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During his lifetime, Brahms accumulated a sizeable fortune. Although the early days were not without difficulties, his finances then accumulated steadily and virtually uninterruptedly. When he died in 1897, he left behind not only manuscripts of his own works, but also an extensive collection of other composers’ autograph manuscripts (including of Mozart, Haydn, Beethoven, Schubert, Schumann, etc.) as well as bonds worth over 181,000 Gulden.The size of the sum is evident when one compares the rent that he paid his landlady Coelestine Truxa between 1887 and 1897 for his three-room apartment in Vienna’s Karlsgasse, which amounted half-yearly to 347 Gulden and 25 Kreuzer.
Brahms grew up in the Hamburg‘Gängeviertel’, an area of workers, small-scale artisans and tradesmen in modest circumstances [see Ch. 1 ‘Childhood in Hamburg’]. Later on, when he could determine his own lifestyle, luxury still held no appeal.
To define what Brahms thought of as ‘early music’ is not difficult. It was essentially the same view as that of his musical contemporaries, particularly those in the German-speaking world. For them, it ended with the works of Johann Sebastian Bach and Georg Friedrich Händel (since they thought of him as German); it began roughly in the era that we think of as the mid-Renaissance, in particular with composers who were important contributors to the development of church music. For Catholics, interest centred on the works of Palestrina and his contemporaries, extending to seventeenth-century composers in the religious tradition. For Lutherans,the history that began with Martin Luther and culminated in the works of Bach was a principal thread that included composers such as Heinrich Isaac, Ludwig Senfl, Johannes Eccard, Michael Praetorius and Heinrich Schütz.
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