Stiffelio

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Operas by Giuseppe Verdi

Oberto, Conte di San Bonifacio (1839)
Un giorno di regno (1840)
Nabucco (1842)
I Lombardi alla prima crociata (1843)
Ernani (1844)
I due Foscari (1844)
Giovanna d'Arco (1845)
Alzira (1845)
Attila (1846)
Macbeth (1847)
I masnadieri (1847)
Jérusalem (1847)
Il corsaro (1848)
La battaglia di Legnano (1849)
Luisa Miller (1849)
Stiffelio (1850)
Rigoletto (1851)
Il trovatore (1853)
La traviata (1853)
Les vêpres siciliennes (1855)
Simon Boccanegra (1857)
Aroldo (1857)
Un ballo in maschera (1859)
La forza del destino (1862)
Don Carlos (1867)
Aida (1871)
Otello (1887)
Falstaff (1893)

Stiffelio is an opera in three acts by Giuseppe Verdi, from an Italian libretto by Francesco Maria Piave, based on the play Le Pasteur, ou l'Évangile et le Foyer by Émile Souvestre and Eugène Bourgeois. First performance: November 16, 1850, Teatro Grande, Trieste.

This opera was revised by Verdi in 1857, into a new four act opera Aroldo.

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The story unfolds around Stiffelio, an Italian Protestant priest, married to Lina. The opera caused a furor during its time as the setting is contemporary to the clergy-hating Verdi and the fact that Lina is having an affair with another man. The greater scandal was that Stiffelio, during his final sermon, still not knowing how to act, opens the Bible on the page where he reads to himself: "He who is fully without sin shall cast the first stone...."

He thus decides to forgive her, in front of the massed church. This was, of course, unacceptable to the moral majority of Catholic Italy during that time.