According
to the Viennese social historian Ilsa Barea:
“Mozart
died in a mean two-roomed flat in the Rauhensteingasse on 5th December 1791 and
was taken to St Marx cemetery in a third-class funeral against the blast of wind
and sleet that made the few mourners turn back at the city gate and leave the
light coffin on the hearse to hired men, to a priest at the graveside, and to a
gravedigger who had no duty to mark the spot if no one else did.”
This
image of Mozart’s passing, the knowledge of his poverty at the end of his days
and the tragedy of his death at the age of only 35, has haunted the great
composers many admirers ever since. Especially in our present era, in which are
accustomed to musicians making huge fortunes from the performance of a single
tune and receiving universal recognition amounting to idolization, we are left
to wonder how one of the greatest composers in history could have died in
poverty and be buried in an unmarked paupers grave, apparently unloved and
unrecognized by society. We shall see, however, that the image is deceptive and
so worthy of a final scene in the opera of life that it could almost have been
choreographed by Mozart himself.
Born
in Salzburg on 27th January 1756, he was baptized the following day at St.
Ruperts Cathedral as Johannes Chrysostomus Wolfgangus Theophilus Mozart.
Theophilus means ‘beloved of God’ and Mozart later used the Latin form Amadeus,
-stylized sometimes as Amade or Amadeo- or the German form Gottlieb. His father,
Johann Georg Leopold Mozart was born in Augsburg in Bavaria, where the Mozart
family can be traced back to the 14thCentury. Several ancestors were stonemasons
and sculptors. Leopold Mozart was educated by the Jesuits at St. Salvador, from
whence he moved to Salzburg in 1737 where he attended the Benedictine
University. At the time of his son’s birth, Leopold was leader of the Court
orchestra of the Prince-Archbishop of Salzburg and was a celebrated violinist,
composer and author of books on the science of music. Baby Mozart’s mother,
Maria Anna (nee Pertl) has born in St. Gilgen near Salzburg and she was the
daughter of an important local official. Together the couple had seven children,
only two of whom survived infancy -Wolfgang and his elder sister Maria Anna,
nicknamed ‘Nannerl’.
Leopold
Mozart undertook his son’s education entirely himself and it soon became
apparent to him that he had sired a boy possessed of prodigious talent. By the
age of four young Mozart had learned to play eight minuets and by the age of six
had become an accomplished performer on the keyboard, violin and organ and was
highly skilled in sight-reading and improvisation. In his sixth year he composed
five short piano pieces, which are still frequently played. Consequently Leopold
decided to take young Wolfgang and his sister Nannerl, who was also very
accomplished at the keyboard, on a series of concert tours of Europe.
The
first documented tour, in 1762, was to Vienna, where the children performed
twice before the Empress Maria Theresa and her consort Francis 1 as well as at
the homes of several ambassadors and nobles. The tour was very profitable for
the Mozart family. Early in 1763 Leopold Mozart was appointed Vice-Kappelmeister
to the Archbishop of Salzburg and later the same year the family set out on a
three-year tour of Germany, France, the Low Countries, England and Switzerland.
In late 1766, the Mozarts set off again for Vienna and whilst there Wolgang
composed his first two operas. This was followed by a year back in Salzburg
where young Mozart wrote a Mass and a series of serenades. In October 1769 he
was appointed an honorary Konzertmeister at the Salzburg court.
One
of the objectives, if not the main objective, of the concert tours was to
promote young Mozart as a prospect for employment at one of the noble courts of
Europe, at least as a virtuoso musician, or better still as a chapel-master,
concertmaster or court composer. The tours of Italy, which started in December
1769, marks the start of an intensified effort to secure Mozart permanent
employment, but also featured an example of the kind of obstacle to his
ambition, and that of his father, he was to face until the end of his life. The
tour took in Verona, Mantua, Milan, Bologna, Florence, Rome, and Naples. Whilst
in Milan, Mozart composed his first Italian opera Mitridate, Re di Ponto which
established his reputation in Italy and hence in Europe as an opera composer. At
the age of thirteen Mozart was made a Knight of the Golden Spur by Pope Clement
XIV. At Bologna he was admitted to Accademia Filarmonica -a great honour
considering the preminence of Italian music at the time.
