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The "Deutschlandlied ", [a] ... was a federation of 35 monarchical states and four republican free cities, ... made the "Deutschlandlied" the official German national ...
English: German anthem "Deutschlandlied" - Weimar Republic and Nazi Germany anthem (Part 1) The "Deutschlandlied", officially titled "Das Lied der Deutschen" ("The Song of the Germans"), or part of it, has been the national anthem of Germany since 1922.
"For Danzig" was the official anthem of the Free City of ... the concurrent annexation of Danzig by Nazi Germany in 1939, "Deutschlandlied" was adopted as the ...
The song's music video was directed by Specter Berlin and was released on 28 March 2019 at 18:00 CET, [3] following a 35-second teaser trailer on 26 March. [4] The lengthy music video sparked controversy; its dark, violent, and macabre style—typical of the band's aesthetic—features various events from German history, [5] [6] including Roman times, the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest, the ...
Memel, East Prussia, Germany, now Klaipėda, Lithuania Memelburg, (Klaipėda Castle), the Ordensburg in Memel, a castle built in 1252 by Teutonic Knights which was the nucleus for the city; Memel Territory (Klaipėda Region), (Memelland), the area separated from Germany by the Treaty of Versailles, later called Klaipėda Region
At the end of its last broadcast on 2 October 1990, the East German international radio broadcaster Radio Berlin International signed off with a vocal version of the East German national anthem. [8] In November 1995, "Auferstanden aus Ruinen" was played by mistake when German President Roman Herzog visited Brazil. This was the first event at ...
" O Deutschland hoch in Ehren" is a patriotic German song written by Ludwig Bauer (1832–1910) in 1859 and set to music by Henry Hugh Pierson. The song was, besides the "Deutschlandlied", "Die Wacht am Rhein" and "Des Deutschen Vaterland", the most popular patriotic anthem in the 19th century.
The Hymne an Deutschland (Hymn to Germany) is a patriotic song which the then-president of West Germany, Theodor Heuss, aspired to establish as the new national anthem of Germany. [1] During the early 1950s prior to the adoption of "Deutschlandlied" by West Germany, it acted as a sort of de facto national anthem of the nascent state. [2]