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- Polish_national_songs abstract "This is a list of Polish national and patriotic songs. Bogurodzica (Mother of God) A religious hymn to the Virgin Mary dating back to between 10th and 13th centuries. It was a de facto national anthem of medieval Poland, sung at royal coronations and on battlefields, including the Battle of Grunwald in 1410 and the Battle of Varna in 1444. Boże, coś Polskę (God Save Poland) Originally written in 1816 by Alojzy Feliński as Pieśń narodowa na pomyślność Króla (National Song to the King's Well-being). It was the official anthem of the Congress Kingdom of Poland reigned over by Russian emperors who were ex officio kings of Poland. Initially unpopular, it evolved in the early 1860s into an important religious and patriotic hymn. The final verse, which originally begged \"Save, Oh Lord, our King\", was substituted with \"Return us, Oh Lord, our free Fatherland\" while the melody was replaced with that of a Marian hymn. The resulting modern version has been sung in Polish churches ever since, with the final verse alternating between \"Return...\" and \"Bless, Oh Lord, our free Fatherland\", depending on Poland's political situation. Czerwone maki na Monte Cassino (Red Poppies on Monte Cassino) A military song written by Feliks Konarski and composed by Alfred Schultz in 1944 to commemorate Polish soldiers fallen in the Battle of Monte Cassino earlier that year. Daj nam Boże doczekać tej pory, by do ataku nachylić propory (Let Us, O God, Live to Lower Our Pennons for Attack) Soldiers' song which originated in Prince Józef Poniatowski's division and gained some popularity at the end of the 18th century. Gaude Mater Polonia (Rejoice, Mother Poland) A hymn written in the 13th century by Wincenty of Kielcza. It was penned in Medieval Latin to the melody of a Gregorian chant, O salutaris Hostia. The hymn celebrates the canonization of Saint Stanislaus of Szczepanów, bishop of Kraków and patron saint of Poland. In the Middle Ages, it was chanted on special occasions and after victorious battles. Today, it is performed at university ceremonies. Gdy naród do boju (When the Nation Fights) A patriotic socialist song written in 1835 by Gustaw Ehrenberg to the melody of an aria from Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's opera Don Juan. The lyrics denounce the loyalist attitude of Polish magnates, noblemen and clergy during the failed November Uprising of 1830. The song was popular with members of Polish socialist and agrarian movements and became an anthem of the Polish People's Army during World War II. Hymn do miłości Ojczyzny (O Sacred Love of the Beloved Country) Written in 1774 by Prince-Bishop Ignacy Krasicki for King Stanisław August Poniatowski's Corps of Cadets, it became in the latter's reign an unofficial national anthem of Poland. The lyrics convey the idea that love of Country gives meaning to poverty, wounds and death. Marsz Pierwszej Brygady (March of the First Brigade) Soldiers' song written in 1917 by Andrzej Hałaciński and Tadeusz Biernacki to the melody of Marsz Kielecki (Kielce March) composed by Andrzej Brzuchal-Sikorski in 1905. It was originally sung by soldiers of the First Brigade of the Polish Legions commanded by Józef Piłsudski during World War I. During Piłsudski's military dictatorship following the coup of May 1926, the song was an unofficial national anthem of Poland. In 2007, it became the official anthem of the Polish Armed Forces. Mazurek Dąbrowskiego (Dąbrowski's Mazurka, or Poland Is Not Yet Lost) Soldiers' song written in 1797 by Gen. Józef Wybicki in praise of Gen. Jan Henryk Dąbrowski, commander of the Polish Legions serving in Italy under Napoleon Bonaparte. In 1926 it became the official national anthem of Poland. Morze, nasze morze (The Sea, Our Sea) Written at the turn of the 1930s by Adam Kowalski to praise the sailors of Poland's nascent navy and to celebrate the construction of Gdynia, a new port city on the Baltic Sea. It is now the official anthem of the Polish Navy. Mury (Walls) A revolutionary song written in 1978 by Jacek Kaczmarski to the melody of Lluís Llach's Catalan song L'Estaca. It became an unofficial anthem of the Solidarity movement in the 1980s. Warszawianka (The Song of Warsaw, 1831) Originally written in 1831 by Casimir Delavigne in French as La Varsovienne, with melody composed by Karol Kurpiński. The song praised the November Uprising of 1830 and, translated into Polish by Karol Sienkiewicz, it became the most popular song of the uprising and is still performed by Polish military bands today. Warszawianka (The Song of Warsaw, 1905) A revolutionary song written in 1879 by socialist Wacław Święcicki imprisoned in the Warsaw Citadel. First sung in the streets of Warsaw in 1885, it became particularly popular during the Revolution of 1905. Its popularity spread to Russia proper and from there to Germany, France and Spain, where it became known as A las barricadas (To the Barricades), the anarchist anthem of the Spanish Civil War.Rota (The oath) (1908)Great anthem against German oppresion and policy of germanisation, written by Maria Konopnicka, music composed 1910 by Feliks Nowowiejski, first publicly sung during patriotic demonstration July 15, 1910, in Kraków on 500'th anniversary of Polish victory in Battle of Grunwald. Special modified version of Rota has been prepared against Soviet Union after WWII when Poland became dependent.".
