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Revision as of 23:00, 27 January 2021
Mendi haujetan jaio ginen | |
National anthem of Lemovicia | |
Lyrics | Amiczis Mikolajewski, 1891 |
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Music | Amiczis Mikolajewski, 1891 |
Adopted | 1979 |
Mendi haujetan jaio ginen (meaning We were born in these mountains) is the national anthem of Lemovicia, adopted upon its declaration of independence from West Miersa following the outbreak of the Miersan War between West Miersa and East Miersa.
Written and composed by Amiczis Mikolajewski in 1891, it quickly became the national song of the Lemovician people, to such a point that the song faced several bans, first by the Soravian government in 1909, and by the West Miersan government in 1936, due to their close associations with Lemovician nationalism. However, its use among Lemovicians meant that upon Lemovicia's independence, Mendi haujetan jaio ginen became the national anthem of the country.
History
The song was first written and composed in 1891 by Amiczis Mikolajewski to commemorate the 400th anniversary of the partition of the Lordship of Lemovicia between the Miersan Commonwealth and the Unio Trium Nationum, and as a protest against continued Soravian rule over Malomiersa (which is today split between West Miersa and Lemovicia). The melody was, according to Mikolajewski, meant to represent "innocence, suffering, and hope, in that order," with the hope that one day, Lemovicia would become "part of the Euclean order of nations along our fellow kith and kin within the Soravian state."
The song quickly became popular among Lemovician nationalists, which led to the song being banned in the aftermath of the 1909 Miersan revolt, due to its use in an abortive uprising in Malomiersa by Lemovician nationalists. Despite the ban, it continued to be widely used among Lemovician nationalists, including during the 1936 Miersan general strike which forced Soravia to give independence to Miersa. However, Lemovicia fell under West Miersan control, with the west instituting policies of Miersanisation against the Lemovician population, and banning traditional Lemovician symbols, including Mendi haujetan jaio ginen.
By the 1970s, the song became popular among Lemovicians to such a degree that many Lemovician organisations, such as the Lemovician Nationalist Party, the Lemovician Cultural Alliance, and the Lemovician Section of the Workers' International used the anthem. Thus, when Lemovicia proclaimed its independence in 1979, Mendi haujetan jaio ginen fell into use as the national anthem of Lemovicia.
Lyrics
Lemovician | Estmerish |
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First verse | |
Mendi haujetan jaio ginen |
We were born in these mountains |
Second verse | |
Laurehun urte, sufritu genuen |
For four hundred years, we suffered |
Third verse | |
Orain garaile ateracen gara |
Now we emerge triumphant |