CONRADIN KREUTZER (b.1780, d.1849): ‘Das Nachtlager in Granada’, opera in 2 acts to a libretto by Karl Braun, Freiherr von Braunthal, after a play by Johann Friedrich Kind; circa 1835: Act I. ff. iii + 332.
CONRADIN KREUTZER (b.1780, d.1849): ‘Das Nachtlager in Granada’, opera in 2 acts to a libretto by Karl Braun, Freiherr von Braunthal, after a play by Johann Friedrich Kind; circa 1835: Act II. ff. iv + 224.
GIUSEPPE NICOLINI (b.1762, d.1842): ‘Giulio Cesare nelle Gallie’, opera in 2 acts to a libretto by Michele Angelo Prunetti; circa 1820: Act I. ff. iii + 201.
GIUSEPPE NICOLINI (b.1762, d.1842): ‘Giulio Cesare nelle Gallie’, opera in 2 acts to a libretto by Michele Angelo Prunetti; circa 1820: Act II. ff. ii + 168.
GIUSEPPE VERDI (b.1813, d.1901): ‘Rigoletto’, opera to a libretto by Francesco Maria Piave, after Victor Hugo; [1850s]. Italian text. With performance markings in pencil and red and blue crayon: Act I. ff. 54-55 are pasted together to form a performance cut. ff. ii + 203.
GIUSEPPE VERDI (b.1813, d.1901): ‘Rigoletto’, opera to a libretto by Francesco Maria Piave, after Victor Hugo; [1850s]. Italian text. With performance markings in pencil and red and blue crayon: Act II. ff. ii + 98.
GIUSEPPE VERDI (b.1813, d.1901): ‘Rigoletto’, opera to a libretto by Francesco Maria Piave, after Victor Hugo; [1850s]. Italian text. With performance markings in pencil and red and blue crayon: Act III. ff. ii + 118.
GIUSEPPE VERDI (b.1813, d.1901): ‘Der Troubadour’, opera in 4 acts to a libretto by Salvatore Cammarano with additions by Leone Emanuele Bardare, after Antonio García Gutiérrez, in a German translation by Heinrich Proch; 19th cent: Acts I and II. ff. i + 275.
GIUSEPPE VERDI (b.1813, d.1901): ‘Der Troubadour’, opera in 4 acts to a libretto by Salvatore Cammarano with additions by Leone Emanuele Bardare, after Antonio García Gutiérrez, in a German translation by Heinrich Proch; 19th cent: Acts III and IV. ff. i + 228.
GAETANO DONIZETTI (b.1797, d.1848): ‘Linda di Chamouny’, opera in 3 acts to a libretto by Gaetano Rossi, after Adolphe Philippe Dennery and G. Lemoine, in a German translation by Heinrich Proch; circa 1850: Act I. ff. iii + 223.