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Mozart's works were catalogued by Kochel. The K number comes from his name. Sometimes KV is used as "Kochel Verz".
Ludwig Koechel compiled a catalogue of Mozart's works in approximate chronological order because most of them had not been published in his lifetime. It was published in 1862 and has been revised several times since then, so the numbers get a little mixed up for some works because new facts have been discovered about their real chronological order.
Mozart was born in 1756. He belongs to the Classical period. His symphonies, concertos and many of other works are in classical style.
the pathetique sonata
Undoubtedly, Mozart's most famous piece is Eine Kleine Nachtmusik for string ensemble. His popular symphonies include Symphony 40 in G minor and Jupiter symphony. His popular piano works include Twinkle-twinkle variations and Turkish Rondo.
Yes, Nannerl was a composer. But she was a girl, meaning she was "lesser" than men, so none of her works were published, sadly enough.
the marriage of figaro
Confucius' work was known, but not considered very significant during his lifetime. This is the right answer.
He wrote 559 Poems
Dickinsons published only a small handful of poems during her lifetime; the rest were published after she died
William Blake published multiple books during his lifetime, including works such as "Songs of Innocence and Experience" and "The Marriage of Heaven and Hell." Overall, he is known for his creativity as both a poet and an artist.
Beethoven published 138 works during his life. 205 more have been published since his death.
No, Edgar Allan Poe did not make millions of dollars from his writing during his lifetime. He struggled financially and faced poverty throughout his career, with many of his works being published posthumously.
In all likelihood, yes, although we do not have records of performances of some of the plays in Shakespeare's lifetime. Since the First Folio was taken from the collection of scripts held by the King's Men after Shakespeare's death, it seems likely that all of them had been performed, otherwise why would the company have the scripts? Of the two plays now agreed to be Shakespeare's which were not in the First Folio, Pericles was published in Quarto form during Shakespeare's lifetime (and no play was published before it was performed) and references in other works suggest that Two Noble Kinsmen was performed in 1613 or 1614.
Shakespeare wrote very little for publication: his long poems Venus and Adonis and the Rape of Lucrece to be precise. Only in these two cases can Shakespeare be legitimately said to have written "books" at all. Of course his plays and poetry were published even during his lifetime, but he did not write poetry intending it to be published and he did not intend his plays to be read by anyone at all except the actors who were performing it. Venus and Adonis, apart from being one of the two works written for publication, was far and away the most successful published work by Shakespeare during his lifetime, going into several editions.
About 18 of them were published before he died. About 19 more were published in 1623, seven years after he died in 1616. The Two Noble Kinsmen wasn't published until 1634, 18 years after his death.
Niccolo Machiavelli wrote several books during his lifetime, but his most famous work is "The Prince," which was published in 1532. He also wrote other notable works such as "Discourses on Livy" and "The Art of War."