Among the three last piano sonatas, Op.111 may have the most interesting history. For example, the primary theme of the first movement appeared in Beethoven’s sketchbook in 1801. According to a nineteenth-century German editor, Gustav Nottebohm, this theme may have been intended for the finale of one of the Op.30 violin sonatas. On 3 July 1822, Beethoven’s publisher of Op.111, Adoft Schlesinger wrote to Beethoven regarding his concern for the two-movement layout, asking if a third movement had been left behind by the copyists. According to Anton Schindler, Beethoven answered casually that he had not had time to write a third movement, and had therefore simply expanded the second. However, two-movement piano sonatas were not unheard of in Beethoven’s oeuvre. Works such as the Piano Sonata Op.54, Op.78, and Op.90 consist of two movements of a much shorter length and lighter weight. In my opinion, the reason that Op.111 is two-movements, besides the extraordinary weight and length of the second movement, is its extra-musical implication composed of a two-movement scheme which will be discussed in a later paragraph.
Op.111 was written between 1821 and 1822 and dedicated to Archduke Rudolf of