Skip to main content Commemorating the Musical Legacy of Fanny Hensel | Leo Baeck Institute London

Commemorating the Musical Legacy of Fanny Hensel

14 May 2026
Featured image

We mark the anniversary of the death of the composer Fanny Hensel, née Mendelssohn Bartholdy, who died on 14 May 1847. A central figure in Berlin’s cultural life, Hensel composed over 450 works, encompassing lieder, piano pieces, and chamber music.

Hensel’s life was characterised by a close musical partnership with her brother, Felix Mendelssohn, whom she described as her ‘right hand and my eyesight’. Despite nineteenth-century social constraints that restricted her public career, her Sunday musicales on Leipzigerstrasse provided a vital space for the city’s highest musical achievements. Contemporaries recorded that she conducted and performed with a force and depth that commanded the room.

Her dedication continued until her final hours. Hensel completed her last work, Bergeslust, on the day she died. Its closing line stands as a fitting reflection of her creative output: ‘Gedanken gehn und Lieder fort bis ins Himmelreich’ (‘Thoughts and songs are borne heavenward’).

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Latest Publications