Peter von Braun
Peter von Braun was an Austrian industrialist, director of the court theatres in Vienna and patron of the arts.
Life
He was the son of Johann Gottlieb von Braun, a court councillor. He entered the civil service in 1777, which he later left to found a silk factory in 1789. The business was successful. From 1794 until 1807 he was director of the two Vienna court theatres, the Burgtheater and the Theater am Kärntnertor; this period was regarded as a golden era for these theatres.He was raised to the rank of Freiherr in 1795, and in 1796 he became a court banker. In that year he bought the lordship of Schönau an der Triesting, near Vienna. He laid out a park there, which was open to the public, and created a "Temple of the Night", a mystical garden grotto which became a meeting place for the nobility. It contained inscriptions by August von Kotzebue, and Antonio Salieri, who often visited, composed music for the temple.
Von Braun was an important patron of the arts. He was a pianist, and composed music for the piano. He performed in 1801 an arrangement of Mozart's The Magic Flute with a new text by Christian August Vulpius.
He married Josephine von Högelmüller ; piano works by Joseph Haydn, Anton Eberl and others were dedicated to her.