Monday, June 8, 2026

Roma antica melodramma

 Ancient Roman history, myth, and politics have served as the single most popular source of inspiration for opera composers. Because 17th- and 18th-century opera seria relied almost entirely on classical antiquity, there are actually hundreds of operas set in ancient Rome. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

To give you a comprehensive look, here are 50 notable operas set specifically during the Roman Kingdom, Republic, or Empire, categorized by their historical eras and figures.
The Roman Kingdom & Mythological Origins (c. 753 BC – 509 BC)
These operas cover Rome's founding, early kings, and the legendary events that led to the overthrow of the monarchy. [123]
  1. Il ratto delle sabine (The Rape of the Sabine Women) – Agostino Agazzari
  2. The Rape of Lucretia – Benjamin Britten (The tragic event that sparked the birth of the Republic)
  3. Lucia Silla – Pasquale Anfossi
  4. Numa Pompilio – Ferdinando Paer (About Rome’s second king)
  5. Tarquinio il Superbo – Francesco Feo (Focusing on the final, tyrannical Roman king) [134]
The Roman Republic (c. 509 BC – 27 BC)
The era of the Senate, major military conquests, and internal civil wars yielded dozens of dramatic plots. [1]
  1. Caio Marzio Coriolano – Attilio Ariosti (The legendary general turned traitor)
  2. Virginia – Saverio Mercadante (The political crisis over a plebeian girl)
  3. Virginia – Gaetano Donizetti
  4. Regulus – Johann Adolph Hasse (The heroic prisoner of the Punic Wars)
  5. Scipione – George Frideric Handel (Scipio Africanus during the Carthaginian conquests)
  6. Scipione affricano – Francesco Cavalli
  7. Il trionfo di Clelia – Christoph Willibald Gluck (The legendary escape of Cloelia across the Tiber)
  8. Mitridate – Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Rome's war against the defiant King Mithridates)
  9. Silla – George Frideric Handel (The bloody dictatorship of Lucius Cornelius Sulla)
  10. Lucio Silla – Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
  11. Lucio Silla – Johann Christian Bach
  12. Lucio Silla – Pasquale Anfossi [1245]
Julius Caesar & The Fall of the Republic (c. 49 BC – 27 BC) [123]
The transition from Republic to Empire centers heavily on Julius Caesar and Cleopatra. [12]
  1. Giulio Cesare in Egitto – George Frideric Handel (Caesar's Egyptian campaign)
  2. Giulio Cesare – Francesco Cavalli
  3. Catone in Utica – Antonio Vivaldi (Cato the Younger's final stance against Caesar)
  4. Catone in Utica – Johann Adolph Hasse
  5. Die Ermordung Cäsars – Giselher Klebe (The assassination of Julius Caesar)
  6. Cleopatra – Johann Mattheson
  7. Antony and Cleopatra – Samuel Barber (The final civil war of the Republic) [12345]
The Julio-Claudian Dynasty (27 BC – 68 AD) [1]
The lives of Rome's first emperors provided opera houses with plenty of madness, poisoning, and political intrigue. [12]
  1. Ottone in Villa – Antonio Vivaldi (The future emperor Otho before his brief rule)
  2. L'incoronazione di Poppea – Claudio Monteverdi (The masterpiece tracking Emperor Nero and Poppaea)
  3. Agrippina – George Frideric Handel (Agrippina plotting to put her son Nero on the throne)
  4. Nerone – Arrigo Boito (Covers the Great Fire of Rome)
  5. Nerone – Claudio Monteverdi (An early, distinct sketch on Nero)
  6. Nerone – Alessandro Stradella
  7. Nerone – Pietro Mascagni
  8. Caligola – Giovanni Maria Pagliardi (The infamous, mad emperor) [123]
The Flavian & Antonine Dynasties (69 AD – 192 AD) [1]
From the destruction of Pompeii to the height of the Pax Romana. [1]
  1. L'ultimo giorno di Pompei – Giovanni Pacini (The final day before Vesuvius erupted)
  2. Tito e Berenice – Antonio Caldara (The romance between Emperor Titus and a Judean queen)
  3. La clemenza di Tito – Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Titus dealing with betrayal and choosing mercy)
  4. La clemenza di Tito – Christoph Willibald Gluck
  5. La clemenza di Tito – Josef Mysliveček
  6. Il trionfo di Camilla – Giovanni Bononcini [1234]
The Vestal Virgins of Rome
A highly specific but incredibly popular setting focusing on the sacred priestesses of Rome. [12]
  1. La Vestale – Gasparo Spontini (A priestess breaks her vows for a Roman general)
  2. La vestale – Saverio Mercadante
  3. Roma – Jules Massenet (A later late-Romantic take on the Vestals)
  4. Vestas Feuer – Ludwig van Beethoven (Unfinished, but set in the temple of Vesta) [1345]
Late Empire & The Rise of Christianity (c. 200 AD – 476 AD) [12]
These works deal with the clashes between the pagan Roman state and the early Christian church.
  1. Poliuto – Gaetano Donizetti (Christian martyrdom in Roman Armenia)
  2. Les Martyrs – Gaetano Donizetti (The grand French revision of Poliuto)
  3. Fausta – Gaetano Donizetti (The tragic wife of Emperor Constantine the Great)
  4. Herculanum – Félicien David (Set right before the eruption of Vesuvius with heavy early-Christian themes)
  5. Polyeucte – Charles Gounod
  6. Roma – Henri Février
  7. Attila – Giuseppe Verdi (The Huns marching on the crumbling Western Roman Empire)
  8. Servilia – Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (Set during the Christian persecutions under Nero) [1234]
Would you like a deeper dive or a plot summary for any specific Roman figure or composer on this list?

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