Kde domov můj (pronounced ⓘ; English: Where My Home Is) is the national anthem of the Czech Republic, written by the composer František Škroup and the playwright Josef Kajetán Tyl.
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English: Where My Home Is | |
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National anthem of the Czech Republic Former co-national anthem of Czechoslovakia | |
Lyrics | Josef Kajetán Tyl, 1834 |
Music | František Škroup, 1834 |
Adopted | 1918 |
Readopted | 1990 |
Audio sample | |
2008 official orchestral and vocal recording by the Prague National Theatre Orchestra and Choir |
The piece was written as a part of the incidental music to the comedy Fidlovačka aneb Žádný hněv a žádná rvačka (Fidlovačka, or No Anger and No Brawl). It was first performed by Karel Strakatý at the Estates Theatre in Prague on 21 December 1834. The original song consists of two verses (see below). Although J. K. Tyl is said to have considered leaving the song out of the play, not convinced of its quality, it soon became very popular among Czechs and was accepted as an informal anthem of a nation seeking to revive its identity within the Habsburg monarchy.
Soon after Czechoslovakia was formed in 1918, the first verse of the song became the Czech part of the national anthem, followed by the first verse of the Slovak song "Nad Tatrou sa blýska". The songs reflected the two nations' concerns in the 19th century[page needed] when they were confronted with the already fervent national-ethnic activism of the Germans and the Hungarians, their fellow ethnic groups in the Habsburg Monarchy. Because of the linguistic and ethnic diversity of the First Republic, official translations were made into Hungarian and German as well.[page needed]
With the split of Czechoslovakia in December 1992, the Czech Republic kept Kde domov můj and Slovakia kept Nad Tatrou sa blýska as their anthems. While Slovakia extended its anthem by adding a second verse, the Czech Republic's national anthem was adopted unextended, in its single-verse version.
In 1882, Antonín Dvořák used Kde domov můj in his incidental music to the František Ferdinand Šamberk play Josef Kajetán Tyl, Op. 62, B. 125. The overture is often played separately as a concert work entitled Domov můj (My Home).
Czech original | IPA transcription | Poetic English translation 1 |
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I | 1 | I |
The first stanza, along with that of the Slovak song Nad Tatrou sa blýska which is nowadays the national anthem of Slovakia, became from 1918 to 1992 the national anthem of Czechoslovakia.
Czech and Slovak original | IPA transcription | English translation |
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Stanza 1 (Kde domov můj) | ||
Kde domov můj, kde domov můj, | [ɡdɛ ˈdo.mof muːj | ɡdɛ ˈdo.mof muːj |] | Where my home is, where my home is, |
Stanza 2 (Nad Tatrou sa blýska) | ||
Nad Tatrou sa blýska, hromy divo bijú | [ˈnat ta.trɔʊ̯ sa ˈbliːs.ka | ˈɦrɔ.mi ˈdi.ʋɔ ˈbi.juː] | There is lightning over the Tatras, thunders wildly beat, |
The following are the lyrics according to Appendix 6 of Czech Act No. 3/1993 Coll., as adapted by Act No. 154/1998 Coll.
Czech original | IPA transcription | Official English translation | Poetic English translation |
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Kde domov můj, kde domov můj, | [ɡdɛ ˈdo.mof muːj | ɡdɛ ˈdo.mof muːj |] | Where my home is, where my home is, | Where my home is, where my home is, |
German translation (used 1918–1938 and 1939–1945) | Hungarian translation (used 1920–1938) |
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Wo ist mein Heim, mein Vaterland, | Hol van honom, hol a hazám, |
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