The
first Italian tour was an outstanding success and after a short break back in
Salzburg he set off back to Italy to fulfil a commission to write the serenade
Ascanio in Alba for the wedding of Archduke Ferdinand and Princess Maria
Beatrice Ricciarda of Modena. In this way Mozart was brought to the attention of
the Archduke who considered giving him employment. However, the Archduke being
the dutiful son of Empress Maria Theresa, he wrote to his mother to ask
permission, and this was part of her reply:
“You
ask me about taking into your service the young Salzburger. I can’t think what
as, for I do not believe you have any need for a composer or of useless persons.
But if it would give you pleasure I will not prevent you. What I say is do not
burden yourself with useless persons, and the claims of such persons on your
service… and he has, furthermore, a large family”.
The
Empress, who was a traditionalist in most things, clearly regarded musicians as
potential ‘hangers-on’ and far less useful than other servants, for servants
they were indeed regarded to be. This attitude was typical of the nobility of
the time and whilst the courts and chapels of Europe needed music and tended to
compete against other for the glory of being regarded as a home of great music
and courtly entertainment, the nobility nevertheless tended to be cautious about
granting permanent appointments to aspiring musicians and composers. Court
orchestras were still regarded as something of a luxury and were the first to
suffer if the purse strings needed to be tightened.
Back
in Salzburg old Archbishop Schrattenbach was succeeded in by Heironymus von
Paula, Count Colloredo as Prince Archbishop of Salzburg in 1772. Colloredo was
an unpopular choice. He was temperamental and somewhat arrogant -in a word ‘difficult’. Colloredo set about reforming the Salzburg diocese and province
along Viennese lines by importing prominent scientists and writers with the
intention of transforming Salzburg into a cultural centre of renown, but he did
not regard music as being part of the exercise. On the contrary, Colloredo
curtailed court concerts, shortened the Mass and placed restrictions on the
performance of purely instrumental music. This all greatly distressed Leopold
Mozart, who envisaged Salzburg as a potential music capital of Europe, with
himself and young Wolfgang Mozart very much in lead roles. Nevertheless, young
Mozart was appointed as a full Konzertmeister and he composed prolifically in
the early years in Colloredo’s employ and the Mozart family enjoyed a period of
relative security and prosperity.
Archbishop
Colloredo, however, continued with his reforms and there resulted a deepening
antipathy between himself and the Mozarts. As both temporal and spiritual ruler
of Salzburg and its surrounding province, Colloredo was determined to streamline
government by ridding it of antiquated, inefficient and superfluous practices.
Likewise, he purged the Church of superstitious practices and tedious, drawn-out
liturgy. Colloredo was, in fact, a product of the new age of enlightenment, one
of the new men in the mould of the new Emperor Joseph II who sought to launch
Austria into a new age but, like the Emperor, Colloredo was autocratic and
consequently just as unpopular. As far as the Mozarts were concerned, Colleredo
wanted value for money and kept them on a tight rein. Already, father and son
had made trips to Munich and Vienna whilst under his employ, but Colloredo had
no intention of paying retainers to absent musicians. Eventually things came to
a head and young Mozart petitioned for his release in order to travel, which was
granted, but Leopold had to stay in Salzburg.
In
September 1777 Mozart, accompanied by his mother, set out on a tour with the
objective of securing employment at one of the great courts of Europe. Calling
first at Munich, he made a botched attempt to find employment at the court of
the Elector of Bavaria. His approach to the Elector was a clumsy mixture of
cocksuredness and pretended servility and the Elector gained the impression that
Mozart had a difficult personality. Besides, as the Elector pointed out, there
was no vacancy at Munich and this, as Mozart was to discover, was the situation
wherever he went. Incumbent court musicians were very seldom dismissed or
summarily replaced – provided they did a competent job and maintained themselves
in good repute, they had a job for life and a pension for their widows after
their death. Only very rarely did a court musician petition for dismissal and
the fact that Mozart had petitioned Colloredo was cause for suspicion.
