Muñagorriren bertsoak (Basque for 'Muñagorri's bertsos') are a set of written bertsos (extemporaneous poems in Basque) written and published in Gipuzkoa (Basque Country, Spain) in 1838 during the last stage of the First Carlist War. During the war various bertso leaflets were published, promoting various factions, with some enjoying wide circulation and influence over public opinion across Basque language areas, the main Carlist stronghold.[1]
The Muñagorri bertsos were issued by José Antonio Muñagorri's faction with the aim of creating a split within Carlos de Borbón's supporters and putting an end to the war, in exchange for keeping a reduced version of home rule in the Basque Country (peace and fueros). Muñagorri's influence on the ground was small, but his talks with the liberals in Madrid paved the way to the Embrace of Bergara (1839).[1]
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While the whole version extends longer, the reduced, most widely known version is made up of six stanzas, and popularized in modern times by singer-songwriter Benito Lertxundi.[2]
Original in Basque | English translation | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Muñagorrik diona |
Carlos agertu ezkero |
Kordoiz inguraturik |
As told by Muñagorri |
Since Carlos showed up |
Chords bind us |
Agintari onenak |
Semiak soldadu ta |
Atiak itxi eta |
The best rulers |
Our sons drafted |
Doors are closed |
*Top to bottom, left to right
References
edit- ^ a b c Zavala, Antonio (1992). Karlisten leenengo gerrateko bertsoak (in Basque). Tolosa: Auspoa. pp. 328–354. ISBN 84-7158-159-0. OCLC 954495334.
- ^ "Muñagorrik diona". BDB Bertsolaritzaren datu-basea. Retrieved 28 April 2022.