My ancestor Petar came from Montenegro to Pannonia and joined the army of Prince Eugene. It can be seen from old records that he served in the cavalry. As a reward for his military service, he received land in the town of Sibinj (today's Croatia). The family still lives on that land today. Although I don't know anything more about my ancestor, I am so proud of him and grateful to prinz Eugen.
@@srdjanmiladinovic5513 Unfortunately, I don't know how he considered himself because in that period there were no nations in the Balkans in the sense that we understand it today. I honestly don't even know if he was Orthodox or Catholic. In the documents of the war chamber in Vienna, it is written that there are some Orthodox among them, but there is no concrete evidence which family was exactly ortodox. As far as I know, my ancestors considered themselves Montenegrins in some ethnic/proto-national sense until the middle of the 19th century when the concept of modern nations was established in Europe. In that period, the Catholics in Slavonia became Croats, and the Orthodox became Serbs...
@@antoniolagator9519 ako mene pitaš dal mi je krivo, pa jeste, ovi ljudi koji ovde oduvek žive od Soluna do Graca su pod stranim uticajem menjali veru, identitet primoravani da idu u ratove i žive u bedi i siromaštvu. šteta zbog stradanja ljudi, istine, pravde... tako da mi jeste krivo.
Greethings from Serbia!! We remember the good, old days when Serbs and Austrians were allies during the wars in 1683-1699, 1716-1718 and 1788-1791. WW1 was in fact an anomaly in our relations. Jovan Monasterlija and his Rascian militia fought with Eugen in the battle of Senta. Also during the siege of Belgrade in 1717, he fought with Vuk Isakovic and Stanisa Markovic. Even, metropolitan of Belgrade Visarion Pavlovic held his portrait next to icon of Serbian patron saint Sava. After 200 years of Ottoman rule, Kingdom of Serbia was restored.
@@juancarlosdegoya2757 Well, you spainards for sure remember Juan de Austria. Spain and Austria have strong historical ties which almost nobody knows of because of the crazy 20th century. The same counts for Russia and "even" Poland. Have a talk with polish people from the former austrian occupation zone. Some say it was even better than the independence (which may depend on ones point of view), but for sure it was all respectful & by far better than russian and prussian occupation. Not wanting to sound cynical: it may even have been a good deed of Vienna to take over polish land when the only alternatives were Russians or Prussians.
@Scp 173 As a Croatian writer once said, Croats and Serbs are the same shit just separated by the wheel of history. Our love for each other goes back centuries. Firstly the language may be similar but we are rather different cultures reasons being, Croatia was first sort of a vassal of the Franks and later on the Hapsburg's and influenced by the Catholic church. While Serbia was a vassal of the Byzantines and later on the Ottomans and was influenced by the Orthodox faith. When the 20th century came Serbia saw itself as a Sardinia-Pidemont of the South Slavs and was jingoistic while Croats were more liberal and we had our own plans for a South Slav state within Austria-Hungary en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trialism_in_Austria-Hungary even in the last days of WW1 the Croatian Ban asked the Emperor for advice to which the Kaiser replied "do as you wish". The Hapsburg's were rather more liberal compared to our brethren in Belgrade (and we knew that), nevertheless we ended up in the first Yugoslavia where the Serbs tried to centralize the Kingdom which didn't fly with us Croats and Slovenes, in the interwar period some Croat politicians and a Serb King were killed and everything else is 2 wars were we released anger on each other and communism in between where we pretended everything is okay. As for the Muslims in Bosnia "Bosniaks" they are a side product of the Turks us Croats didn't pay much attention to them as they didn't exist until Tito created them, during the 40s they considered themselves "Croats of the Muslim faith"
Ich als deutsche aus Sachsen stammend frage Euch, können wir uns vertragen? Dieses Lied ist viele hundert Jahre alt, es hat seine Berechtigung im Kontext der Geschichte. Heute jedoch könnten wir uns ins Benehmen setzen und darüber und die anderen Fragen reden.
@@weiterimtext8134 im Grunde war er weder Deutsch noch Österreicher falls du auf das anspielst er kam ja aus Savoyen das damals noch Unabhängig war Er war halt nunmal ein Feldherr der Österreichs
@@weiterimtext8134 Weil Österreich und Deutschland schon immer eins waren - bis sich die Österreicher 1945 nicht mehr allzu genau erinnern wollten, was sie zusammen mit dem Mann aus Wien alles so angestellt hatten.
