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  2. Sep 20, 2024 · How did Robert Schumann die? Robert Schumann had been mentally unstable all his life, suffering periodic attacks of severe depression and nervous exhaustion. In 1854, after attempting suicide by drowning, he was sent to a private asylum, where he died two and a half years later at the age of 46, though the exact cause is debated.

  3. Friends, including Brahms and Joachim, were permitted to visit Schumann but Clara did not see her husband until nearly two and a half years into his confinement, and only two days before his death. [73] Schumann died at the sanatorium aged 46 on 29 July 1856, the cause of death being recorded as pneumonia. [74] [n 9]

  4. Robert Schumann had been mentally unstable all his life, suffering periodic attacks of severe depression and nervous exhaustion. In 1854, after attempting suicide by drowning, he was sent to a private asylum, where he died two and a half years later at the age of 46, though the exact cause is debated.

  5. Aug 21, 2024 · Robert Schumann died on 29 July 1856. Clara visited her stricken husband a few days before his death, the first time they had met in two and a half years. Shocked at Robert's physical weakness and verbal incoherence, she, nevertheless, was glad to embrace her husband once again, noting that "I did receive a few tender glances – those I will ...

    • Mark Cartwright
  6. Apr 30, 2023 · On August 10, 1826, about 10 months after the death of his sister, Robert's father Friedrich Schumann died at the age of 53. Robert was devastated, and it was in response to his father's death that he started keeping a diary, which he continued to keep throughout his life, to resist "painful hours eating up the memories of happier times."

    • Marina Manoukian
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  7. Nov 28, 2010 · Nov. 26, 2010. AND you were feeling overwhelmed by the 118 different diagnoses recently tallied for Mozart’s final illness? Consider Robert Schumann, whose bicentennial is being celebrated this...

  8. Robert Schumann (June 8, 1810 – July 29, 1856), a German composer and pianist, was one of the most important Romantic composers of the first half of the nineteenth century, as well as a highly regarded music critic.