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Treceți, batalioane române, Carpații

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"Treceți, batalioane române, Carpații" (transl. "Cross, Romanian battalions, the Carpathians") is a Romanian patriotic song. It is thought to have been composed in 1916, shortly before Romania's entry into World War I, although its first historical apparition occurred in February 1919, when members of the Romanian Legion of Transylvanian–Bukovinian Volunteers were recorded singing a version of the song. The original version (with 3 stanzas) is about how Romanian soldiers say goodbye to their families and go to Transylvania to fight against the Austro-Hungarian Empire for the unification of the region with the Kingdom of Romania.[1][2]

The song was later "revived" in the 1970s and 1980s, when Adrian Păunescu and other poets added more stanzas and made the song part of the repertory of the spectacles of Cenaclul Flacăra, an artistic and cultural movement of the time.[3] This ended up making the song more popular during the communist period.[1]

There is a theory that the author was possibly Iosif Romulus Botto [ro], who composed around 30 other choirs and fanfares about Transylvania and Banat during the interwar period.[4] However, he was only 12 in the year 1916, making it unlikely if the song was indeed composed at that time.[5]

This song is similar to "Szara piechota [pl]" ("Gray uniformed infantry"), a Polish patriotic song reportedly from either 1918 or 1927.[5]

Lyrics

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The lyrics are as follows:[1]

Original version (World War I)

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Cenaclul Flacăra version (1970s–1980s)

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Dumbauld, Benjamin (2017). "Spectacular politics and everyday performance: tracing music from Ceaușescu's Romania to multicultural America". CUNY Academic Works.
  2. ^ Ghișa, Simion (2009). Luptele românilor cu bolșevicii în Siberia: 1918-1920 (in Romanian). Editura Marist. pp. 1–295. ISBN 9789738935709.
  3. ^ Contescu, Daniel (December 1, 2021). "Istoria necenzurată a cântecului care a înmuiat inima dictatorului Nicolae Ceaușescu. "Treceți, batalioane române, Carpații", socotit imnul Armatei Române, este oful familiei Păunescu" (in Romanian). Mediafax. Retrieved December 2, 2021.
  4. ^ Grancea, Mihaela (2014). "Imnul, componentă a naționalismului ca "religie a suferinței"". Studia Universitatis Cibiniensis. Series Historica (in Romanian). 11: 127–139.
  5. ^ a b Curtifan, Tudor (19 April 2018). ""Treceți batalioane române Carpații", istoria uitată a celebrului cântec". DCnews (in Romanian).
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