Fun fact: Eugen of Savoy applied at the French court before Louis XIV. for a position as a military officer. The king of France declined and even mocked him that a small man like him was unsuitable for military service. Eugen of Savoy later fought many battles against the French and even defeated the French army decisively at Blindheim (the English know it as "Blenhem" and only mention that guy Marlborough), which did cost the French king the victory in the war of the Spanish succession. Karma is a bitch!
@@miracleyang3048 Well, Eugene fougth several wars on his own and won each of them. Marlborough on the other hand almost never fought a battle on his own, without support from Austria, so maybe it is rather Marlborough who is overrated?
@@miracleyang3048 He won each of the wars he fought for Austria; I did not speak about battles! But even if we go by individual battles, his results are still outstanding. Eugene won almost all, except for one or two battles when he was severly outnumbered (almost two to one) by Villars, because the British had left the coalition.
I am a Croat from Baranja/Baranya/Branau where Prinz Eugen owned land. I say we stand side by side and tackle the islamic threat together! No matter if catholic, orthodox or protestant, a Christian is a Christian, a Slav is a Slav, a European is a European. We should not rest until Bosnia is divided between our two great nations, until Bosniaks realise that their ancestors were christian Croats and Serbs, until Kosovo is safely in Serbian hands and Albania realize their Christian heritage and until Constantinople is once more safely in Greek hands.
@@DeskJet1 No. Never again Yugoslavia. It would be the death of individual cultures replaced by a fake politicaly imposed one. Just sovereign nations standing side by side against a common enemy.
Prinz Eugen der edle Ritter, makes me emotional for some reason, even though I am not a Savoyard or Germanic descent, it's amazing how folk and classical music can connect with people from all parts of the world. :-)
Prinz Ludewig ritt auf und Nieder, "Halt't euch brav, ihr deutschen Brüder, Greift den Feind nur Herzhaft an!" For some reason this part is always the most addicting
Ich habe dieses Lied noch im Musikunterricht meiner Realschule während der 1970er gelernt! Wohl undenkbar in heutigen Schulen , mein damaliger , schon älterer , Musiklehrer hatte schon meine Mutter während des Krieges unterrichtet .
@@dr.ludwig Du kannst sicher davon ausgehen , das es KEIN traditionelles Liedgut ist , jedenfalls kein deutsches Liedgut. Oder sie lernen , welche Lieder alle "Nazi" sind ?
@@61diemai meine Schulzeit ist zwar auch schon etwas her aber ja Deutsches wird nicht mehr gelehrt aber Noten schreiben, bekanntes wie Mozart,Bethoven villt noch. Aber dazu muss man sagen das hat 90% meiner damaligen klasse sowieso nicht interessiert.
Tatsächlich weiß ich das noch ähnliche Lieder unterrichtet werden in Schulen auf dem Dorf. Ich besitze eine umfangreiche Sammlung an deutschen Liederbüchern und habe eine Musiklehrerin kennengelernt, die davon sehr angetan war. Ich hab ihr ein eigenes Exemplar von einem Werk geschenkt. Ich saß auch manchmal am Abend zusammen mit ihr hab alte deutsche Lieder gesungen.
Interessant ist, dass Eugen mit den Herrschergeschlechtern der Borbonen, Habsburger (spanisch u. österreichisch), Wittelsbacher, Baden-Baden und Savoyen direkt verwandt war. Das heißt, dass er sowohl Deutscher, Franzose, Italiener und Spanier war.
@@Berzelmayr Schwachsinn, das lag lediglich daran, dass er der Deutschen Sprache nicht besonders gut mächtig war und er nie von jemandem darauf hingewiesen wurde, dass man seinen Namen im Deutschen anders schreibe, so zumindest Alfred v. Anreth
@@TheAustrianAnimations87 Thanks, I'm glad to hear that, after nearly 300 years of war, we have become allies 😄 By the way, your videos are very successful
Even as I kinda "adopted" Austria, I can't help but to admire the Ottoman Empire in ways. Nothing like a gentleman's rivalry. Also - Marco d'Aviano, emperor Leopold's field chaplain, went along with Eugene on his balcan campaigns, and was famed for doing his utmost to make sure his troops treated their enemy with respect
When you are so cool that the cruiser ship that was named after you was able to survive a World War, assisted the 2nd heaviest battleship of Europe on a glorious combat and was able to survive 2 nukes on Operation Crossroads
The first time I heard that song was in school in music class at the age of maybe 10, almost 30 years ago. I was hooked to that song ever since💪😎! Even at that time a comeback of Prinz Eugen was overdue!!!