From
Munich, mother and son moved on to Mannheim, a court that featured the most
famous orchestra in Europe. There Mozart came into contact with the musical
Weber family and fell in love with Aloysia Weber, one of four sisters all of
whom were singers, though she was the best. Mozart became involved in an
ill-conceived plan to tour Italy with Aloysia and his mother, in desperation,
wrote to Leopold in Salzburg urging him to bring their son into line. Leopold
took two days writing his reply, concluding with:
…it
now depends on you alone to raise yourself gradually to a position of eminence
Such as no musician has ever obtained You owe that to the extraordinary talents
which you have received from a beneficent God; and it now depends solely on your
good sense and your way of life whether you die as an ordinary musician, utterly
forgotten by the world, or as a famous Kappelmeister, of whom posterity will
read – whether, captured by some woman, you die bedded on straw in an attic full
of starving children, or whether, after a Christian life spent in contentment,
honour and renown, you leave this world with your family well provided for and
your name respected by all. Off with you to Paris! And that soon! Find your
place among great people.
Mozart
duly dispatched to Paris but the venture did not turn out well. The French court
showed little genuine interest in him and he, for his part, was very critical of
French music and of the French court – and not without justification. Eventually
he was offered an appointment as court organist at Versailles but it was a
poorly paid, subordinate post, which he declined. Mozart did not feel at home in
Paris. The French court tended to be frivolous and light-minded, given to
intrigues and scandals and markedly morally debased – starting from the top.
Mozart, who throughout his life was deeply religious and inured in the solid
morality of the Austrian way of life, would not have lasted long at Versailles.
Then, on 3 July 1778, his mother died of a sudden illness and he was left alone
to make his way back to Salzburg.
Mozart
retraced his steps to Mannheim and then to Munich, where he caught up with
Aloysia Weber, but she gave him the cold shoulder this time and so he returned
reluctantly to Salzburg. On arrival, he found to his surprise that his father
had secured for him the position of court organist. Archbishop Colloredo,
obviously not a man who bore grudges, had given Mozart another chance. But the
second honeymoon was not to last long. A commission to write an opera came from
the court of Bavaria and by November 1780, Mozart was off to Munich to complete
and conduct Idomeneo. This tour was done with Colloredo’s permission but in
March 1781 Mozart was summoned to join Colleredo’s entourage in Vienna. On his
arrival there, Mozart was provided quarters and meals with the rest of the
servants in the Palace of the Teutonic Knights and found himself regimented into
a whirlwind series of chamber concerts in the houses of the nobility. Mozart
resented being paraded as a show pony but at the same time being treated like
just any other servant and made to wait in the antechamber until required to
perform. On one occasion he exerted a show of independence by storming past the
flunkies and walking straight up to Prince Galitzin, the Russian ambassador,
whom he addressed as an old friend. Mozart also believed that he was being
cheated out of concert fees which were rightfully his and that he was being tied
down and denied opportunities. He began to plan a way to free himself from
Colloredo’s employment.
Matters
came to a head in May 1781, when Colloredo ordered Mozart to return to Salzburg.
An agitated Colloredo took Mozart to task for having made no preparations to
leave and there followed a heated interview in which Colloredo addressed Mozart
in the language of the street and summarily dismissed him. Mozart replied that
the pleasure was his! Even so, the final dismissal did not come until a month
later; during which time Leopold Mozart acted in collaboration with Count Arco,
the Archbishops chamberlain, to get Mozart to return to the fold. These attempts
having failed, Count Arco formally dismissed Mozart in June, concluding with a
dressing down and a kick up the backside.
