Advertisement

Jacob Jakowlewitsch von Staehlin

Advertisement

Jacob Jakowlewitsch von Staehlin

Birth
Memmingen, Stadtkreis Memmingen, Bavaria, Germany
Death
25 Jun 1785 (aged 76)
Saint Petersburg, Saint Petersburg Federal City, Russia
Burial
Saint Petersburg, Saint Petersburg Federal City, Russia Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Jacob von Staehlin-Storcksburg (also: Jakow Jakowlewitsch Stäehlin)
born May 9, 1709 in Memmingen, † June 25, 1785 in Saint Petersburg, Russia

was a German-Russian state councilor and polymath in the Russian service. Jacob was a historian and writer on music. He was educated at the Lateinschule in Memmingen and after 1728 at the Gymnasium in Zittau; here he also studied privately with a certain Montallegro, an Italian master of fireworks display. In 1732 he entered Universität Leipzig, and during this period became a friend of J.S. Bach's sons, playing flute duets with them, and also took part as flautist in the performances of the Collegium Musicum under J.S. Bach's direction. He was also a member of the circle surrounding the most famous literary critic of the day, Johann Christoph Gottsched.

Jacob von Stählin's career as fireworks designer and professor of poetry and rhetoric took him in 1735 to Russia, where he held numerous positions in St Petersburg and at the imperial court. He edited a fortnightly German-language journal in St Petersburg, where he reported extensively on court activities and introduced a wide variety of materials related to the German Enlightenment.

His valuable Nachrichten von der Musik in Russland (published in J. Haigold's Beylagen zum neuveranderten Russland, Riga and Leipzig, 1769-1770) was the first study of Russian music, theater, and dance..



Jacob von Staehlin-Storcksburg (also: Jakow Jakowlewitsch Stäehlin)
born May 9, 1709 in Memmingen, † June 25, 1785 in Saint Petersburg, Russia

was a German-Russian state councilor and polymath in the Russian service. Jacob was a historian and writer on music. He was educated at the Lateinschule in Memmingen and after 1728 at the Gymnasium in Zittau; here he also studied privately with a certain Montallegro, an Italian master of fireworks display. In 1732 he entered Universität Leipzig, and during this period became a friend of J.S. Bach's sons, playing flute duets with them, and also took part as flautist in the performances of the Collegium Musicum under J.S. Bach's direction. He was also a member of the circle surrounding the most famous literary critic of the day, Johann Christoph Gottsched.

Jacob von Stählin's career as fireworks designer and professor of poetry and rhetoric took him in 1735 to Russia, where he held numerous positions in St Petersburg and at the imperial court. He edited a fortnightly German-language journal in St Petersburg, where he reported extensively on court activities and introduced a wide variety of materials related to the German Enlightenment.

His valuable Nachrichten von der Musik in Russland (published in J. Haigold's Beylagen zum neuveranderten Russland, Riga and Leipzig, 1769-1770) was the first study of Russian music, theater, and dance..




Advertisement