Johann van Beethoven
Johann van Beethoven was a German musician, teacher, and singer who sang in the chapel of the Archbishop of Cologne, whose court was at Bonn. He is best known as the father of the celebrated composer Ludwig van Beethoven. Johann became an alcoholic later in his life and was at times an abusive father to Ludwig. At 18, Ludwig had to obtain an order to force Johann to support his family. Johann died soon after Ludwig moved to Vienna to study with Joseph Haydn.
Life
Johann van Beethoven was the son of Maria Josepha Poll and Lodewijk or Ludwig van Beethoven, who was probably born in or near the city of Mechelen, in the Habsburg Netherlands, and had served as a musician in several communities in and around Mechelen before establishing himself in Bonn in 1733, where he served as a musician at the court of Prince-Archbishop-Elector of Cologne Clemens August of Bavaria, rising to the post of Kapellmeister in 1761. Johann van Beethoven also showed musical talent, and joined the court, primarily as a singer, in 1764. In addition to singing, he played the violin and zither, and played and taught keyboard instruments of the day, including the harpsichord and the clavichord.He met his future wife, Maria Magdalena Keverich, on a trip to Ehrenbreitstein. She was the daughter of the head chef to Johann IX Philipp von Walderdorff, Archbishop-Elector of Trier, whose court was there, and she had family connections in the court orchestra at Bonn. Keverich was already widowed at the age of nineteen. She and Johann were married on 12 November 1767 in the Catholic Church of St Remigius, Bonn. They had seven children, three of whom lived into adulthood:
- Ludwig Maria van Beethoven
- Ludwig van Beethoven
- Kaspar Anton Karl van Beethoven
- Nikolaus Johann van Beethoven
- Anna Maria Franziska van Beethoven
- Franz Georg van Beethoven
- Maria Margarete Josepha van Beethoven
Johann died in 1792, not long after Ludwig moved to Vienna to study with Joseph Haydn. His employer the Elector wrote sardonically to a friend, "The revenues from the liquor excise have suffered a loss in the death of Beethoven."