In
1782, at the age of 26, Mozart found himself alone in Vienna and forced to make
a living as a freelance. Handel was the only composer before Mozart to attempt
it. Mozart still hoped for a court appointment but, in the meantime, he made a
living by giving music lessons to the daughters of the nobility and from
virtuoso performances at private salons. More important, he now had more time to
compose with a view to staging subscription concerts. What’s more, he had become
engaged to one of the Weber sisters, Constanze, the second youngest. Although he
pretended at first that the relationship was merely “playful” and not
serious, the true love he felt for Constanze could not be withheld from his
father’s knowledge for long. Leopold feared that he was losing his position as
his son’s best advisor and that his son was in danger of marrying an uneducated
girl who was his inferior.
July
1782 saw the performance of the hugely successful opera Die Entfuhrung aus dam
Serail and his establishment in Vienna as a serious rival to the Imperial
Kappelmeister, Antonio Salieri. Mozart was now claiming the attention of the
Emperor and of the great nobility, at whose palaces Mozart staged regular of
chamber concerts. Amongst the foremost of these aristocrats were Baron Gottfried
van Swieten, Prefect of the Imperial Court library, President of the Court
Commission for Education and Head of the Court Censorship Commission, Prince
Galitzin the Russian ambassador, Count Orsini-Rosenberg, Intendant of the Vienna
Court Opera, Count Cobenzl and Countess Thun. Mozart became a regular
name-dropper in his letters to his father describing his grand life in Vienna.
On 4th August 1782, after an escape from the clutches of his future
mother-in-law worthy of a soap opera, Mozart married Constanze Weber in the St.
Stephens cathedral. They were to have six children, only two boys survived
infancy.
Mozart
went on to compose many great works including the operas Le nozze di Figaro
(1786) and Don Giovanni (1787) several symphonies and concertos amounting to an
eventual catalogue of over 600 works, but the hoped for court appointment
alluded him until the Emperor Joseph II appointed him as a chamber composer in
1787 in order to keep him in Vienna. Mozart also volunteered himself as honorary
Kappelmeister to St. Stephens cathedral in the hope of succeeding the aged
incumbent whom, however, refused to die. This was Mozart’s problem – there were
no vacancies – and Mozart did not have the right sort of approach to obtain a
position, even if available. He was too full of himself, cocksure and emotional,
too critical of others and too inclined to act above himself in the eyes of the
nobility. Also, his music was too experimental for some tastes, or too Germanic
for others in spite of his Italian operas – he was up against the Viennese
preference for Italian musical style. The Emperor had all he wanted in the
Imperial Kappelmeister Antonio Salieri, who was a typical career musician –
diplomatic and deferential without being fawning or flattering, highly competent
without being brilliant, hardworking and productive, cooperative and undemanding
on his employer. What’s more Salieri knew his patrons taste in music and gave
him what he wanted. Mozart, by contrast, tended to write for Mozart – “Too
many notes, my dear Mozart” said the Emperor .
Mozart
Freemason
Mozart
was made a Freemason in 1784. He was initiated in Lodge ‘Zur Wohltatigkeit’
(Beneficence) on 14th December but it is not known when he was passed and raised
or whether he ever took office. He is recorded in a list of members as having
completed his third degree and he is known to have been a very regular attendee
of Lodge. It is not known who introduced him to freemasonry but it is clear from
the overtly Masonic cantata Ok, Seele des Weltalls (To Thee, Mind of the
Universe) that he had absorbed Masonic ideas some time before his initiation
into the craft. It is known that both his father-in-law and brother-in-law were
Freemasons, but they were not members of Mozart’s lodge. Joseph Lange, who had
married Mozart’s old love Aloysia Weber was also a Freemason, but like wise not
a member of the lodge, so it is probable that he was proposed by one of his
noble acquaintances.