PRINZ EUGEN WOHL AUF DER RECHTEN! TÄT ALS VIE EINE LÖWE FËCHTEN ALS GENERAL UND FELDMARSCHALL!!: Me at 3am at the top of my lungs because of Prinz Eugen and Ludwig imao
I just realized Herr Prinz Eugens head shape looks like a thumb or long dinner plate. Mir ist gerade aufgefallen, dass die Kopfform von Herrn Prinz Eugen wie ein Daumen oder ein langer Essteller aussieht.
Why nobody mentions czech writer Jaroslav Gasek ? In Russia we know this Austrian marsch due to Gasek's masterpiece " Adventures of Good Soldier Sweik" :-)
I am greatful to Prinz Eugen that I have an "E" at the end of my middle name which I am not going to say but rhymes with "air". Thanks to Eugen, everyone can have E names, like Edgar, Edward, Eric, Enrique, Emma, Elisabeth, Elise, Erica, etc.
@@dr.ludwig "Als ältestes deutschsprachiges Lied mit Charakter einer Volkshymne kann Prinz Eugen, der edle Ritter, verfasst 1719, angesehen werden." Wikipedia: de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deutsche_Nationalhymne Unter "Vorgeschichte" unter "Erste Schritte"
@@Qaqucauyep he was the person that stoped the Ottoman Empire forever . An underrated genius not only in the balkans but also in the war of the Spanish succession were he smashed French forces in Italy . Eternal glory to him savior of my country from the ottoman scum
Ich bin Prinz Eugen dankbar, dass ich am Ende meines zweiten Vornamens ein „E“ habe, das ich nicht aussprechen werde, das sich aber auf „air“ reimt. Dank Eugen kann jeder einen Namen mit E haben, wie Edgar, Edward, Eric,
Mein Vater kam aus Semlin, gestern gestorben, da musste an das Lied denken. Er hat auch genug erlebt für mehrere Leben, angefangen mit der Bombadierung Belgrads als Kind im Zweiten Weltkrieg, Flucht (Vater im Krieg, Großvater als Zivilst ermordet, wie Hundertausende), Wiederaufbau, zäh, kämpferisch bis zum Schluss, weit über jedes normale Maß hinaus.
@@МиланЈовановић-м3б Thanks! There is a bridge in Austria (Enns), the border between the Soviet and the US area from 1945-55, Grandma came with her 3 kids in Autum 44 to this bridge but couldn´t cross it. So she stayed in St. Valentin = Saint Valentin, where we still live, which became the Soviet side. She was once called to the Soviet Command because a traitor claimed something. The translator there didn't say what she said, he just told the commander something. Fortunately, she also spoke Russian and at one point shouted: "It's all a lie." Then she was fine. Russian soldiers are known to be friendly towards children, including my father. (He and his brother stole a car tire while they were changing it...needed the rubber for model airplanes.) May I ask where you come from? PS: Years ago an archaeologist phoned all people with the same last name in Austria and soon found our family. They found a passport from an officer in an big Austrian war ship in the Adria from WW1. He was from Semlin and there were only one familiy with our name.. a uncle of his father as far as i remember.
@@ET_Geris I am from Serbia, specifically from Kragujevac. Our city was greatly developed by Austrian government during the brief period of liberation (1718-1739). Later we were capital of Serbia (1818-1841) and we had some notable German families that also helped in development of our city and had not collaborated with Nazi regime. Tragically after communist ,,libareted" our city in WW2 they killed all German families or exiled them and had sized their property. I am studying history and i plan to major in Yugoslavian history specifically. My family fought for Austria in many wars against Turks. German contributions to our culture, my city, way of life and even vocabulary is immeasurable. So learning more about our German population is always a treat. Thank you for your reply and if you have more stories of your family lives in Serbia and Yugoslavia please write them, those stories are always important for our history and historiography.
