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== Family life == [[File:Robert und Clara Schumanns Kinder.jpg|thumb|right|Robert and Clara Schumann's children (photo taken in 1853 or 1854); from left to right: Ludwig, Marie, Felix, Elise, Ferdinand and Eugenie.]] Robert Schumann gave his wife a diary on their wedding day. His first entry indicates that it should act as an autobiography of the family's personal lives, especially of the couple, and of their desires and accomplishments in the arts. It also functioned as a record of their artistic endeavors and growth. She fully accepted the arrangement of a shared diary, as evidenced by her many entries. It demonstrates her loyal love for her husband, with a desire to combine two lives into one artistically, although this life-long goal involved risks.{{sfn|Litzmann Bio|1913|loc=[https://books.google.com/books?id=Yit8CgAAQBAJ&pg=PT201 v. 2 p. 201]}} The couple remained joint partners in both family life and their careers. She premiered many of his works, from solo piano works to [[List of compositions by Clara Schumann#Arrangements|her own piano versions of his orchestral works]].{{sfn|Reich Grove|2001}} She often took charge of finances and general household affairs. Part of her responsibility included earning money by giving concerts, though she continued to play throughout her life, not just for the income but because she was an artist by training and nature. The burden of family duties increased over time and narrowed her ability as an artist. As a flourishing composer's wife, she was limited in her own explorations.{{sfn|Litzmann Bio|1913|loc=v. 1 p. 306}} She was the main breadwinner for her family and the sole one after her husband was hospitalized and then died. She gave concerts and taught, and she did most of the work of organizing her own concert tours.{{sfn|Reich Book|2001}} She hired a housekeeper and a cook to keep house while she was away on her long tours.{{sfn|Galloway|2002}}<!-- She refused to accept charity when a group of musicians offered to put on a benefit concert for her.--> Clara Schumann had eight children in 13 years:{{sfn|Reich Book|2001|pp=162β77}} * Marie (1841β1929) * Elise (1843β1928) * Julie (1845β1872) * Emil (1846β1847) * Ludwig (1848β1899) * Ferdinand (1849β1891) * [[Eugenie Schumann|Eugenie]] (1851β1938) * Felix (1854β1879) Her life was punctuated by tragedy. Her husband was permanently institutionalized after a mental collapse. Her eldest living son Ludwig suffered from mental illness like his father and, in her words, eventually had to be "buried alive" in an institution. She became deaf in later life, and she often needed a wheelchair.{{sfn|Braunstein|1971}} Not only did her husband predecease her, but so did four of their children.{{sfn|Reich Book|2001}} Their first son, Emil, died in 1847, aged only 1.{{sfn|Reich Book|2001|p=170}} Their daughter Julie died in 1872, leaving two small children aged only 2 and 7, then raised by their grandmother.{{sfn|Reich Book|2001|p=169}} In 1879, their son Felix died aged 24.{{sfn|Reich Book|2001|p=158}} In 1891, their son Ferdinand died at the age of 41, leaving his children to her care.{{sfn|Reich Book|2001|p=152}} Their oldest child Marie was of great support and help to her mother, taking the position of household cook. Marie also dissuaded her mother from continuing to burn letters that she had received from Brahms which he had asked her to destroy. Another daughter, Eugenie, who had been too young when her father died to remember him, wrote a book, ''Erinnerungen'' (Memoirs), published in 1925, covering her parents and Brahms.{{sfn|Nauhaus Eugenie|2019}}{{sfn|Schumann, Eugenie|1925}} Schumann famously rescued her children from violence during the [[May Uprising in Dresden]] in 1849. On the evening of 3 May, Robert and Clara heard that the revolution against King [[Frederick Augustus II of Saxony]] for not accepting the "constitution for a German Confederation" had arrived in Dresden. Most family members left and hid in a "neighbourhood security brigade", but on 7 May, she bravely walked back to Dresden to rescue her three children who had been left with a maid,{{sfn|Daverio Article|1997}} defying a pack of armed men who confronted her, then walked back out of the city through the dangerous areas again.
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