A Life for the Tsar
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A Life for the Tsar
Summary
A Life for the Tsar is a dramatico-musical work[1]. It draws 347 Wikipedia views per month (dramatico_musical_work category, ranking #367 of 2,893).[2]
Key Facts
- A Life for the Tsar's instance of is recorded as dramatico-musical work[3].
- A Life for the Tsar's composer is recorded as Mikhail Glinka[4].
- A Life for the Tsar's librettist is recorded as Karl Georg Woldemar von Rosen[5].
- A Life for the Tsar's librettist is recorded as Sergey Gorodetsky[6].
- A Life for the Tsar's librettist is recorded as Vassilij Jukovskij[7].
- A Life for the Tsar's genre is opera[8].
- A Life for the Tsar's Commons category is recorded as A Life for the Tsar[9].
- A Life for the Tsar's language of work or name is recorded as Russian[10].
- 1836 marks the founding of A Life for the Tsar[11].
- A Life for the Tsar was released on 1850[12].
- A Life for the Tsar's characters is recorded as Ivan Susanin[13].
- A Life for the Tsar's characters is recorded as Sigismund III Vasa[14].
- A Life for the Tsar's characters is recorded as Bogdan Sobinin[15].
- A Life for the Tsar's characters is recorded as Ivan Susanin[16].
- A Life for the Tsar's characters is recorded as Antonida[17].
- A Life for the Tsar's characters is recorded as Vanya[18].
- A Life for the Tsar's characters is recorded as A Polish courier[19].
- A Life for the Tsar's characters is recorded as Commander of the Polish Detachment[20].
- A Life for the Tsar's characters is recorded as Commander of the Russian Detachment[21].
- A Life for the Tsar's narrative location is recorded as Domnino[22].
- A Life for the Tsar's narrative location is recorded as Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth[23].
- A Life for the Tsar's narrative location is recorded as Moscow[24].
- Ivan Susanin inspired A Life for the Tsar[25].
- A Life for the Tsar's date of first performance is recorded as November 27, 1836[26].
- A Life for the Tsar's title is recorded as {'lang': 'ru', 'text': 'Жизнь за царя'}[27].
Product Details
The following facts are restated verbatim from public-domain and CC0 open-data sources — every line is independently verifiable against the named source's catalog.
MusicBrainz — CC0 open music encyclopedia
Why It Matters
A Life for the Tsar draws 347 Wikipedia views per month (dramatico_musical_work category, ranking #367 of 2,893).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 15 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[30] It is known by 25 alternative names across languages and contexts.[31]