Gioachino Rossini
Fun Facts
In 1815, after Rossini had already staged several successful popular operas, the beautiful and wealthy Spanish soprano, Isabella Colbran, was cast as the lead in his opera Elisabetta. She was eight years older than the composer and, according to Stendhal, beginning to lose her voice. The couple married in 1822, but separated in 1836 due to her extravagance, high-society lifestyle and gambling. A year after Colban’s death in 1845, Rossini married Olympe Pélissier, the 46-year-old French artists’ model and courtesan whom he had lived with since meeting her in Paris in 1830. He and his second wife lived for varying periods in Bologna, Milan, Florence and Paris, their last and longest home. Their musical evenings were legendary with guests includingFranz Liszt, Giuseppe Verdi, Niccolò Paganini, Alexandre Dumas fils and Eugène Delacroix.
Cemetery Information:
Final Resting Place:
Santa Croce Basilica
Piazza di Santa Croce, 16, 50122
Firenze, Florence,
Italy
Europe
Map:
Grave Location:
Rossini Family TombGrave Location Description
Santa Croce is one of the most famous churches in the world, appreciated for its superb Gothic architecture, its paintings by Giotto and for its tombs: Michelangelo, the scientist-philosopher Galileo, the author Niccolò Machiavelli, and composer Gioachino Rossini. The musicians tomb, sculptured by Giuseppe Cassioli, is on the right-hand side of the church. The original tomb that held Rossini can be found in Paris, France at Cimetière du Père Lachaise in Division 4 on the main path.