Tautiška giesmė

Tautiška giesmė
English: 'National Song'

National anthem of Lithuania
Former anthem of the Lithuanian SSR (occupied by the Soviet Union)
Also known as„Lietuva, Tėvyne mūsų“ (English: 'Lithuania, Our Homeland')
Lietuvos himnas (English: 'Anthem of Lithuania')
LyricsVincas Kudirka, November 13, 1898
MusicVincas Kudirka, 1898
Published1899
Adopted1919 (1919)
1944 (1944) (by the Lithuanian SSR)
Readopted1988 (1988)
Relinquished1940 (1940)
1950 (1950) (by the Lithuanian SSR)
Audio sample
U.S. Navy Band instrumental version
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"Tautiška giesmė" (pronounced [ˈtˠɐʊtʲɪʃˠkɐ ɡʲɪɛsʲˈmʲeː]; 'National Song') or "Lietuvos himnas"[1] ('Anthem of Lithuania'), also known by its incipit "Lietuva, Tėvyne mūsų"[2][a] ('Lithuania, Our Homeland'),[4] is the national anthem of Lithuania. The music and lyrics were written in 1898 by Vincas Kudirka, when Lithuania was still part of the Russian Empire. The fifty-word poem was a condensation of Kudirka's conceptions of the Lithuanian state, the Lithuanian people, and their past. Shortly before his death in 1899, the anthem was performed for Lithuanians living in Saint Petersburg, Russia.

The first public Lithuanian performance of the anthem took place in Vilnius in 1905, and it became the official national anthem in 1919, a year after Lithuania declared its independence.

"Tautiška giesmė" was reinstated in 1989 shortly before the reestablishment of Lithuanian independence and confirmed in the National Anthem Act of October 21, 1991. It was automatically included as the national anthem in 1992, when the new Constitution was ratified after independence from the Soviet Union was achieved. The status of "Tautiška giesmė" as the national anthem of Lithuania was further confirmed in 1999 with the passage of a national law stating this.

  1. ^ "Lietuvos audiovizualinio kultūros paveldo Išsaugojimo ir prieigos sistemos analizė ir plėtros rekomendacijos" (PDF). Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Lithuania. December 16, 2020. p. 80. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
  2. ^ ""Lietuva, Tėvyne mūsų…"– nuaidėjo per Pamario kraštą". Pamarys (in Lithuanian). July 10, 2020. Retrieved April 27, 2022.
  3. ^ Turner, B. (January 12, 2017). The Statesman's Yearbook 2011: The Politics, Cultures and Economies of the World. Springer. p. 801. ISBN 978-1-349-58635-6.
  4. ^ Cite error: The named reference transl was invoked but never defined (see the help page).


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