La reine de Saba
0 sources
La reine de Saba
Summary
La reine de Saba is a dramatico-musical work[1]. It draws 94 Wikipedia views per month (dramatico_musical_work category, ranking #408 of 2,893).[2]
Key Facts
- La reine de Saba's instance of is recorded as dramatico-musical work[3].
- La reine de Saba's composer is recorded as Charles Gounod[4].
- La reine de Saba's librettist is recorded as Jules Barbier[5].
- La reine de Saba's librettist is recorded as Michel Carré[6].
- La reine de Saba's based on is recorded as Journey to the East[7].
- La reine de Saba's Commons category is recorded as La Reine de Saba (opera)[8].
- La reine de Saba's language of work or name is recorded as French[9].
- La reine de Saba's country of origin is recorded as France[10].
- 1861 marks the founding of La reine de Saba[11].
- La reine de Saba was published on 1850[12].
- La reine de Saba's characters is recorded as Amrou[13].
- La reine de Saba's characters is recorded as Bénoni[14].
- La reine de Saba's characters is recorded as Méthousaël[15].
- La reine de Saba's characters is recorded as Phanor[16].
- La reine de Saba's characters is recorded as Sarahil[17].
- La reine de Saba's characters is recorded as Adoniram[18].
- La reine de Saba's characters is recorded as Soliman[19].
- La reine de Saba's characters is recorded as Balkis[20].
- La reine de Saba's date of first performance is recorded as February 28, 1862[21].
- La reine de Saba's location of first performance is recorded as Salle Le Peletier[22].
- La reine de Saba's form of creative work is recorded as opera[23].
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
La reine de Saba draws 94 Wikipedia views per month (dramatico_musical_work category, ranking #408 of 2,893).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 9 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[26]