Franz Gerhard Wegeler

{{Short description|German physician (1765–1848)}}

File:Wegeler Franz Gerhard.jpg

Franz Gerhard Wegeler (22 August 1765 – 7 May 1848) was a German physician from Bonn, who, in his youth, was a close friend of composer Ludwig van Beethoven.

{{cite journal

| last1 = Schweisheimer

| first1 = Waldemar

| title = Beethoven's Physicians

|date= July 1945

| journal = The Musical Quarterly

| volume = 31

| issue = 3

| pages = 289–298

| doi = 10.1093/mq/xxxi.3.289

| quote = Beethoven was the friend of Franz Gerhard Wegeler from early youth.

| jstor = 739163

}}{{subscription required}}

He was the father of historian Julius Stephan Wegeler (1807-1883).

Wegeler studied medicine at the Universities of Bonn and Vienna. After completing his studies in Austria, he returned to Bonn, where he became a tenured professor of legal medicine and obstetrics in 1789.[http://de.wikisource.org/wiki/ADB:Wegeler,_Franz_Gerhard ADB: Wegeler, Franz Gerhard] @ Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie In 1794, he fled Bonn during the French Revolutionary Wars, returning to Vienna, where he renewed his friendship with Beethoven. After spending two years in Vienna, he again returned to Bonn as an instructor and a general practitioner of medicine.

In 1802, he married Eleonore von Breuning, the daughter of Helene von Breuning. Eleonore was a former piano student and 'first love' of Beethoven. The marriage produced four children. The descendants include Helena Josepha Theresia (1803-1832) and Julius Stephan Wegeler (1807-1883).

In 1807, Wegeler relocated to Koblenz, where he joined the Prussian civil service and received several prestigious awards.

Wegeler was a Freemason; Beethoven corresponded with him on the subject of Beethoven's music (not masonic music) being used in lodge ceremonies. Beethoven offered to compose a better piece than he had heard was being used.

A distinguished physician, Wegeler is remembered for his 1838 biography of Beethoven (Biographische Notizen über Ludwig van Beethoven), co-written with Beethoven's friend and pupil, composer Ferdinand Ries (1784-1838) and published eleven years after Beethoven's death. Historians consider these memoirs to be an important and reliable source of information regarding the early life of the great composer. According to this memoir, Wegeler and Beethoven first met when they were respectively aged 17 and 12, leading Andrew Crumey to suggest they were "brought together under Illuminist auspices – perhaps some educational event or programme to foster local talent."{{cite web |url=https://crumey.co.uk/beethoven_6_was_he_a_freemason |title=Was Beethoven a Freemason? |last=Crumey |first=Andrew |access-date=26 July 2023 |author-link=Andrew Crumey}}

References

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  • This article is based on a translation of an article from the German Wikipedia.
  • [http://www.beethoven-haus-bonn.de/sixcms_upload/media/85/kf_wegeler_engl.pdf]{{dead link|date=October 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} Beethoven and his Bonn Circle of Friends. Selected Objects from the Wegeler Collection

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Category:German biographers

Category:German male biographers

Category:German obstetricians

Category:18th-century German physicians

Category:1765 births

Category:1848 deaths

Category:University of Bonn alumni

Category:Academic staff of the University of Bonn

Category:German Freemasons

Category:18th-century German male writers

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