Difference between revisions of "È morto il mio Gesù"

Line 62: Line 62:
In the medieval ''Legenda aurea'', Cleophas is directly identified with Alphaeus, the father of Jacobus the Younger (Mt 10:28 EU), so that his wife Mary is regarded as the mother of Jacobus the Younger, Simon Zelotes and Judas Thaddeus. This identification is also held today by individual, mostly Catholic interpreters, who assume a sameness or alternation of names of one and the same person due to the similarity of the names, as it occurred more frequently with the Graecization of Jewish names (the assumption presumes a person with the seminitic name "Chalpai").''(Translated from German Wikipedia)''<ref name="WikiK"/>
In the medieval ''Legenda aurea'', Cleophas is directly identified with Alphaeus, the father of Jacobus the Younger (Mt 10:28 EU), so that his wife Mary is regarded as the mother of Jacobus the Younger, Simon Zelotes and Judas Thaddeus. This identification is also held today by individual, mostly Catholic interpreters, who assume a sameness or alternation of names of one and the same person due to the similarity of the names, as it occurred more frequently with the Graecization of Jewish names (the assumption presumes a person with the seminitic name "Chalpai").''(Translated from German Wikipedia)''<ref name="WikiK"/>


It appears on the following album:
The aria ''"È morto il mio Gesù"'' appears on the following album:


{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
Line 69: Line 69:
! Album
! Album
! Ensemble
! Ensemble
! Conductor


|-
|-
|  
| [[La Vanità del Mondo (Album)]]
|  
| Artaserse
|
|
|}
|}
It is part of the following concert program:
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! width="80px"|Year
! Concert program
! Ensemble
|-
| [[È morto il mio Gesù (Concert program)]]
| Artaserse
|}
==Libretto==
==Libretto==
<!-- The box above is defined in Template:Custom/songinfo.css -->
<!-- The box above is defined in Template:Custom/songinfo.css -->