Yelizaveta Tchaikovskaya: Difference between revisions

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* '''[[Letter 3980]]''' – 8/20 December 1889, from [[Saint Petersburg]]
* '''[[Letter 3980]]''' – 8/20 December 1889, from [[Saint Petersburg]]
* '''[[Letter 4266]]''' – 4/16 December 1890, from [[Saint Petersburg]]
* '''[[Letter 4266]]''' – 4/16 December 1890, from [[Saint Petersburg]]
* '''[[Letter 4819a]]''' – early/mid December 1892 or mid/late October 1893 (?), from [[Saint Petersburg]]
* '''[[Letter 4819a]]''' – early/mid-December 1892 or mid/late October 1893 (?), from [[Saint Petersburg]]


7 letters from Yelizaveta Tchaikovskaya to the composer, dating from 1875, are preserved in the [[Klin]] House-Museum Archive.
7 letters from Yelizaveta Tchaikovskaya to the composer, dating from 1875, are preserved in the [[Klin]] House-Museum Archive.

Revision as of 20:55, 16 December 2022

Stepmother of the composer (b. 1829; d. 1910), born Yelizaveta Mikhaylovna Lipport (Елизавета Михайловна Липпорт); known after her first marriage as Yelizaveta Mikhaylovna Aleksandrova (Елизавета Михайловна Александрова); and after her second marriage as Yelizaveta Mikhaylovna Chaykovskaya (Елизавета Михайловна Чайковская).

In 1863, Yelizaveta, who had by then lost her first husband, became acquainted with the Tchaikovsky family in Saint Petersburg, and two years later, she became the third wife of the composer's father, Ilya Tchaikovsky (1795–1880). As the composer's brother Modest later recalled: "With her unconditional devotion, affectionate solicitude, and tactfulness she won the respect and gratitude of all those around her. Pyotr Ilyich loved this woman very much, and in all practical difficulties he would turn to her for advice and assistance" [1]. In his letters the composer would affectionately refer to her as "Dumpling" (Пышка), or by other jocular terms relating to her somewhat rotund physique.

Correspondence with Tchaikovsky

8 letters from Tchaikovsky to Yelizaveta Tchaikovskaya have survived, dating from 1865 to 1892 or 1893, of which those highlighted in bold have been translated into English on this website:

7 letters from Yelizaveta Tchaikovskaya to the composer, dating from 1875, are preserved in the Klin House-Museum Archive.

Notes and References