August von Goethe
Julius August Walther von Goethe (25 December 1789 – 27 October 1830 in Rome) was the only one of the five chidren of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Christiane Vulpius to survive into adulthood. He was born in Weimar and served at the court of Karl August, Grand Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach.
He studied law 1808-1809 at the Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg. After that brief period, his primary employment was as a kind of personal secretary to his father. He accompanied him on his frequent trips and kept his travel diary. Like his parents, he had a penchant for alcohol, but unlike them, he had a tendency to be melancholy.
At the age of 27, he married Ottilie von Pogwisch (1796–1872) on 17 Jun 1817 in Weimar. Although the marriage proved difficult,[1] the couple had three children: Walther,[2] Wolfgang Maximilian, and Alma.
In 1830, he undertook a trip to Italy with his father's friend Johann Peter Eckermann.[3] The traveled by way of Frankfurt, Lausanne, and Milan, where Eckermann became ill and returned home. August traveled on to La Spezia, where he had an accident and was injured. He nevertheless traveled on to Rome, where he died of smallpox in the night of 26-27 October.
References
- Karl von Holtei: Goethe und sein Sohn: Weimarer Erlebnisse in den Jahren 1827–1831. Vera-Verlag, Hamburg 1924
- Thomas Mann describes in detail the difficulties that surrounded the couple already during their courtship in his novel Lotte in Weimar, set in 1816.
- Walther became a composer and was the last living descendent of Goethe.
- Eckermann is best known for his Conversations with Goethe