, built 1706–1707, demolished 1936 Benda was baptised on 22 November 1709. He was born in
Benátky nad Jizerou in
Bohemia, the son of Jan Jiří Benda. His brother was the composer
Georg Benda. Many of Benda's offspring (
Maria Carolina Wolf (1742–1820),
Friedrich Benda (1745–1814),
Karl Hermann Heinrich Benda (1748–1836),
Juliane Reichardt (1752–1783)) and his granddaughter (
Louise Reichardt (1779–1826)) were also composers. Benda wrote his autobiography in 1763: it not only gives a detailed account of his own life, but also a valuable record of the lives of other musicians whom he encountered during his career. In his youth Benda was a chorister in
Prague and afterward in the Chapel Royal at
Dresden. At the same time he began to study the violin, and soon joined a company of strolling musicians who attended fetes, fairs, etc. At eighteen years of age Benda abandoned this wandering life and returned to Prague, going to
Vienna, where he pursued his study of the violin under
Johann Gottlieb Graun, a pupil of
Tartini. After two years he was appointed chapel master at
Warsaw. In 1732, he entered the service of
Frederick the Great, then crown prince of
Prussia, with whom he remained the rest of his life. He was a member of the crown prince's orchestra, and later became
concertmaster to the king. He played about 50,000 concertos over a period of forty years. At Benda's request, Frederick allowed his parents and siblings to move to Potsdam when, as Protestants, they suffered religious persecution in Bohemia. Benda was a master of all the difficulties of violin playing, and the rapidity of his execution and the mellow sweetness of his highest notes were unequalled. He had many pupils and wrote a number of works, chiefly exercises and studies for the violin. Benda died in the Nowawes, a small colony near
Potsdam set up by Frederick the Great to house Protestant refugees fleeing religious persecution in Bohemia. ==Legacy==