@@МиланЈовановић-м3б (google translate) I was too young, my grandfather didn't mourn the war either (he wasn't even in the comradeship association, he said his comrades all stayed in Russia; came back in 1955, physically ruined), so 1. for me it's all just hearsay and 2. Others know a little more - but not much, his older brother is still alive. There is a photo of my grandfather in a Chetnik uniform hanging here. When the Germans came he was happy because now the - regional - war is finally over (they thought). He changed from one uniform to the next - SS, (according to ethnicity and height) in hours. He had relatives - I think his uncle - among the partisans. He himself usually worked as a scout with his squad. It went like this: He told his uncle where in Belgrade they were patrolling, the partisans then blew up a mast somewhere else and nothing happened to anyone (especially his family... that was also the reason why my father stayed away from the Serbs throughout his life could suffer because his grandfather was killed in the great purge and not even his relative and officer in the partisan ranks could help him, an old man and pure civilian). There is a story that is historically interesting, but I hardly know anything about it, let alone can prove it. Perhaps this story already exists in several versions as a kind of urban legend; I could not find it: On exploration (SS-scout, knowing the languages & people), normally far away from his battalion he went into a house with one (several?) comrades. There was a woundet man lying there. He knew right away that it could only be a partisan, but he didn't want to burden himself with a wounded man and they simply left again. When they were in the village, a traitor came and told him Tito was lying injured in the house. They immediately ran back, but of course he was already gone. When that happened, it was a critical point in history.
@@МиланЈовановић-м3б I wrote an answer but it looks as it has dissappeared, if it is I can write it again. Second part - about my grandfather, who first was a Tchetnik, than a SS sodier, with an uncle who was a partisan officer, so they could talk and avoid to collide which each other´s interest - of this was: There is a story that is historically interesting, but I hardly know anything about it, let alone can prove it. Perhaps this story already exists in several versions as a kind of urban legend: on exploration - he normally worked as a scout with his troup of 8-12 SS soldiers, knowing the languages and people, almost always far away from his battalion - he went into a house with one (several?) comrades. There was a wounded man lying there in a bad. He knew right away that it could only be a partisan, but he didn't want to burden himself with a wounded man and they simply left. While they were in the village, a traitor came and told him Tito is laying wounded in that house. He rushed back to the house but of course it was too late, the man had dissapeared. If that is correct, it was a critical point in history.
ich bin türke, aber ich mag prinz eugen ein wenig und respektiere ihn sogar.(darüber hinaus gedenke ich voller respekt der türkischen Soldaten, die in zenta gefallen sind) 🇹🇷🤝🇦🇹
Das ist eine sehr edle Einstellung, wenn man einen Rivalen respektieren kann. Genauso können auch wir das Osmanische Reich als starkes Reich respektieren, welches eine lange Blütezeit erlebte
I believe that Prinz Eugen of Savoy existed, he is my predecessor, in the long gone time path, in breath, strength, resistance, in stability, part of this half-perished-unsucessedable-future-of unpredictable events. He is my saviour. Believe in him. that's why I listen to him everyday when I feel lost.
Biz Türkler ve Avusturyalılar çok savaştık. Sonucunda ise çokça ve şanlı bir tarih kaldı. her iki tarafta çok iyi kesinlikle. En son ise WW1 de İttifak olduk
@@Kartus. prens eugen normalde fransız fransa kralı louis ile arası b.k gibi olduğu için kutsal roma imparatorunun safına geçti yani prens eugenin anavatanı fransa kutsal roma değil
I've always enjoyed coming back to listen to this song, especially now as I've learned more about my family history. The German side of my family lived in the military frontier region of Croatia in Hungary and may have been present in Austria's army during the wars against the Turks
At that time, Austria did not exist as a separate state. Like Bavaria, Württemberg, Saxony, etc., Austria belonged to the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation. The Habsburgs were German emperors and not emperors of Austria. And not only Germans from Austria served in the imperial lord, but Germans from all over the empire.
My ancestor Petar came from Montenegro to Pannonia and joined the army of Prince Eugene. It can be seen from old records that he served in the cavalry. As a reward for his military service, he received land in the town of Sibinj (today's Croatia). The family still lives on that land today. Although I don't know anything more about my ancestor, I am so proud of him and grateful to prinz Eugen.
