Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Later, during World War II, it resurged in popularity among anti-fascist partisan fighters, most prominently among Yugoslav and Soviet partisans. [citation needed] The song entered the official canon of Soviet songs when the director of the Red Army choir Aleksandr Aleksandrov, together with the poet Sergei Alymov , introduced the song into the ...
O, land of Karelia! O, country ancient and wise, One family of brother-nations, Karelia! Ring, O lakes! And sing, O taiga! Thou art to me dear, O native land. High on thy mountains I stand And a song to thy glory I chant. II O, land of Karelia! Forever by fate thou art given to me. Through centuries live long, my country, Karelia!
The "Chant des Partisans" ([ʃɑ̃ de paʁ.ti.zɑ̃]; "Song of the Partisans") was the most popular song of the Free French and French Resistance during World War II. [1] [2] The piece was written and put to melody in London in 1943 after Anna Marly heard a Russian song, namely Po dolinam i po vzgoriam, that provided her with inspiration.
Partisan Song or Partisan's Song may refer to: Partizaner lid (disambiguation), Yiddish World War II songs; Chant des Partisans, French World War II song;
Karelia's forever a part of it. Our glee's to follow the great fatherland To glorious victories. II Kaleva's fatherland, the runes' native land, Now led by the banner of Lenin and Stalin. The light of the fraternal folks' star shines Over our industrious and merry people. Chorus III The labour of our folks revived our homeland,
12 stringed Karelian kantele in the National Museum of the Republic of Karelia. Traditional music of Karelia is a form of music performed among Karelian people. It has been less influenced by Germanic elements than traditional Finnish music, which is why many Finnish musicians and other creators have used it as source of inspiration.
Karjalan kunnailla (Karelian: Karjalan kumbuzil), lit. ' On the Hills of Karelia ', is a Finnish folk song.Lyrics were created by Valter Juva [fi; it; fr] in 1902. Karelian Iivo Härkönen [fi; olo; ca; ru] also published an early Karelianist adaptation of Juva's original Finnish lyrics in the Livvi-Karelian language of East Karelia.
Soviet partisans were members of resistance movements that fought a guerrilla war against Axis forces during World War II in the Soviet Union, the previously Soviet-occupied territories of interwar Poland in 1941–45 and eastern Finland. The activity emerged after Nazi Germany's Operation Barbarossa was launched from mid-1941 on.