Sheet music with multiple staves, musical notes, and dynamic markings on a white background.
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Discover Chopin's handwritten manuscripts

Explore sheet music and manuscripts by the Polish Romantic era composer

by
Beth Daley (opens in new window) (Europeana Foundation)

Frédéric François Chopin was a Polish composer and pianist, considered to be one of the most significant composers of the Romantic age in the early 19th century.

Chopin composed many musical works for piano, with many music manuscripts and recordings of his work found on Europeana.

An illustration of Frederic Chopin playing a piano, sheet music and “Fryderyk Chopin” are below the illustration.

Who was Frédéric Chopin?

Chopin was born on 22 February 1810 in a village called Żelazowa Wola, near Warsaw, Poland. He studied music in Warsaw before leaving the country aged 20 and heading to Paris.

Despite being a prodigy, Chopin gave very few public performances - only around 30. Instead, he made his living teaching piano lessons and selling his compositions.

A painted portrait of a young Frederic Chopin, wearing a suit and bow tie.

He is credited with inventing the instrumental ballade and made major innovations to the genres of piano sonata, mazurek, waltz, nocturne, polonaise, étude, impromptu, scherzo and prélude.

The main love of his life was French writer Amantine Dupin, who wrote under the pen name George Sand, with whom he had a relationship between 1837-1847.

Chopin was always plagued with ill health and died in Paris aged just 39 in 1849.

Music sheets and manuscripts

Europeana holds a treasure trove of Chopin-related material, including recordings of his work and music manuscripts, many of them handwritten.

Handwritten sheet music by Chopin with musical notes, annotations, and a blue library stamp at the bottom.

This manuscript bears his Chopin's name and his notes in the margin. It's a sonata for piano and cello (opus  65), and you can find a recording of it on Europeana. This is the last opus number that Chopin himself used.

On his deathbed, he requested that all remaining unpublished works be destroyed. Contrary to his wishes, his family published further works after his death as op. 66-74.

Handwritten sheet music with musical notations and some corrections on aged paper.

Here is another handwritten manuscript, this time of Chopin's famous 'Minute Waltz', or ' Waltz in D-flat major, Op. 64, No. 1'.

It is often thought that Chopin intended the waltz to be played in under a minute, but this is not the case. The emphasis is on the second syllable of the word 'minute', not the first, and so means 'small'.

Most performances of the waltz take between one-and-a-half to two-and-a-half minutes, although some pianists still take on the challenge of playing it super fast within 60 seconds - to do that they need to play at a rate of 420 quavers (quarter notes) per minute, or 7 per second.

You can find recordings of the Minute Waltz on Europeana as well as sheet music such as this from the National Library of Poland.

Sheet music for Chopin's "Valse," featuring musical notes and notations for piano.