Borussia (anthem) explained

Borussia
Composer:Gaspare Luigi Pacifico Spontini

Borussia, also known as Chant national prussien, was a patriotic Prussian song. It temporarily held the status of the national anthem. The melody is made by Gaspare Luigi Pacifico Spontini, and the text by .[1] Borussia is a neo-Latin term for Prussia and a female figure as Prussia's allegory in the song.

History

In 1814, King Friedrich Wilhelm III met the Italian composer Gasparo Luigi Pacifico Spontini in Paris, whom he brought to Berlin in 1820 as a music director. One of Spontini's first Berlin works was the composition with the title Borussia. It had already been composed by him two years ago as Chant National Prussien. He instrumented it with 100 violins, 50 trumpets, twenty other wind instruments (e.g. Bassoon, clarinet, horn) and 130 voices along with a soprano solo. It incorporated the melody of the British anthem God Save The Queen.[2] [3] The text was written by Johann Friedrich Leopold Duncker the cabinet secretary of the king.

On August 3, 1820, on the occasion of the birthday of King Friedrich Wilhelm III, the performance of Borussia took place in the Berlin State Opera. Within the same year, it was decreed as a Prussian national anthem and was then on sung in all schools and patriotic festivities.

The anthem was later extended by four stanzas, Karl Alexander Herklots is considered the author. However, the stanzas never became popular. They can only be found printed by August Heinrich Hoffmann von Fallersleben.[4]

While in the course of the founding of the German Empire on 18 January, 1871, in August of the same year, a performance in the Berlin State Opera, an attempt was made to revive Borussia with changed text - instead of Borussia now Germania and instead of King now Kaiser - but without success.

Literature

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Carl Freiherr von Ledebur: Tonkünstler-Lexicon Berlin’s von den ältesten Zeiten bis auf die Gegenwart. Ludwig Rauh, Berlin 1861, S. 570.
  2. Book: Sagrillo . Damien . Graziano . John Michael . Marshall . Nigel A. . Festschrift in honour of Raoul F. Camus' ninetieth anniversary . 2021 . . Münster . 9783643913647 . 359–360.
  3. Book: Whitwell . David . A New History of Wind Music . 1972 . Instrumentalist . Evanston, IL . 37 . 6746287.
  4. August Heinrich Hoffmann von Fallersleben: Findlinge. Breitkopf und Härtel, Leipzig 1860.