Vivien Chartres
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Born25 June 1893
Turin, Italy
Died1 September 1941 (aged 48)
Hove, Sussex, England
OthernamesVivienne Chartres, Vivien Chartres Burns, Vivien Chartres Young, Vivien Burns Young
OccupationViolinist
Vivien Chartres | |
|---|---|
Chartres, from a 1906 publication. | |
| Born | 25 June 1893 Turin, Italy |
| Died | 1 September 1941 (aged 48) Hove, Sussex, England |
| Other names | Vivienne Chartres, Vivien Chartres Burns, Vivien Chartres Young, Vivien Burns Young |
| Occupation | Violinist |
| Years active | 1904–1913 |
| Known for | Child musical prodigy |
| Spouses | Arthur Lindsey Burns
(m. 1915; died 1925)Richard C.R. Young
(m. 1927; died 1941) |
| Children | 2 |

Vivien Chartres (25 June 1893 – 1 September 1941) was a British violinist and child musical prodigy, daughter of writer Annie Vivanti, whose novel The Devourers (1910) was inspired by the life of Vivien Chartres.
Vivien Chartres was born in Turin, Italy, the daughter of Anglo-Irish lawyer, journalist, and Sinn Féin activist John Smith Chartres (1862–1927), and English-born Italian writer Annie Vivanti (1866–1942); her mother was the niece of German writers Paul Lindau and Rudolf Lindau.[1] Vivien Chartres began playing the violin as a girl, and was taken to Prague to study with Otakar Ševčík when she was ten years old.[2]