Karjalais-suomalainen SNT hymni | |
English Title: | Anthem of the Karelo-Finnish SSR |
Prefix: | Former regional |
Country: | the |
Composer: | Karl Rautio |
Author: | Armas Äikiä |
Adopted: | 1945 |
Until: | 16 July 1956 (demoted to ASSR)[1] |
Successor: | State Anthem of the Soviet Union |
Sound: | Anthem of the Karelo-Finnish SSR - Karjalais-suomalainen SNT hymni-instrumental.ogg |
Sound Title: | Anthem of the Karelo-Finnish SSR – Karjalais-suomalainen SNT hymni (instrumental) |
The State Anthem of the Karelo-Finnish SSR (Finnish: Karjalais-suomalaisen SNT hymni) was the national anthem of Karelia (now a federal subject of Russia) when it was a republic of the Soviet Union and known as the Karelo-Finnish SSR.[2]
In 1945, the Karelo-Finnish SSR's government held a competition to create a state anthem. The winning entry (written by Armas Äikiä and composed by Karl Rautio) was adopted as the SSR's official anthem in the early 1950s until 1956 when it was re-absorbed into the Russian SFSR. Along with the Georgian and Estonian SSR anthems, it was one of the only three Soviet republic anthems that did not mention the Russian people.