{"id":2397,"date":"2023-03-29T10:37:39","date_gmt":"2023-03-29T08:37:39","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.popularbeethoven.com\/?p=2397"},"modified":"2023-03-29T10:37:39","modified_gmt":"2023-03-29T08:37:39","slug":"famous-beethoven-hair-locks","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.popularbeethoven.com\/famous-beethoven-hair-locks\/","title":{"rendered":"Famous Beethoven hair locks"},"content":{"rendered":"
One of the most distinctive features of Beethoven\u2019s appearance was his hair. As someone from the generation of the Revolution, he refused to use wigs (although he owned at least one that he had purchased upon arriving to Vienna, as a young man), and was often described as shaggy. Over the years many locks were cut from this famous head and many of these are still preserved in private or public collections. Recently a genome study<\/a> used eight of these locks. Why people cut and keep locks and what are the stories of these specific Beethoven hair locks? Let\u2019s find out!<\/p>\n \n The hair of a person, throughout history, carried value. This falls into three main categories. First, it can have sentimental value<\/i>. I still remember in the cabinet of my grandmother a lock of my hair was kept as a memento from my very first haircut. Secondly, it can carry superstitious<\/i> value<\/i>. The mentioned first haircut of a baby, for others, may mean good luck. For many it represents power over the individual, like in voodoo practices. The third category is the religious value. <\/i>Roman virgins, for example, offered locks of hair to Jupiter, before getting married.<\/p>\n \n There are more than 30 locks today that are told or believed to come from Beethoven. These are named after the first recipients or the long term owners, not necessarily the same person who made the cut. In this article was cover only the ones that are considered authentic or relevant.<\/p>\n \n The Halm-Thayer Lock<\/strong><\/p>\n This is the only perfectly documented lock, where the chain of custody is complete. Furthermore, this lock was handed over personally by Beethoven himself in 1826.<\/p>\n The lock is associated with a practical joke carried out by Beethoven\u2019s secretary of the time, violinist Karl Holz. He was asked by Anton Halm, who at the time was completing the four-hand piano transcription of Beethoven\u2019s Gro\u00dfe Fuge, Op. 133, to request a lock from the great composer, for his wife. Holz in a few days handed over the lock of hair…coming from a goat!<\/p>\n When next time Halm visited Beethoven, he revealed that they were tricked, saying \u201cYou have been cheated with the lock of hair! You see, I am surrounded by such terrible creatures that they put aside all the respect they owe respectable people. You have the hair of a nanny-goat.\u201d <\/i>Then, he handed over a sheet of paper with significant amount of hair cut from the back. He wrote on the paper: That is my hair!<\/i><\/p>\n The wife was furious about the joke up until the burial of Beethoven. Holz and the Halms were standing opposite above the open grave. Holz was weeping bitterly and in shame could not look at them directly. The wife, moved by the situation, held out her hand above the grave and forgave him.<\/p>\n According to Schindler<\/a>, known to forge history, the trick was made by Beethoven himself, but later put the blame on Holz.<\/p>\n This lock, together with the Bermann Lock was purchased in 2017 by the American Beethoven Society.<\/p>\n \n The Bermann Lock<\/strong><\/p>\n The first documented owner of this lock is Mr.Bermann, who is either Jeremiah Bermann or his son, Joseph. Jeremiah married into the Eder family, a publisher of Beethoven works from as early as the 1790s. The Eders made more first editions for Beethoven, like Piano sonata Op. 10 and 13, and part of the Bagatelles Op. 119.<\/p>\n Bermann had direct contact with Beethoven around 1820 and 1821, although written evidence as a letter or notes in the correspondence books does not exist. In 1851 the lock was acquired by biographer Alexander Wheelock Thayer. Living descendants of Thayer in 2017 sold their collection, including the lock, to the American Beethoven Society.<\/p>\n \n The M\u00fcller Lock<\/strong><\/p>\n This lock is connected to two individuals, Nannette Streicher and Elise M\u00fcller. Both of them had friendly relationship with Beethoven.<\/p>\n Nannette Streicher was a renowned piano maker in Vienna, who not only provided the composer this instrument, but helped him in other ways. In fact both she and her husband were actively helping in business and ordinary daily issues, like finding a housekeeper (a problematic area for Beethoven).<\/p>\n The second name, Elise M\u00fcller. She was a song composer, a pianist and a piano teacher. Beethoven and Elise were in correspondence for years and the composer even met her father Dr. Wilhelm Christian M\u00fcller, when he stayed in Vienna.<\/p>\n This lock is believed to be cut between 1815 and 1820, initially owned by Nannette and was given to Elise by her in November 1821, on the last day of Elise\u2019s visit to Vienna.<\/p>\n A Swiss doctor named Hans Conrad Bodmer, who was a Beethoven memorabilia collector, acquired the lock from the M\u00fcllers, but no document survived pointing to a how and when. The lock finally was gifted to the Beethoven Hause in Bonn, where it is part of the collection today named HCB V 12<\/i> (Hans Conrad Bodmer collection).<\/p>\n \nWhy people cut and keep hair locks?<\/h3>\n
The famous hair locks of Beethoven<\/h3>\n