Deutschland über alles [Very rare 1912 version of German anthem] (full version)
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- Опубликовано: 18 сен 2024
- -History:
Deutschland über alles is a song with a very well known melody wich has been used many times throughout history for different songs like Gott Erhalte Gott Beschütze or Got save the king. The melody itself is very old aswell dating back to the 18th century. The Deutschland über alles version however, was written by 'August Heinrich Hoffmann von Fallersleben' in 1841 on the island of Heligoland. August wrote the song to bolster nationalism for German unification. Germany at that time wasn't a fully unified nation yet but consisted of many German kingdoms and duchies, wich were only unified by the German confederation, wich was to say it very simple a alliance for cooperation between various German nations. This confederation was created as somewhat of a replacer for the Holy Roman Empire, wich was disbanded by the Austrian Empire during the disasterous Napoleonic wars. Later on through a series of army vistories by the Prussian state, the German Empire was declared in 1971 with Berlin as it's capital. All major former German kingdoms (mostly the southern ones) kept some form of autonomyand the royals wich ruled these kingdoms before unification, were allowed to stay in place until the end of ww1 where the German empire was thrown into chaos, wich is a whole other story of itself.
-The coat of arms and maps used in the video:
I used to coat of arms of the German confederation used from 1848 to 1871 to represent the political situation of Germany when the song was written. Later on I used the German empire map and coat of Arms to represent German unification, wich was one of the main drivers for this song to be made and to represent the period in wich this record was recorded.
#germany #deutschland #anthem #history #rarerecords
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-The record:
Deutschland über alles / Hollandia-Parlophon-Records
August Heinrich Hoffmann von Fallersleben / 13688
Performed by: Kapellmeister F. Kark
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-Disclaimer:
This song is not made by me! I simply record vinyl records, upload them on youtube and tell a bit of history.
I do not promote any type of idiology, hate or anything of the sort. This video is made to educate people about history through old music.
Be sure to check out our discord if you like history: discord.gg/v6AMQKb73j
You can find the cut version with only the lyrical part here: ruclips.net/video/_8896iyhidw/видео.html
Above Everything!
But not above signing capitulations in both world wars
@@Булат-к1э So would you rather kill your people completely?
@@Булат-к1э yep. Still most powerful single nation in both of them
More like under everything
Mögest du in Frieden ruhen im Herzen Gottes, lieber Kaiser Wilhelm!
Wow, so cool! That they sung this in Imperial Germany before WWI. 🇩🇪 🇩🇪 🇩🇪
The anthem was created in 1841 so naturally they sung it before WW1
epic!
The banners dance to the anthems beautiful hymm.
Nice
Good music!
1:02
I'm a little confused with the disclaimer at the beginning, the German empire was nothing like the nazis and didn't commit genocide to slavs and jews, infact, the German empire was relatively calm compared to what the British empire did tbh
Some people (including youtube) dont seem to understand that. And the german empire committed its own share of atrocities in europe and its colonies
Fun fact, the English have a prodestant hymn by William cowper penned in 1773 that sounds exactly the same as this when played on Organ, in 1936 von Ribbon was on a state visit in Durham cathedral where they began to play this hymn where he Automatically raised his right arm in a salute which had to quickly restrained back down. I believe the Austrians have a similar sounding hymn aswell..
RARE Version!
What is the name of this melody that is played in most old German marches and songs? 0:00 - 0:26
I was only able to recognize "heil dir Im siegerkranz". I hope it helps
@@alejandro_509 I think about it too, but this melody too have Preußenlied and Preußen Gloria, it made me curious about how much this melody meant to the Germans in those years
The first part is just the beginning of the Prussian Anthem at that time, which contains a section of "Heil dir im Siegerkranz", the second part is called the Prussian Lockmarsch, where it is played as an "introduction" before a march (usually Prussian) is played. Sometimes they still do that in the present, it just symbolizes that a march is about to be played.
@@redactedgaming2807You sir, are the nerd that we need in comment sections. 🫡
@@Duckcalculator I've asked the same question before, it's great to know more about these historical marches in Germany!
Dutchland uber alles