thumb|upright=1.2|189px|Giuseppe Verdi

The following is a list of published compositions by the composer Giuseppe Verdi (1813–1901).

The list includes original creations as well as reworkings of the operas (some of which are translations, for example into French or from French into Italian) or subsequent versions of completed operas.

List of operas and revisions

Revision of earlier opera, including translations with material musical changes.<!-- Librettists not directly involved in the preparation of a specific revision, but whose text (or a translation thereof) is included in the work, are shown in italics.-->

{| class="wikitable"

!#

!|Title

!Libretto

!Acts

!Language

!Premiere

!Remarks

|-

|1

|Oberto, conte di San Bonifacio

|

<br/>Temistocle Solera

|2

|Italian

|La Scala, Milan<br/>17 Nov 1839

|Lightly revised three times after the première

|-

|2

|Un giorno di regno

|Felice Romani

|2

|Italian

|La Scala, Milan<br/>5 Sep 1840

|Later revision known as Il finto Stanislao

|-

|3

|Nabucodonosor

|Temistocle Solera

|4

|Italian

|La Scala, Milan<br/>9 Mar 1842

|Later known as Nabucco

|-

|4

|I Lombardi alla prima crociata

|Temistocle Solera

|4

|Italian

|La Scala, Milan<br/>11 Feb 1843

|Later revised in French as Jérusalem

|-

|5

|Ernani

|

|4

|Italian

|La Fenice, Venice<br/>9 Mar 1844

|Based on work by Victor Hugo

|-

|6

|I due Foscari

|Francesco Maria Piave

|3

|Italian

|Teatro Argentina, Rome<br/>3 Nov 1844

|Based on work by Lord Byron

|-

|7

|Giovanna d'Arco

|Temistocle Solera

|3

|Italian

|La Scala, Milan<br/>15 Feb 1845

|Based on work by Friedrich Schiller

|-

|8

|Alzira

|Salvatore Cammarano

|2

|Italian

|San Carlo, Naples<br/>12 Aug 1845

|

|-

|9

|Attila

|Temistocle Solera<br/>Francesco Maria Piave

|3

|Italian

|La Fenice, Venice<br/>17 Mar 1846

|Acts 1 and 2 written, and Act 3 sketched, by Solera<br/>Act 3 completed by Piave.

|-

|10

|Macbeth

|Francesco Maria Piave

|4

|Italian

|La Pergola, Florence<br/>14 Mar 1847

|Based on work by William Shakespeare

|-

|11

|I masnadieri

|Andrea Maffei

|4

|Italian

|Her Majesty's Theatre, London<br/>22 Jul 1847

|Based on work by Friedrich Schiller

|-

|style="background:#B9FFC7"|4a

|style="background:#B9FFC7"|Jérusalem

|style="background:#B9FFC7"|Temistocle Solera<br/>Alphonse Royer<br/>Gustave Vaëz

|style="background:#B9FFC7"|4

|style="background:#B9FFC7"|French

|style="background:#B9FFC7"|Salle Le Peletier, Paris<br/>26 Nov 1847

|style="background:#B9FFC7"|Revision and translation of I Lombardi alla prima crociata

|-

|12

|Il corsaro

|Francesco Maria Piave

|3

|Italian

|Teatro Grande, Trieste<br/>25 Oct 1848

|Based on work by Lord Byron

|-

|13

|La battaglia di Legnano

|Salvatore Cammarano

|4

|Italian

|Teatro Argentina, Rome<br/>27 Jan 1849

|

|-

|14

|Luisa Miller

|Salvatore Cammarano

|3

|Italian

|San Carlo, Naples<br/>8 Dec 1849

|Based on work by Friedrich Schiller

|-

|15

|Stiffelio

|Francesco Maria Piave

|3

|Italian

|Teatro Grande, Trieste<br/>16 Nov 1850

|Later revised as Aroldo

|-

|16

|Rigoletto

|Francesco Maria Piave

|3

|Italian

|La Fenice, Venice<br/>11 Mar 1851

|Based on work by Victor Hugo

|-

|17

|Il trovatore

|Salvatore Cammarano<br/>Leone Emanuele Bardare

|4

|Italian

|Teatro Apollo, Rome<br/>19 Jan 1853

|Cammarano died before completion; his libretto was restructured by Bardare

|-

|18

|La traviata

|Francesco Maria Piave

|3

|Italian

|La Fenice, Venice<br/>6 Mar 1853

|Based on work by Alexandre Dumas fils

|-

|19

|Les vêpres siciliennes

|Charles Duveyrier<br/>Eugène Scribe

|5

|French

|Salle Le Peletier, Paris<br/>13 June 1855

|

|-

|style="background:#B9FFC7"|19a

|style="background:#B9FFC7"|Giovanna de Guzman

|style="background:#B9FFC7"|Charles Duveyrier<br/>Eugène Scribe<br/>Ettore Caimi

|style="background:#B9FFC7"|5

|style="background:#B9FFC7"|Italian

|style="background:#B9FFC7"|Teatro Regio, Parma<br/>26 Dec 1855

|style="background:#B9FFC7"|Revision and translation of Les vêpres siciliennes<br/>Also known as Batilda di Turenne in an 1858 Naples production<br/>After 1861 most commonly known as I vespri siciliani

|-

|style="background:#B9FFC7"|17a

|style="background:#B9FFC7"|Le trouvère

|style="background:#B9FFC7"|Salvatore Cammarano<br/>Leone Emanuele Bardare

|style="background:#B9FFC7"|4

|style="background:#B9FFC7"|French

|style="background:#B9FFC7"|La Monnaie, Brussels<br/>20 May 1856