George Augustus Polgreen Bridgetower was born on 11 October 1778, in
Biała Podlaska,
Poland, where his father worked for Prince
Hieronim Wincenty Radziwiłł. He was baptised Hieronimo Hyppolito de Augusto on 11 October 1778. His father, John Frederick Bridgetower (né Joannis Friderici de Augusto Æthypois), was probably a
West Indian (possibly from
Barbados), although he also claimed to be an African prince, as stated in George's baptismal record. From 1779 John Frederick was a servant of the
Hungarian Prince
Esterházy, the patron of
Joseph Haydn. George's mother, Maria Anna Ursula Schmidt, was from
Swabia, now in
Germany, described as a "Polish lady of quality", from the "noble Polish House of Schmidt". She was later possibly a domestic worker in the household of
Sophie von Thurn und Taxis, who married Prince
Hieronim Wincenty Radziwiłł in 1775. George moved to London at an early age and was performing as a violin soloist at the
Drury Lane Theatre by the age of 10. He exhibited considerable talent while still a child and gave successful violin concerts in
Paris,
London,
Bath and
Bristol in 1789. In 1791, the British
Prince Regent, the future
King George IV, took an interest in him and oversaw his musical education. At the Prince's direction, he studied under
François-Hippolyte Barthélémon, the leader of the
Royal Opera, with Croatian-Italian composer
Giovanni Giornovichi, and with
Thomas Attwood, pupil of Mozart and organist at
St Paul's Cathedral and professor at the
Royal Academy of Music. Bridgetower performed in around 50 concerts in London theatres, including
Covent Garden,
Drury Lane and the
Haymarket Theatre, between 1789 and 1799, and he was employed by the Prince to perform in his orchestra in
Brighton and London. In the spring of 1789, Bridgetower performed to great acclaim at the
Abbaye de Panthemont in Paris, with
Thomas Jefferson and his family in attendance. ==Relations with Beethoven==