Johann Mayrhofer

Schwind: Johann Mayrhofer
Birthplace Steyr, Pfarrgasse
"Gedenktafel"
Schwind: Spaun’s Schubertiade 1828, Vogl and Schubert, Mayrhofer (right)
Johann Mayrhofer's handwriting 1820 (review of Schubert's "Zauberharfe")

Johann Baptist Mayrhofer (22 October[1] 1787  5 February 1836), was an Austrian poet and librettist. He is best known for his close friendship with the composer Franz Schubert.

Biography

Mayrhofer was born in Steyr, educated and Novitiate in St. Florian's Priory Upper Austria. In 1810 he began to study Jurisprudence and Theology at the University of Vienna, both of which courses he finished. In 1814 he met the young composer Franz Schubert and his friends (Joseph von Spaun, Franz von Schober).

Mayrhofer wrote a lot of lyric poetry and published it in 1824.

47 Schubert songs and two of his operas are based on Mayrhofer’s lyric poems.

As a young man Mayrhofer had been hopelessly in love with Mina (Wilhelmina Watteroth), the daughter of Heinrich Watteroth, who was one of Mayrhofer's professors and for a short time also his landlord. In his late years Mayrhofer (like Schubert) fell in love with a young 15-year-old girl, the daughter of his landlord Doctor Strauss. Mayrhofer was a hypochondriac all his life: in 1836, during a cholera epidemic, he committed suicide by jumping from the window of his office in Vienna.[2]

Libretti

References

Works

Notes

  1. Michael Lorenz "Johann Mayrhofer's Real Date of Birth"
  2. Susan Youens, Schubert's Poets and the making of Lieder, p. 152

External links

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