Charles de Bériot was born in 1802 in
Leuven,
France (now part of Belgium) into a noble family but was orphaned at the age of nine. He was given to the custody of his music teacher and friend of his father, Jean-François Tiby (1772–1844). De Bériot began studying violin with Tiby, who trained him in the French style as exemplified by
Giovanni Battista Viotti. In 1811 he performed for the first time in public, playing a concerto by Viotti.
François-Joseph Fétis says that Tiby sent de Bériot to Paris at the age of 12 (1814), however de Bériot's own correspondence confirms that he only arrived in Paris in 1821. (This mistake is attributed to the advanced age at which Fétis wrote his final biographical note on de Bériot.) While in Paris, de Bériot studied briefly at the
Paris Conservatory under
Pierre Baillot and played for
Rodolphe Kreutzer and Viotti. The latter encouraged de Bériot to "..listen a lot...and take what seems good to you, be like the bees and you will create a genre..." After being refused a subsidy by
William I of the Netherlands, he returned briefly to Belgium in 1822. The following year he returned to Paris where he taught and performed. In 1824 he made a concert tour in England and was named violinist to
Charles X of France in 1826 and in 1827, solo violinist at the court of William I of the Netherlands. De Bériot and
Niccolo Paganini's careers ran parallel for many years even though de Bériot was 20 years younger than Paganini. In much of northern Europe the two virtuoso's playing styles were often compared, including in a small publication which appeared in 1831. De Bériot lived with the opera singer
Maria Malibran and had a child (
Charles-Wilfrid de Bériot, a piano professor who taught
Maurice Ravel,
Ricardo Viñes,
Enrique Granados and others) with her in 1833. They were married in 1836 when Malibran obtained an annulment of her previous marriage.
Felix Mendelssohn wrote an aria accompanied by a solo violin especially for the couple. However, Malibran died the same year from injuries sustained in a fall from a horse. After Malibran's death, de Bériot lived in
Brussels and did not return to performance until 1838. In 1840 in Vienna he married Marie Huber, daughter of a local magistrate. In 1842,
Pierre Baillot died in Paris at the age of 71, and his position as instructor at the
Paris Conservatoire was offered to de Bériot. He rejected the offer, however, and in 1843 became chief violin instructor at the
Brussels Conservatory where he established the Franco-Belgian school of violin playing. On account of failing eyesight he retired in 1852, and in 1858 became totally blind. Paralysis of the left arm ended his career in 1866. Surgeons amputated his left arm to relieve pain. Among his students were
Hubert Léonard,
Henri Vieuxtemps and
Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst. ==Compositions==