47 by Louis Spohr, the Violin Concerto in G minor by Max Bruch, and solo works by Pablo de Sarasate, Carl Halir, and Henryk Wieniawski.
In Saint Petersburg, at the age of 25, Hochmann met the Jewish banker Felix Stransky, whom she married in Vienna in 1900.
The couple initially resided in Saint Petersburg, but then moved to Zurich, and from about 1905 the Hoffmann-Stransky family, now with two children, George Franz Kyrill and Claire Eugenie, lived in Vienna.
[2][3] According to the social conventions of the time, marriage meant a withdrawal from public concert life for the violinist.
In later years Hochmann worked primarily as a violin teacher, training Erika Morini and Norbert Brainin, among others.