earl of Clanwilliam, son of Theodosia Meade, Countess of Clanwilliam. The marriage caused a rift with her husband's protestant Irish Ascendancy family. She "excelled as a singer and guitarist". They had issue, one son Richard Charles Francis Christian Meade, 3rd Earl of Clanwilliam, and two daughters Caroline, Countess Széchenyi de Sárvár-Felsővidék and Selina, Countess von Clam-Martinic who married back into the Austrian aristocracy.
Relations with Mozart and Beethoven
It is possible that Countess Thun first met Mozart in 1762, when she was 18 and he was seven; this was during an early concert tour of the Mozart family, carried out to display their children as musical prodigies; the young Mozart performed in her father's home. In 1781, when the 25-year-old Mozart moved permanently to Vienna to pursue his career, he and Thun became friends. Mozart wrote of her to his father Leopold, " the most charming and lovable lady I have ever met; and I am very high in her favor." He frequently performed in her home, and she lent him her excellent Stein piano when Mozart performed before the Emperor in competition with Muzio Clementi on 24 December 1781.Thun may have played an essential role in Mozart's career when she arranged for him to perform extracts from his recent opera Idomeneo in her home before a set of guests that included Count Orsini-Rosenberg, the manager of the Imperial Theater. The Count "applauded warmly", and not long thereafter gave his agreement to the plans to commission Mozart for the opera Die Entführung aus dem Serail, which turned out to be his first great success in Vienna. As Mozart composed the work, Countess Thun listened with encouragement to each of three acts of the opera, performed on the piano by Mozart in her home, as he completed them.
According to Kenyon, "after 1782, features less often in his activities." After Mozart's death in 1791, it is believed that she helped financially with the schooling of his two surviving sons.
She was the dedicatee of Beethoven's Piano Trio in B flat, Opus 11.