Pu Tian Yue

The Pu Tian Yue (Chinese: 普天乐, Chinese: 普天樂, Chinese: pǔ tiān yuè) is considered the first national anthem of China, though it was not approved officially by the Qing Dynasty's government.

History

In 1878, (the 4th year of Guangxu), Zeng Jize (曾纪泽) had a diplomatic visit to Great Britain and France; he was appointed Ambassador to Russia two years later. At an international convention, a national song was needed, so he wrote the song Pu Tian Yue to the tune 词牌.

This song was not officially approved by the Qing Dynasty, but is widely recognized as the National Song of China in other countries.

The only known versions are from a version played by the Victor Military Band, translated as "The World's Delight," recorded in Camden, New Jersey on 9/18/1914.[1]

Lyrics

The lyrics seem to have disappeared, although the youtuber Ying Yang Mapper managed to find a fraction of the song:

Chinese

一统旧江山,
亚细亚文明古国四千年,
最可叹:,
犹太、印度与波兰,
亡国恨,
谈之心寒……

Hanyu Pinyin

Yītǒng jiù jiāngshān,
Yàxìyà wénmíng gǔguó sìqiān nián!
Zuì kě tàn:
Yóutài, yìndù yǔ bōlán,
Wángguó hèn,
Tán zhī xīnhán……

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.