In
1786, at Emperor Joseph II’s orders lodge ‘Zur Wohlthatigkeit’ was amalgamated
with the lodges ‘Zurgekronten Hoffnung’ (Crowned Hope) and ‘Drei Feuern’ (Three
Fires) into ‘Zur neugekronten Hoffnung (New Crowned Hope), under the leadership
of the well-known scientist Ignaz von Born. A list of members dated 1791 shows
that ‘Zur neugekronten Hoffnung’ had 89 attending members, 111 absent members
and 12 serving members.
Wofgang
Mozart is listed among the attending members and his occupation is stated as
Imperial Kappelmeister – which he was not! Among the members are no less than
four Counts Esterhazy, as well as several others of the highest nobility, and no
less than 49 Officials of the Imperial Court as well as officers of provincial
and noble courts throughout the Empire. Mozart was in good company. The
Esterhazy family of Hungary were possessed of fabulous wealth and Prince
Nicholas Esterhazy was the patron of Joseph Haydn, who started life as the son
of a ‘free serf’ on the Harrach estates (Field-Marshall, Frederick, Count
Harrach was a member of lodge Zur neugekronten Hoffnung). The Esterhazy family
as a whole were enlightened and humane masters of huge estates in Hungary,
Austria and Bohemia. It is worth stressing at this juncture that the vast
majority of the Austrian and Hungarian Freemasons were devout and active members
of the Roman Catholic Church. They were all intelligent and well-informed men
who saw no contradiction between Freemasonry and their faith, even though they
were well aware of the opposition of the clergy.
Mozart’s
major contribution to Freemasonry was, as might be expected, in the field of
music. In 1785 he composed the cantata Die Maurerfreude (Mason’s Joy) which was
performed in lodge ‘Zur gekronten Hoffnung’ on 24th April to honour Ignaz von
Born, Master of lodge ‘Zur wahren Eintracht’ (True Concord) on his being made a
Knight of the Empire. Also in 1785 he composed Maurerische Trauermusik (Masonic
Funeral Music) to be played at a lodge of sorrows. This Music was in honour of
two deceased brethren; Franz, Count Esterhazy de Galantha and Georg August, Duke
of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, honorary member of the ‘Three Eagles’ lodge in Vienna
and a member of the ‘Three Globes’ lodge in Berlin. It is clear to experts on
music that Mozart associated certain musical characteristics with Masonic ideas:
tied notes and suspensions, descending pairs of slurred notes, parallel thirds
and sixths, the rising interval of the major sixth, dotted rhythms and various
rhythmic embodiments of Masonic ritual knocks, were used consciously as musical
symbols, bearing mind that music is the geometry of sound. The Symphonies Nos.
39 and 41, the Clarinet Quintet, the Clarinet Concerto, the Requiem Mass, the
opera La Clemenza di Tito all have Masonic aspects and Die Zauberflote (The
Magic Flute) is wholly Masonic. His last completed work ‘Eine kleine Freymaurer
Kantata’ (Little Masonic Cantata) was performed on the occasion of his last
visit to his lodge, only a month before his death.
Apart
from Mozart’s wholehearted involvement, the year 1785 saw further injections of
talent from the world of music. On 11 February, Joseph Haydn was initiated into
lodge ‘Zur wahren Eindracht’ and on 6 April Leopold Mozart, whilst on a visit to
Vienna, was initiated in to the same lodge. By special dispensation, Leopold
Mozart was passed on 16 April and raised on 22 April. Amongst other prominent
musicians, Paul Wraniszky, Music Director to Count Johann Baptist Esterhazy, and
Vittorio Colombazzo the celebrated oboeist, were members of Mozart’s lodge.
Mozart
enjoyed his Freemasonry at a time when the craft in Austria was strong and
protected by a benevolent Emperor who was well aware that many of his most
trusted friends were members of the craft. But just as Mozart was near to the
end of his days, so Freemasonry in Austria was drawing close to its’ demise, so
we will now delay an account of Mozart’s last years in order to trace the
progress of Freemasonry in Austria.