So your ancestor was an ortodox Serb (the people who constantly fought the Turks for 500 years) and you are today a katolicised Croat?
@@srdjanmiladinovic5513 Unfortunately, I don't know how he considered himself because in that period there were no nations in the Balkans in the sense that we understand it today. I honestly don't even know if he was Orthodox or Catholic. In the documents of the war chamber in Vienna, it is written that there are some Orthodox among them, but there is no concrete evidence which family was exactly ortodox. As far as I know, my ancestors considered themselves Montenegrins in some ethnic/proto-national sense until the middle of the 19th century when the concept of modern nations was established in Europe. In that period, the Catholics in Slavonia became Croats, and the Orthodox became Serbs...
❤
@@srdjanmiladinovic5513 je ti krivo...
@@antoniolagator9519 ako mene pitaš dal mi je krivo, pa jeste, ovi ljudi koji ovde oduvek žive od Soluna do Graca su pod stranim uticajem menjali veru, identitet primoravani da idu u ratove i žive u bedi i siromaštvu. šteta zbog stradanja ljudi, istine, pravde... tako da mi jeste krivo.
Als ein Ungarisch, ich danke Prinz Eugen für sein Arbeit gegen die Türken. Er hat meinen Land befreit.
I would have loved to witness all of these amazing songs when they were first played infront of an audience of sorts. Thank you for uploading them.
Nova himna Srbije...
The greatest general of erly modern war he was recognised by most popular generals after him like fredrick the great and napolion
The great Frederick learned the art of war from Prinz Eugen.
I love them both!
Bro he wasn't the greatest general during his own time
@@miracleyang3048 Yes he was
@@Tilly-u2h
Marlborough and Villars were better, if we look at the whole period then Turenne is incomparable
Aus den momentanen Gegebenheiten heraus, einer meiner Lieblingsmusikstücke. Danke Dir dafür!
PRINZ EUGEN DO IT AGAIN
Would you like his best friend to die twice ? ;(
Yes man you are right 😂😂
This is impossible baby
@@atillabayram7049 Well there is one way to do it, but i think that would be the final solution.
!!!
Wir brauchen dringend Prinz Eugen !
Prinz Eugen,komm zuruck !!
It brings to life a truly historic moment. Prince Eugen, a great leader in perilous times!!!!!!!!
I simply ADORE this melody
Prinz Eugen. Ein treuer Mann.
Greethings from Serbia!! We remember the good, old days when Serbs and Austrians were allies during the wars in 1683-1699, 1716-1718 and 1788-1791. WW1 was in fact an anomaly in our relations. Jovan Monasterlija and his Rascian militia fought with Eugen in the battle of Senta. Also during the siege of Belgrade in 1717, he fought with Vuk Isakovic and Stanisa Markovic. Even, metropolitan of Belgrade Visarion Pavlovic held his portrait next to icon of Serbian patron saint Sava. After 200 years of Ottoman rule, Kingdom of Serbia was restored.
The Serbs also fought with the Habsburg to put down the Hungarian rebellion and the Austrians intervened during the Serbo-Bulgarian war.
The serbs also killed Franz Ferdi- I mean... The serbs also fought with austria *COUGH* *COUGH*
damnjan prlincevic greetings back from Austria 🇦🇹👋
@@juancarlosdegoya2757 Well, you spainards for sure remember Juan de Austria. Spain and Austria have strong historical ties which almost nobody knows of because of the crazy 20th century.
The same counts for Russia and "even" Poland.
Have a talk with polish people from the former austrian occupation zone. Some say it was even better than the independence (which may depend on ones point of view), but for sure it was all respectful & by far better than russian and prussian occupation. Not wanting to sound cynical: it may even have been a good deed of Vienna to take over polish land when the only alternatives were Russians or Prussians.
@@jessasnamoi of Course I remember Juan de Austria and Charles V too I admire the Habsburgs respect to Austria
*Pass the AUX cord, Kerle*
*Aus cord
H U R R A K A M E R A D E N
As a Croat do I necessarily like ze Serbs? no, but would I help liberate them from the Turks? wholeheartedly I would
@Scp 173 As a Croatian writer once said, Croats and Serbs are the same shit just separated by the wheel of history.
Our love for each other goes back centuries.
