The Swiss Psalm (German: Schweizerpsalm [ˈʃvaɪtsərˌpsalm] ;[a] French: Cantique suisse [kɑ̃tik sɥis]; Italian: Salmo svizzero [ˈsalmo ˈzvittsero]; Romansh: Psalm Svizzer [ˈ(p)salm ˈʒviːtser]) is the national anthem of Switzerland.
English: Swiss Psalm | |
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National anthem of Switzerland | |
Also known as | "Trittst im Morgenrot daher..." (English: "Appearing at Dawn...") |
Lyrics | Leonhard Widmer (German) Charles Chatelanat (French) Camillo Valsangiacomo (Italian) Flurin Camathias (Romansch), 1840 |
Music | Alberich Zwyssig, 1835, 1841 |
Adopted | 1961 (de facto) 1981 (de jure) |
Preceded by | "Rufst du, mein Vaterland" |
Audio sample | |
Official instrumental (one stanza) |
It was composed in 1841, by Alberich Zwyssig (1808–1854). Since then, it has been frequently sung at patriotic events. The Federal Council declined, however, on numerous occasions to accept the psalm as the official anthem.[1] This was because the council wanted the people to express their say on what they wanted as a national anthem. From 1961 to 1981, it provisionally replaced "Rufst du, mein Vaterland" ("When You Call, My Country"; French "Ô monts indépendants"; Italian "Ci chiami o patria", Romansh "E clomas, tger paeis"), the anthem by Johann Rudolf Wyss (1743–1818) that was set to the melody of "God Save the King". On 1 April 1981, the Swiss Psalm was declared the official Swiss national anthem.
In 2014, the Schweizerische Gemeinnützige Gesellschaft organized a public competition and unofficial vote to change the lyrics of the national anthem.[2]
History
editThe German-language patriotic song "Rufst du, mein Vaterland" (French "Ô monts indépendants", Italian "Ci chiami o patria", Romansh "E clomas, tger paeis"), composed in 1811 by Johann Rudolf Wyss (1743–1818), was used as the de facto national anthem from about 1850. The setting of the hymn to the British tune of "God Save the King" led to confusing situations when both countries' anthems were played. Therefore, it was replaced with another tune in 1961.
The Swiss Psalm was composed in 1841 by Alberich Zwyssig (1808–1854). Zwyssig used a tune he had composed in 1835 and slightly altered the words of a poem written in 1840 by Leonhard Widmer (1809–1867).[3]
In the second half of the 19th century, the song became popular and was frequently sung at patriotic celebrations. Between 1894 and 1953, there were repeated suggestions for it to be adopted as official national anthem. In this, it was in competition with "Rufst du, mein Vaterland", a patriotic song that was widely seen as the de facto national anthem but was never given official status.
The Swiss Psalm temporarily became the national anthem in 1961. After a trial period of three years, the Swiss tune was adopted indefinitely in 1965. The statute could not be challenged until ten years later but did not totally exclude the possibility of an ultimate change. A competition was set up in 1979 to search for a successor to the anthem. Despite many submissions, none of the others seemed to express the Swiss sentiment. The Swiss anthem finally got its definitive statutory status in April 1981, the Federal Council maintaining that it was purely a Swiss song suitably dignified and solemn. The popularity of the song has not been established. At least, it has been shown with several vox pops taken that many people do not know it at all, and only a small percentage can recite it all.[citation needed]
Lyrics
editBecause Switzerland has four national languages, the lyrics of the original German song were adapted into the other three national languages: French, Italian and Romansh.
German original[4] | French lyrics[5] | Italian lyrics[6] | Romansh lyrics[7] |
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I |
I |
I |
I |
English translations
editGerman lyrics | French lyrics | Italian lyrics | Romansh lyrics |
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I |
I |
I |
I |
IPA transcriptions
editGerman IPA[b] | French IPA[c] | Italian IPA[d] |
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[trɪt͡st ɪm ˈmɔrɡn̩ˌroːt daˈheːr] |
[syʁ no mɔ̃ kɑ̃ lə sɔ.lɛj] |
[ˈkwan.do ˈbjon.d‿au̯ˈrɔːra] |
Proposals for a new anthem or new lyrics
edit- 1986: "Roulez tambours!" ("Roll the drums!") by Henri-Frédéric Amiel was proposed by the Swiss National Alliance.[8]
- Late 1990s: the Fondation Pro CH 98 tried to promote a new anthem composed by the Argovian Christian Daniel Jakob.[8]
- 2014: the Société suisse d'utilité publique started a public competition to find new lyrics for the national anthem.[9] The instruction was to take inspiration from the preamble of the Federal Constitution of Switzerland. The jury received 208 proposals; it selected six of them and translated them in the four national languages of Switzerland. In March 2015, the six selected proposals were released on-line (with videos in four languages) and opened to public vote (until May 2015). The top three vote-getters were selected for a second on-line ballot between June and August. In September 2015, a televised final selected one set of lyrics. Finally, the Société suisse d'utilité publique will propose the winning lyrics to the federal authorities. As soon as the new hymn text is known enough, the Swiss Parliament and the electorate will be asked to determine it. As of 2017, the new lyrics have not been officially adopted. A version of the winning lyrics was also made by combining the four national languages of Switzerland.[9] As 500,000 Swiss abroad and residents in Switzerland are native English speakers, the new hymn text has been translated not only into the four official Swiss languages but also into English. More information and the scores of the hymn can be found at: [1].
Notes
edit- ^ Also known by the opening line "Trittst im Morgenrot daher...".
- ^ See Help:IPA/German, German phonology and Swiss German.
- ^ See Help:IPA/French, French phonology and Swiss French.
- ^ See Help:IPA/Italian, Italian phonology and Swiss Italian.
References
edit- ^ "Switzerland – Swiss Psalm". NationalAnthems.me. Retrieved 25 November 2011.
- ^ "Swiss to launch national anthem competition in 2014". BBC News. 2 August 2013.
- ^ (in German, English, French, and Italian) How a church hymn tune became a national anthem Archived 5 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine article at Admin.ch retrieved on 21 June 2009.
- ^ Schweizer Landeshymne (Schweizerpsalm), admin.ch
- ^ Hymne national suisse (Cantique suisse), admin.ch
- ^ Inno nazionale svizzero (Salmo svizzero), admin.ch
- ^ Imni naziunal svizzer (psalm svizzer), admin.ch
- ^ a b swissinfo.ch, S. W. I.; Corporation, a branch of the Swiss Broadcasting (21 July 2005). "L'hymne suisse entre émotion et exaspération". SWI swissinfo.ch (in French). Retrieved 15 May 2020.
- ^ a b "Über 200 Persönlichkeiten wünschen neuen Hymnentext", sgg-ssup.ch, accessed 7 July 2018 (in German)
External links
edit- Landeshymne in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.