In
1731, John Desaguliers, Past Grand Master of England, traveled to The Hague to
preside over an occasional lodge held under special dispensation to initiate and
pass Francis, Duke of Lorraine. Later the same year, the Duke traveled to
England where, at Houghton Hall, Sir Robert Walpole’s house in Norfolk, an
occasional lodge was formed in which Lord Lovell, Grand Master of England,
raised the Duke to Master Mason. The Duchy of Lorraine was at that time an
independent principality and thus the Duke was the first European Prince to be
made a Freemason. Unfortunately the Duke was coerced into renouncing his ancient
inheritance as part of a European peace settlement and in order to win the hand
of Archduchess Maria Theresa von Habsburg, heir to the thrones of Austria,
Hungary, and Bohemia. He was, however, compensated by being made Grand Duke of
Tuscany.
In
1738, the year in which the Duke of Lorraine and Maria Theresa of Austria were
married, Pope Clement XII issued the Papal Bull In Eminenti in which Freemasonry
is condemned on a number of grounds and Freemasons ipso facto ex-communicated by
continuing membership of the society. Several Roman Catholic countries including
Austria, moved swiftly to ban Freemasonry, but the suppression of the craft was
by no means universal. The French, for example, although predominently Catholic,
were nevertheless fiercely supportive of the independent rights of the Gallican
church and besides – no king of France would take orders from a pope.
In
1740, Maria Theresa succeeded to the throne of Austria and immediately appointed
Francis, now Grand Duke of Tuscany, co-regent and so Europe now had a situation
whereby a Freemason was joint ruler of a vast empire with his spouse, who was
fiercely anti-freemasonry, Fortunately the couple genuinly loved each other,
which was just as well because in 1742 Francis was instrumental in the formation
of the Austria’s first Masonic lodge ‘Drei Kanonen’ (Three Cannons ). The Lodge
was consecrated by officers of the Lodge of Breslau, under its ruling master,
the Catholic Prince-Bishop. The following year the Three Cannons lodge was
broken up by a detachment of 100 grenadiers and thirty lodge members were
arrested and imprisoned for having met in contempt of the authorities. Archduke
Francis managed to escape by a rear staircase and was later able to secure the
release of twelve of his brethren and the rest were released soon after.
The
suppression of the Three Cannons lodge was a disaster for the Austrian
Freemasons but the lodge struggled on in secrecy, After Archduke Francis was
crowned Holy Roman Emperor in 1745, new lodges were formed which survived under
his patronage, but the craft also survived, in an irregular form, in the shape
of the rather curious Order of Mopses, Several brethren of the Catholic states
of Germany who were fearful of offending the ecclesiastical authorities
inaugurated the Order of Mopses in Vienna on 22 September 1738, The Order of
Mopses pretended to be anew association, but was in fact an imitation of
Freemasonry under a different appellation. The title is derived from the German
word mops, signifying a pug dog and was indicative of the mutual fidelity and
attachment of the brethren, these virtues being characteristic of the animal.
The alarm made for entrance was to imitate the barking of a dog. The order
admitted both males and females and women were admitted to all offices except
that of Grand Master. There was, however, a Grand Mistress, and the male and
female heads of the order alternately assumed overall authority for six months
at a time.
In
1751, Pope Benedict XIV issued the Bull Providas,which confirmed and renewed the
Bull of Clement XII, and there followed a new round of suppressions of the craft
in Catholic countries but not, it seems, in Austria. Emperor Francis was,
however, very deft in thwarting the authorities in his Duchy of Tuscany. The
flame of Freemasonry was kept alight in Vienna until in 1764 Empress Maria
Theresa issued an edict closing all Masonic lodges in her dominions. Her
husband, Emperor Francis, died in 1765 and by his death the Austrian Freemasons
lost a great protector. Francis was replaced as co-regent to Empress Maria
Theresa by the couples’ own son Joseph von Habsburg-Lorraine, who also became
the new Holy Roman Emperor. Joseph II was an avid reformer, the very epitome of
the new age of enlightenment. He went on to abolish serfdom, to guarantee
religious freedom before the law, to grant freedom of the press, and following
the death of Maria Theresa in 1780, Freemasonry was able to emerge from the
shadows and embark on a period of rapid expansion. Under Joseph’s tolerant
administration, the craft was able to establish lodges in Hungary, Bohemia and
Transylvania, as well as Austria, under the authority of the Grand Lodge of
Germany and in 1784 the Grand Lodge of Austria was formed and the Count of
Dietrichstein installed as Grand Master .
