Lev Davydov: Difference between revisions

Tchaikovsky Research
 
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* [[Letter 495]] –  12/24 September 1876, from [[Moscow]]
* [[Letter 495]] –  12/24 September 1876, from [[Moscow]]
* [[Letter 523]] –  18/30 December 1876, from [[Moscow]] (addressed jointly to Lev and his wife [[Aleksandra Davydova]])
* [[Letter 523]] –  18/30 December 1876, from [[Moscow]] (addressed jointly to Lev and his wife [[Aleksandra Davydova]])
* [[Letter 566]] –  19/31 May 1877, from [[Moscow]]
* '''[[Letter 566]]''' –  19/31 May 1877, from [[Moscow]]
* [[Letter 575]] –  5/17 July 1877, from [[Moscow]] (addressed jointly to Lev and his wife [[Aleksandra Davydova]])
* [[Letter 575]] –  5/17 July 1877, from [[Moscow]] (addressed jointly to Lev and his wife [[Aleksandra Davydova]])
* [[Letter 667]] –  2/14 December 1877, from [[Venice]] (addressed jointly to Lev and his wife [[Aleksandra Davydova]])
* [[Letter 667]] –  2/14 December 1877, from [[Venice]] (addressed jointly to Lev and his wife [[Aleksandra Davydova]])

Latest revision as of 15:05, 11 June 2024

Lev Davydov (1837–1896) with his first wife Aleksandra (b. Tchaikovskaya, 1842–1891)

Estate manager and brother-in-law of the composer (b. 1837; d. 1896), born Lev Vasilyevich Davydov (Лев Васильевич Давыдов).

Lev was the sixth son of landowner Vasily Lvovich Davydov (1792–1855) and his wife Aleksandra Ivanovna (b. Potapova, 1802–1895). His father was a participant in the unsuccessful "Decembrist uprising" of 1825 which unsuccessfully attempted to overthrow the Russian Emperor Nicholas I.

Lev managed the family's extensive estates at Verbovka and Kamenka (near Kiev). On 6/18 November 1860 he married for the first time to the composer's sister Aleksandra (1842–1891), and they had seven children: Tatyana (1861–1887); Vera (1863–1888); Anna (1864–1942); Natalya (1868–1956); Dmitry (1870–1929); Vladimir (1871–1906); and Yury (1876–1965).

In 1893, two years after Aleksandra's death, Lev married a cousin of his late wife — Yekaterina Nikolayevna Olkhovskaya (1859–1930) — and this union opened a rift with some family members (but not the composer). Lev had a son by his second marriage, also called Lev (b. 1893).

Correspondence with Tchaikovsky

37 letters from Tchaikovsky to Lev Davydov have survived, dating from 1866 to 1885, of which those highlighted in bold have been translated into English on this website:

40 letters from Lev Davydov to the composer, dating from around 1866 to 1886, are preserved in the Tchaikovsky State Memorial Musical Museum-Reserve at Klin (a4, Nos. 791–830) [1].

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Including one letter from 1866 written jointly by Lev and his wife Aleksandra.