- Polish_national_songs thumbnail Bogurodzica_rekopis1407.png?width=300.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageID "22124164".
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageLength "6375".
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageOutDegree "75".
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageRevisionID "550442327".
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink 1st_Brigade,_Polish_Legions.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink A_las_Barricadas.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Alfred_Schultz.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Alojzy_Feliński.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Archbishop_of_Kraków.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Armia_Ludowa.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Baltic_Sea.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Grunwald.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Monte_Cassino.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Varna.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Bogurodzica.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Boże,_coś_Polskę.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Casimir_Delavigne.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Catalonia.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Category:Polish_patriotic_songs.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Congress_Poland.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Corps_of_Cadets_(Warsaw).
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Daj_nam_Boże_doczekać_tej_pory,_by_do_ataku_nachylić_propory.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Don_Juan.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Feliks_Konarski.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Feliks_Nowowiejski.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Gaude_Mater_Polonia.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Gdy_naród_do_boju.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Gdynia.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Gregorian_chant.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Gustaw_Ehrenberg.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Hymn.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Ignacy_Krasicki.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Italy.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Jacek_Kaczmarski.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Jan_Henryk_Dąbrowski.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Józef_Piłsudski.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Józef_Poniatowski.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Józef_Wybicki.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Karol_Kurpiński.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Karol_Sienkiewicz.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Kielce.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Kraków.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink LEstaca.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink List_of_bishops_of_Warmia.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Lluís_Llach.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Maria_Konopnicka.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Mary_(mother_of_Jesus).
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink May_Coup_(Poland).
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Medieval_Latin.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Morze,_nasze_morze.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Mury_(song).
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Napoleon.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink National_anthem.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink November_Uprising.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink O_Sacred_Love_of_the_Beloved_Country.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Poland_Is_Not_Yet_Lost.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Polish_Armed_Forces.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Polish_Legions_(Napoleonic_period).
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Polish_Legions_in_World_War_I.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Polish_Navy.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Revolution_of_1905.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Rota_(poem).
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Solidarity_(Polish_trade_union).
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Spanish_Civil_War.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Stanislaus_of_Szczepanów.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Stanisław_August_Poniatowski.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink The_Red_Poppies_on_Monte_Cassino.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Wacław_Święcicki.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Warsaw_Citadel.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Warszawianka_(1831).
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Warszawianka_(1905).
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink We_Are_the_First_Brigade.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Wincenty_of_Kielcza.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink Wolfgang_Amadeus_Mozart.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink World_War_I.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink World_War_II.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLink File:Bogurodzica_rekopis1407.png.
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLinkText "Patriotic songs".
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLinkText "Pieśń narodowa za pomyślność króla".
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLinkText "Poland's national anthems".
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLinkText "Polish national anthems".
- Polish_national_songs wikiPageWikiLinkText "Polish national songs".
- Polish_national_songs subject Category:Polish_patriotic_songs.
- Polish_national_songs hypernym List.
- Polish_national_songs comment "This is a list of Polish national and patriotic songs. Bogurodzica (Mother of God) A religious hymn to the Virgin Mary dating back to between 10th and 13th centuries. It was a de facto national anthem of medieval Poland, sung at royal coronations and on battlefields, including the Battle of Grunwald in 1410 and the Battle of Varna in 1444.".
- Polish_national_songs label "Polish national songs".
- Polish_national_songs sameAs Q11042425.
- Polish_national_songs sameAs Polskie_pieśni_hymniczne.
- Polish_national_songs sameAs m.07k5n9r.
- Polish_national_songs sameAs เพลงประจำชาติโปแลนด์.
- Polish_national_songs sameAs Польські_національні_пісні.
- Polish_national_songs sameAs Q11042425.
- Polish_national_songs wasDerivedFrom Polish_national_songs?oldid=550442327.
- Polish_national_songs depiction Bogurodzica_rekopis1407.png.
- Polish_national_songs isPrimaryTopicOf Polish_national_songs.