The Festival was established in 1980 with the aim of making the world more aware of Rossini's neglected operas and presenting all of them in collaboration with the
Casa Ricordi music publishing house, which published their critical editions. Of the approximately three dozen operas written, only a handful are regularly presented. On 13 August 1993, the Italian parliament unanimously approved the Special Law N. 319 "Regulations in support of the Rossini Opera Festival", which recognizes the Pesaro Festival's achievements in the reviving of Rossini's operas as entitled to be included among the state-supervised works of restoration of the national artistic heritage. The ensuing grant (of which parliament has recently approved the continuation) is financed from the funds of the
Beni Culturali. The Rossini Festival has seen many of Rossini's lesser-known works revived, some of which have since entered the
standard operatic repertoire. From the beginning, the Festival attracted some major singers including
Marilyn Horne,
Montserrat Caballé,
Ruggero Raimondi,
Samuel Ramey and
Juan Diego Flórez. Based on press reports, some productions have been extremely controversial. ==See also==