Ivanhoé
Ivanhoé è un’opera in french di Gioachino Rossini.
Ivanhoé is an 1826 pastiche opera in three acts with music by Gioachino Rossini to a French-language libretto by Émile Deschamps and Gabriel-Gustave de Wailly, after Walter Scott's 1819 novel of the same name. The music was adapted, with the composer's permission, by the music-publisher Antonio Pacini from Rossini's operas, namely Semiramide, La Cenerentola, La gazza ladra, and Tancredi in order to introduce his music to Paris. An examination of the score shows that Pacini also used music from Bianca e Faliero, Armida, Maometto II, Aureliano in Palmira, Sigismondo, Torvaldo e Dorliska, Mosè in Egitto and an amount of newly composed music including fanfares and the gallop that was later to become famous from its inclusion in Guglielmo Tell. The work was premiered on 15 September 1826, at the Odéon Theatre.
Gustave de Wailly

Gioachino Rossini (1792–1868) — compositore italian, periodo Romantic.
Libretto di Ivanhoé
Il libretto è scritto da Émile Deschamps, Gustave de Wailly — in totale 2 autori di libretto.
Da Ivanhoe all’opera
Ivanhoé è un adattamento di Ivanhoe — soggetto letterario di partenza per il libretto.
Altre opere di Gioachino Rossini
- Adelaide di Borgogna
- Adina
- Armida
- Aureliano in Palmira
- Bianca e Falliero, o sia Il consiglio di tre
- Ciro in Babilonia
- Demetrio e Polibio
- Eduardo e Cristina
- Elisabetta, regina d'Inghilterra
- Ermione
Dati sull’opera provenienti da Wikidata (CC0, pubblico dominio).