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From the Concert Hall to the Guildhall: Leia Zhu, 19, Receives the Freedom of the City of London

British violinist Leia Zhu has been awarded the Freedom of the City of London.

The teenage musician received one of the UK’s oldest and most distinguished civic honours – conferred by the City of London Corporation at Guildhall – on Monday (20.04.26).

The honour marks a historic first as Leia, 19, is believed to be the first classical musician to be nominated for the Freedom of the City of London through the Worshipful Company of International Bankers and is among the youngest recipients of the honour in recent memory.

The Worshipful Company of International Bankers (WCIB) is the City of London livery company representing international banking and financial services, supporting excellence, stewardship and civic life in the Square Mile.

Membership is open to those working in or studying financial services – a qualification Leia meets through her formal financial education, holding the Diploma for Financial Advisers (DipFA, LIBF) and Associate Membership of the Chartered Institute for Securities and Investment (CISI).

The Freedom of the City dates back to 1237 and is not given lightly. That it comes to Leia through a financial livery company, while she remains as one of the most active young soloists performing internationally today – says something about what she represents: a new kind of leadership that refuses the false choice between the arts and finance.

Leia’s engagement with finance was not a career pivot – it was a response to a crisis she witnessed first-hand.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, widespread concert cancellations exposed the financial vulnerability of professional musicians – including several of her peers.

Watching established artists face sudden economic precarity made clear to her that creative excellence alone offers no protection.

The conviction drove Leia’s decision to pursue formal education alongside her performance career.

At 17, she became one of the youngest holders of the Diploma for Financial Advisers (DipFA, LIBF). She holds Associate Membership of the Chartered Institute for Securities and Investment (CISI) and is currently working towards the organisation’s highest professional qualification.

The Worshipful Company of International Bankers, in its Winter 2026 feature in The International Banker, noted her particular interest in how financial discipline, ethical governance and long-term planning enable cultural organisations to endure, serve communities effectively and earn public trust.

Leia’s musical career is marked by both its scale and its velocity. She became the youngest artist ever signed by HarrisonParrott – one of the world’s pre-eminent classical music agencies – aged 12.

Since then, she has performed in more than 20 countries, including at the BBC Proms at London’s Royal Albert Hall, with the London Symphony Orchestra under Sir Simon Rattle, and with the Tonhalle Orchestra Zurich under Paavo Jarvi.

Leia is the recipient of the OPUS Klassik Young Talent of the Year 2025 award – one of classical music’s most prestigious international recognitions. She has been named to Classic FM’s 30 under 30 and recognised as a Rising Star by BBC Music magazine.

She also serves as Education Ambassador for the London Mozart Players and Patron of the HarrisonParrott Foundation.

Leia said: “To receive the Freedom of the City of London is a profound honour, and one that I see as a responsibility as much as a recognition.

“To thrive sustainably, culture must be supported by strong financial understanding, thoughtful governance and long-term thinking.

“This honour strengthens my commitment to contributing to that conversation and to the belief that culture and finance are not opposing forces, but complementary ones. Culture needs capital; capital needs soul. I intend to be that bridge.”