Ditlev (or Ditlef) Ludvig Rogert (1742–1813) was a Danish songwriter who is credited with composing the music for Denmark's royal anthem "Kong Kristian stod ved højen mast". He was also a High Court judge and violinist.
The lyrics to the anthem first appeared in May 1778,[1] in Johannes Ewald's vaudeville play, The Fishermen. It has long been debated who composed the music to the song. It was originally accredited to Johann Hartmann, the same composer who wrote the score for The Fishermen; however his original romantic score for the vaudeville was entirely different from the score commonly used today.[2] Following the dismissal of the possibility that Hartmann could have composed the score, it was suggested that Rogert had been the original composer, a claim that was backed up by several 19th century intellectuals. In 1880, Vilhelm Carl Ravn presented his theory that the score significantly preceded Ewald's poem and had no one particular composer. This is the most commonly supported theory today.[citation needed] The song was adopted as a national anthem in 1780.
References
edit- ^ "Tekstens historie og den tidligste melodi". Royal Danish Library. Archived from the original on 2010-04-10. Retrieved 2008-08-20.
- ^ "Spørgsmålet om komponisten". Royal Danish Library. Archived from the original on 2010-04-15. Retrieved 2008-08-20.