The Quartet was founded in
Prague by three pupils of
Antonín Bennewitz (
Karel Hoffmann,
Josef Suk and
Oskar Nedbal) and a pupil of
Hanuš Wihan (); Bennewitz and Wihan were both teachers at the
Prague Conservatory. Wihan had himself studied at Prague, and was cellist of the chamber quartet of
Ludwig II in
Munich, becoming Professor at Prague in 1888. He replaced his student Otto Berger as cellist in the quartet when Berger died prematurely. Wihan then directed the Quartet until 1913 when the strain of touring obliged him to retire from it and resume his teaching. His place was then taken by , who since 1911 had been playing with the
Ševčík-Lhotský Quartet. In 1906, the violist Nedbal had run off with Hoffmann's wife; during the tour in England, his place was at short notice taken by
Lionel Tertis and afterwards formally by
Jiří Herold. The group made repeated tours in Europe, especially with the quartets of Dvořák and Smetana, and were noted for their warm tone and fiery rhythms. In 1922 the four members were appointed professors at the Prague Conservatory. The group disbanded with a concert on 4 December 1933, to honour Suk’s 60th birthday. Many key contemporary works were written for and/or first performed by the Bohemian Quartet. Most notably, this included works by
Antonín Dvořák and
Leoš Janáček, such as Janáček's
second string quartet, subtitled "
Intimate Letters". == Personnel ==