Karoline Pichler

Writer, Lyricist

1769 – 1843

89

Who was Karoline Pichler?

Karoline Pichler, also spelled Caroline Pichler, was an Austrian novelist. She was born in Vienna to Hofrat Franz Sales von Greiner and his wife Charlotte, née Hieronimus.

In 1796, Karoline married Andreas Pichler, a government official. For many years her salon was the centre of the literary life in the Austrian capital, frequented by Beethoven, Schubert, Friedrich von Schlegel and Grillparzer, among many others, from 1802 to 1824. As a young girl she had met Haydn, and she was a pupil of Mozart, who regularly performed music at the Greiners' residence. She died in Vienna in 1843 and 50 years after her death was reburied at the Zentralfriedhof.

Her early works, Olivier, first published anonymously, Idyllen and Ruth, though displaying considerable talent, were immature. She made her mark in historical romance, and the first of her novels of this class, Agathocles, an answer to Edward Gibbon's attack on that hero in his The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, attained great popularity. Among her other novels may be mentioned Die Belagerung Wiens; Die Schweden in Prag; Die Wiedereroberung Wiens and Henriette von England. Her last work was Zeitbilder.

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Born
Sep 7, 1769
Vienna
Also known as
  • Pichler, Karoline
Nationality
  • Austria
Profession
Lived in
  • Vienna
Died
Jul 9, 1843
Vienna

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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