In
1785, and in response to mounting pressure from the Church, Joseph II issued an
edict restricting the number of lodges to three in anyone city and, in fact, of
forty-five lodges then existing, only three survived, The same edict required
the lodges to supply the magistrates with an annual list of members and lodge
meeting times. However, the edict did have this to say:
“In
return for their compliance with this ordinance, the government accords to the
Freemasons welcome, protection, and liberty, leaving entirely to their own
direction the control of their members and their constitutions. The government
will not attempt to penetrate into their mysteries. Following these directions
the Order of Freemasons, in which body is comprised a great number of worthy men
who are well known to me, may become useful to the state.”
It
is this edict that caused the amalgamation of the Viennese lodges detailed
earlier. On his death in 1790, Emperor Joseph II was succeeded by his brother
Leopold, who was not unfriendly to the craft, But Leopold died suddenly and
unexpectedly in 1792 and the enemies of Freemasonry were quick to allege a
Masonic plot or at least a plot by the mysterious sect called the Illuminati.
Emperor
Leopold had been concerned about the Illuminati, a secret society which had been
founded on 1st May 1776, by Adam Weishaupt, who was professor of canon law at
the University of Ingolstadt. Its professed object was to attain the highest
possible degree of morality and virtue, and to lay the foundation for the
reformation of the world by the association of good men to oppose the progress
of moral evil. To give the order higher influence, Weishaupt connected it with
Freemasonry by introducing a system of degrees, lectures of instruction and
means of recognition. Weishaupt was himself initiated into a masonic lodge at
Munich in 1777. Although its main base in Bavaria, the Order of Illuminati
established lodges in several countries and tended to infiltrate Masonic lodges.
Certainly many Freemasons were also members of the Illuminati and it became very
difficult for non-masons to distinguish between the two societies. Since the
state authorities of Bavaria and Austria tended to suspect the Illuminati a
having a dangerous political agenda -the freemasons were also under suspicion.
In
1792 Emperor Leopold asked Count Rottenhan, his Lord Lieutenant in Prague, to
report on the Illuminati and the Freemasons in Bohemia. Count Rottenhan’s
lengthy and intelligent reply is revealing. First the Count is well aware of the
identities of the Illuminati and Freemasons in his jurisdiction and knows all
about their backgrounds. He stresses that there is no cause for alarm and that
the people in the lists do not appear to be at all dangerous. He says:
“if
I consider the everyday activities and family background of these men, the whole
organization is, in my view, rendered very innocuous”.
He
is here referring to the Freemasons and concludes:
“there
is no reason for concern about the Masons in this district”.
His
one criticism of the Freemasons, and a serious criticism at that, is that of
favoritism. He states that until recently it had been impossible for a man to
make a career unless he was a Freemason. He also confirms that most of the
Illuminati are also Freemasons, but for that very reason Illuminatism is
harmless in Bohemia. He also states his belief that no revolutionary movement
would make headway in the Habsburg dominions because of the policy of
enlightened reform, good government, and a moral and decent society. By
contrast, the Revolution in France had been the inevitable consequence of
inefficient, unenlightened government and a decadent and immoral society.
History proved the Count to be right. The list of Illuminati, containing 65
names, shows that the sect included some of the highest born nobles of Europe,
several of them holding high office, several high ranking clergy, government
ministers and diplomats from various countries and a large international
selection of university professors. The Bavarian Illumminati were suppressed in
1785 by the Elector of Bavaria, who was himself a Freemason.
