Ant etkenmen
English: I Have Promised | |
---|---|
anthem of Crimean Tatars | |
Lyrics | Noman Çelebicihan, 1917 |
Adopted | 1991 |
Ant etkenmen (English: I Have Promised) is the national anthem of the Crimean Tatars. It was written in 1917 by Noman Çelebicihan and served as the national anthem of the short-lived Crimean People's Republic.[1]
Lyrics
Latin script | Yañalif (original orthography) | Cyrillic script | Arabic script (historical) | English translation |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ant etkenmen, milletimniñ yarasını sarmağa | Ant etkenmen, milletimiᶇ jarasьnь sarmaƣa | Ант эткенмен, миллетимнинъ йарасыны сармагъа | انت ەتكەنمەن، مىللەتىمنىﯓ ياراسىنى سارماﻍا | I've promised to heal the wounds of my nation, |
Original lyrics by Noman Çelebicihan
Latin script | Yañalif (original orthography) | Cyrillic script | Arabic script (historical)[3] | English translation |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ant etkenmen, tatarlarnıñ yarasını sarmağa, | Ant etkenmen, tatarlarnьᶇ jarasьnь sarmaƣa, | Ант эткенмен, татарларнынъ йарасыны сармагъа, | آند اتكەمەن تاتارلارك ياراسنى صارماغا، | I've promised to heal the wounds of Tatar nation, |
See also
- Ey Güzel Kırım, a famous Crimean folk song
- Hymn of Crimea, official anthem of Crimea
References
- ^ Williams, Brian Glyn (2001). The Crimean Tatars: The Diaspora Experience and the Forging of a Nation. BRILL. p. 344. ISBN 978-90-04-12122-5.
- ^ Milli Marşımız – ANT ETKENMEN Archived 2017-04-24 at the Wayback Machine vatankirim.net
- ^ "Numan Çelebicihanin «Ant etkenmen» kirimtatar milli marşi'nin incelemesi". avdet.org (in Russian). 2020-02-25. Retrieved 2024-07-19.
- v
- t
- e
- Austria (then Austria-Hungary, 1797–1918)
- Austria (1920–29)
- Austria (1929–38)
- Baden (1865–71)
- Bosnia and Herzegovina (1992–98)
- Bulgaria (1885–1947)
- Bulgaria (1947–51)
- Bulgaria (1951–64)
- Czechoslovakia (1918–92)
- Danzig (1920–39)
- France (1590–1792)
- France (1804–14, 1815)
- France (1814–15, 1815–30)
- France (1830–48)
- France (1848–52)
- France (1852–70)
- Germany (1871–1918)
- Germany (1933–45)
- East Germany (1949–90)
- West Germany (1949–52)
- Italy (1861–1946)
- Italy (1943–1945)
- Montenegro (1870—1918)
- Netherlands (1815–1932)
- Norway (1782–1820)
- Norway (1820–64)
- Ottoman Empire 1829–1923
- Papal States (then Vatican City, 1857–1949)
- Portugal (1809–1834)
- Portugal (1834–1910)
- Prussia (1830–40)
- Romania (1862–1884)
- Romania (1884–1948)
- Romania (1948–53)
- Romania (1953–75)
- Romania (1975–77)
- Romania (1977–90)
- San Marino (to 1894)
- Sardinia (1830s–61)
- Slovakia (1939–45)
- Slovenia (1919–89)
- Spain (1931–39)
- Switzerland (1848–1961)
- Two Sicilies (1815–61)
- Württemberg (1806–71)
- Yugoslavia (1919–41)
- Yugoslavia (then Serbia and Montenegro, 1945–2006)
Former Russian Empire, the Soviet Union or their successor states |
|
---|