In 1804, Lea Salomon married the banker Abraham Mendelssohn, son of the Jewish Berlin Enlightenment thinker
Moses Mendelssohn, whom she met through her friend Henriette, his sister. They took the name Bartholdy following its adoption by Lea's brother, the diplomat
Jakob Salomon Bartholdy, who had already been baptized in 1805. After her marriage, Lea Mendelssohn lived in
Hamburg until 1811. She began to promote culture and music after she returned to her hometown of Berlin in 1811. Having grown up with the Itzig family's appreciation of Bach, she represented a "classical" aesthetic that was oriented towards the content of music and developed something new based on what was tried and tested. She was therefore particularly committed to the music of Mozart, Haydn and Beethoven and supported musicians who disseminated their works. As the first piano teacher of her musically gifted older children, Fanny and Felix, she chose their later piano teachers with great knowledge and in accordance with her own aesthetic convictions. The musical experiences and events in the Mendelssohn house found their way into the extensive correspondence between Lea Mendelssohn and her cousin
Henriette von Pereira-Arnstein (1780–1859), through which she also influenced
Viennese musical life. In 1825, the family moved to the former Recke Palace at Leipziger Straße 3 in Berlin, an address that from 1831 onwards, through the activities of her daughter Fanny, was to become the epitome of musical sociability in Berlin. Lea Mendelssohn also continued to organize musical societies in her own rooms. Lea Mendelssohn Bartholdy died in Berlin in 1842 at the age of 65. She was buried next to her husband Abraham, who had died seven years earlier, in the
Trinity Cemetery I in front of the
Hallesches Tor. The Hensel/Mendelssohn Bartholdy family burial ground, in which her children Fanny and Felix are buried, as well as the grave of her son Paul, are also located nearby. Lea Mendelssohn Bartholdy's final resting place (grave location DV1-1-1) was dedicated as an
honorary grave of the state of Berlin from 1952 to 2015. ==References==