The
death of Leopold II left the Empire to the young and inexperienced Francis II.
He was only twenty-four and soon found himself caught up in the wars which
followed the French Revolution, when the French were attempting to spread
revolutionary ideas by force of arms. Francis became suspicious of any society
of men who espoused a spirit of reform and slowly but surely he turned Austria
into a police state. In 1794 the Masonic lodges were formally closed down and in
1801 Francis issued a decree which forbade the employment in public service of
anyone attached to a secret society. Freemasonry was not to remerge in Austria
until 1918.
Mozart’s
remaining years were typified by intense musical activity coupled with serious
indebtedness. Mozart had borrowed freely from his fellow Mason, Michael Puchberg,
the textile manufacturer and banker. His indebtedness was partly due to
Constanze’s health problems, which required expensive treatment at the spa at
Baden. Also, many of his wealthy patrons were called away to the war against the
Turks. Nevertheless, the ‘Magic Flute’ was a great success and he was
commissioned to compose the opera La Clemenza di Tito for Leopold’s coronation
as King of Bohemia. Mozart was also commissioned by Count Walsegg-Stupach, under
conditions of strict secrecy, to compose a requiem for his wife. Count Walsegg
was an amateur musician who commissioned works that he then performed as his
own. It was the Requiem Mass, which Mozart was composing on the very day of his
death. Mozart sometimes commented that he thought he was composing his own
requiem – a comment that was taken seriously by some of his friends.
Mozart’s
health rapidly deteriorated during 1791. On 18th November he was able to conduct
fine Kleine Freimaurer Kantata at the dedication of a new Masonic temple but
within a few days he became seriously ill and died, probably of rheumatic fever
on 5th December 1791. Because of his Freemasonry, his sister-in law Sophie had
great difficulty in finding a priest to perform the funeral service, but this
nevertheless took place at St. Stephens cathedral on 7th December. The mourners
included van Swieten, Salieri, Albrechtsberger and Sussmayer (two pupils of
his), Hofer and Lange. Van Swieten arranged the funeral and its simple nature
was in keeping with the spirit and customs of the times and so as not to put
demands on the widow’s purse. The grave was not marked and has never been found.
A benefit concert was later held, which paid off all Mozart’s debts and provided
Constanze with a useful lump sum.
So
Mozart was far from forgotten in his last days and, had he lived, would
undoubtedly have gone on to ever greater things. His financial position had also
greatly improved by the time of his death, his indebtedness considerably
reduced. But what would Mozart have made of the suppression of the Freemasons?
Undoubtedly, he would have been greatly distressed to see the disappearance of a
society of upright and enlightened men, all of them true friends. Would Mozart
have fought back? We cannot be sure, but The Magic Flute with its’ Masonic
message, is a clear indication that Mozart made a conscious use of music to
promote Masonic ideas. After his death the authorities made several attempts to ‘reinterpret’ The Magic Flute in order to come up with a meaning palatable to
the Emperor and his aristocratic government. They did this by changing the
characters, so that Mozart’s good guys (the enlightened freemasons) became the
Jacobin revolutionary bad guys, and Mozart’s bad guy’s (the aristocratic
tyrants) became the good guys. The authorities didn’t dare close the opera down
altogether and neither did they get away with their new interpretation. Mozart’s
Masonic statement outlived them all.
References:
Mozart- “The Golden years” – by HC. Robbins 1989
Schirmer Boob. Mozart – by Hugh Ottaway 1979
Orbis. Maria Theresa – by Edward Cranbhaw, 1969 Longmans.
Encyclopaedia of Freemasonry by Albert C. MacKay and Charles T. McClenachan, 1924 Edition, The Masonic History Company.
Encyclopaedia Brittanica.
Encarta Encyclopaedia by Microsoft.