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  1. Tytus Woyciechowski, c. 1875 Memorial to Chopin's visit to Poturzyn. Tytus Sylwester Woyciechowski (31 December 1808 – 23 March 1879) was a Polish political activist, agriculturalist, and patron of art. He was an early friend — and possible lover — of the Polish composer Frédéric Chopin.

    • The Letters Have Disappeared
    • Unproven Footnotes Refer to Women
    • Mythical Romances
    • Systematic Construct
    • Appearance Versus Reality
    • Distorted Beyond Recognition
    • Homosexuality as A Political Issue

    Of all the things it is the very letters Chopin received from Tytus and from other men that are presumed lost. They are likely to also contain homoerotic text: «Dearest Tytus! I received your last letter, in which you tell me to kiss you.»(11/14/1829) Chopin’s letters to those men were written in Polish – too high a barrier for many researchers. Th...

    In line with the footnotes it was (and still is) suggested that Chopin speaks about women. But the statements in the footnotes are not corroborated anywhere. None of the renowned biographers like Alan Walker nor the powerful Fryderyk Chopin Institute in Warsaw (NIFC), which is internationally acclaimed as the temple of knowledge about Chopin, can d...

    Chopin himself writes nothing about the romantic affairs described in those footnotes in flowery terms. The respective teenagers play only a very marginal role in his letters. The alleged affairs and the unproven engagement all belong in the realm of myths. Most researchers today agree that Chopin’s much-described «relationship» with George Sand wa...

    The rather coarse but all the more systematically built-up construct from footnotes and mistranslated words has stubbornly persisted until today. It still distracts the attention from what’s obvious from Chopin’s own hand: his equally intimate and passionate feeling for Tytus Woyciechowski, who may have been the love of his life. And his feelings f...

    Chopin deliberately separated inside and outside. He paid careful attention as to how he appeared in public – a recurring motive in his letters and a quality often observed by his environment. «One must respect the concealment of hidden feelings.» (5/15/1830) Musicology has long found it difficult to deal with the homosexuality of great classical m...

    To date, Chopin’s emotional and erotic relationship with Woyciechowski, the most important relationship in his life, has been distorted or marginalized beyond recognition – even in otherwise reliable sources of reference. In Wikipedia proven details of this relationship were instantly deleted. «I am going to wash. Don’t kiss me now, because I haven...

    With Chopin the issue is loaded with a political dimension today: For the Catholic leaning national conservative ruling Law and Justice Party (PiS) Chopin’s love for Tytus Woyciechowski is likely to be most unwelcome. After all, many of its high-ranking representatives act aggressively against minorities, even supporting inhumane ideas like «LGBTQ-...

  2. 28 de nov. de 2020 · There are 22 letters on record from Chopin to the same friend, Tytus Woyciechowski, and he often began them with “my dearest life”, and signed off: “Give me a kiss, dearest lover.”

    • Lily Wakefield
  3. Tytus Woyciechowski (1808–1879) was a landowner and a boyhood friend of Chopin. The two continued to correspond after the composer left the country. Woyciechowski attended the Warsaw Lyceum and stayed at the Chopins’ boarding house from 1818.

  4. Tytus Woyciechowski (1808–1879) was born 31rd of December in Lviv. He finished Warsaw Highschool in 1826. Then he studied Administration at Warsaw University (1826–1828). Since 1828 he had started to managed Poturzyn Estate, causing economic prosperity in this area.

  5. Tytus Sylwester Woyciechowski ( Lemberg, Galicia, 31 de diciembre de 1808 - Poturzyn, 23 de marzo de 1879) es un activista político, agrónomo y mecenas del arte polaco. Fue uno de los primeros amigos o amantes del polaco- francesa compositor , Frédéric Chopin.

  6. 27 de nov. de 2020 · In the programme, Weber reveals that Chopin wrote 22 letters to his school friend, Tytus Woyciechowski, several of which started with “My dearest life” and ending with “Give me a kiss, dearest lover.” One read: “You don’t like being kissed. Please allow me to do so today. You have to pay for the dirty dream I had about you last night.”