What did Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart brown plaque do at 180 Ebury Street?

180 Ebury StreetBlue Plaque

The Story

# 180 Ebury Street Standing before this elegant townhouse in Belgravia, you're standing at the threshold of a musical miracle: here, at just eight years old, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart composed his first symphony while lodging with his family during their triumphant London tour of 1764. The prodigy, already celebrated across Europe for his virtuosity at the keyboard and violin, channeled the energy of the bustling city around him—the Thames nearby, the fashionable society of Georgian London, and the rich musical traditions he'd encountered—into a work that would launch him as not just a performer but a serious composer. In this modest terraced house on Ebury Street, far from the grand palaces and cathedral halls where he'd performed for royalty, Mozart proved that genius needs no magnificent setting, only inspiration and the freedom to create. This address became a small but crucial milestone in the biography of history's greatest musical mind, a place where a child's extraordinary gift crystallized into lasting artistic legacy.

Location

180 Ebury Street

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