Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Opernhaus am Zwinger

Opernhaus am Zwinger
Interior
Map
General information
TypeOpera house
Architectural styleBaroque
Town or cityDresden, Germany
Coordinates51°03′35″N 13°44′02″E / 51.0597°N 13.7339°E / 51.0597; 13.7339
Construction started1718 (1718)
Opened1719 (1719)
Destroyed1849 (1849)
Design and construction
Architect(s)Matthäus Daniel Pöppelmann

The Opernhaus am Zwinger (Opera house at the Zwinger) was a theatre in Dresden, Saxony, Germany, opened in 1719. The architect of the Zwinger, Matthäus Daniel Pöppelmann, was also responsible for the opera house situated next to its south-western pavilion. The building replaced the first opera house of Dresden, the Opernhaus am Taschenberg, which was transformed to a church.[1]

The three-tier hall seated up to 2000 people and was at the time one of the largest opera houses in Europe. The first performance was on 3 September 1719 Antonio Lotti's Giovi in Argo, followed on 13 September by the premiere of Lotti's Teofane on the occasion of the wedding of prince Friedrich August II, later the elector and as August III king of Poland, and Maria Josepha of Austria. The house flourished when he, an opera enthusiast, reigned as elector, and Johann Adolph Hasse was musical director. Due to the Seven Years' War, the last opera, Hasse's Olimpiade, was performed in 1756. The building was used for balls and concerts. It burned down during the May Uprising in Dresden in 1849.[1][2] The next opera house, the Semperoper, was built at a different location.

References

  1. ^ a b Löffler, Fritz [in German] (1976). "Die Wiederholung der Orangeriebauten nach der Stadt und die vierte Zwingerseite". Der Zwinger in Dresden (in German). Photographs by Willy Pritsche (6th ed.). VEB E. A. Seemann Verlag Leipzig. p. 35. ISBN 978-3363002287.
  2. ^ Näther, Joachim [in German]; Haußwald, Günter [in German] (1985). "Historischer Streifzug rings um die in neuer Schönheit erstandene Semperoper – Das Opernhaus am Zwinger". Bühnentechnische Rundschau (in German) (5). Berlin: Friedrich Berlin Verlag/Theaterverlag: 22. Archived from the original on 1 April 2016. Retrieved 17 December 2014.