Firstly the language may be similar but we are rather different cultures reasons being,
Croatia was first sort of a vassal of the Franks and later on the Hapsburg's and influenced by the Catholic church.
While Serbia was a vassal of the Byzantines and later on the Ottomans and was influenced by the Orthodox faith.
When the 20th century came Serbia saw itself as a Sardinia-Pidemont of the South Slavs and was jingoistic while Croats were more liberal and we had our own plans for a South Slav state within Austria-Hungary en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trialism_in_Austria-Hungary even in the last days of WW1 the Croatian Ban asked the Emperor for advice to which the Kaiser replied "do as you wish".
The Hapsburg's were rather more liberal compared to our brethren in Belgrade (and we knew that), nevertheless we ended up in the first Yugoslavia where the Serbs tried to centralize the Kingdom which didn't fly with us Croats and Slovenes, in the interwar period some Croat politicians and a Serb King were killed and everything else is 2 wars were we released anger on each other and communism in between where we pretended everything is okay.
As for the Muslims in Bosnia "Bosniaks" they are a side product of the Turks us Croats didn't pay much attention to them as they didn't exist until Tito created them, during the 40s they considered themselves "Croats of the Muslim faith"
Both Croatians and Serbs hate Islam.
But, they also hate each other because of Orthodox-Catholic conflict.
You don`t have to like Your Neighbours, it`s enough You send Your betraying Leaders to Hell, or better hang them
upside down right now....... ;-))
Unite and you'll conquer
Ich als deutsche aus Sachsen stammend frage Euch, können wir uns vertragen? Dieses Lied ist viele hundert Jahre alt, es hat seine Berechtigung im Kontext der Geschichte. Heute jedoch könnten wir uns ins Benehmen setzen und darüber und die anderen Fragen reden.
BESTE Marsch und Video!!!👑🇦🇹⚔🤝💝💐Bravo!!!🙂 Vielen Dank Dr. Ludwig 🌷🤗
....auch meine Mutter sang es....
3:16
The place this lyric refers to is modern-day Petrovaradin, a riverside fortress on the outskirts of Novi Sad in Serbia.
Einer der Größten Feldherrn Österreichs seiner Zeit aber auch wahres Universal Genie nicht nur im Felde
'Einer der größten Feldherrn Österreichs...' Warum heißt es dann: 'Halt Euch brav, ihr deutschen Brüder...'
@@weiterimtext8134 im Grunde war er weder Deutsch noch Österreicher falls du auf das anspielst er kam ja aus Savoyen das damals noch Unabhängig war
Er war halt nunmal ein Feldherr der Österreichs
Damals gab es noch keine Österreichische Identität@@weiterimtext8134
@@weiterimtext8134 Weil Österreich und Deutschland schon immer eins waren - bis sich die Österreicher 1945 nicht mehr allzu genau erinnern wollten, was sie zusammen mit dem Mann aus Wien alles so angestellt hatten.
I am sad that Prinz Eugen was sad that Prinz Ludwig lost his life.
I think nobody of that name really died.
@@tomasvlcek4476 prînz Ludwig was his brother
@@ilietudor6878 How is it connected with the siege of Belgrade and this song?
@@tomasvlcek4476 3:12 dumbass
Fun fact:
Eugen of Savoy applied at the French court before Louis XIV. for a position as a military officer. The king of France declined and even mocked him that a small man like him was unsuitable for military service.
Eugen of Savoy later fought many battles against the French and even defeated the French army decisively at Blindheim (the English know it as "Blenhem" and only mention that guy Marlborough), which did cost the French king the victory in the war of the Spanish succession. Karma is a bitch!
Marlborough deserves the greater credit for that, we've seen how Eugene preform alone when Marlborough (not very well)
France ultimately won the war
@@miracleyang3048 Well, Eugene fougth several wars on his own and won each of them. Marlborough on the other hand almost never fought a battle on his own, without support from Austria, so maybe it is rather Marlborough who is overrated?
@@xornxenophon3652 He didn't win each on them he was badly defeated by Marshall Villars in France
@@miracleyang3048 He won each of the wars he fought for Austria; I did not speak about battles!
But even if we go by individual battles, his results are still outstanding. Eugene won almost all, except for one or two battles when he was severly outnumbered (almost two to one) by Villars, because the British had left the coalition.
Im Namen des Vaters, des Sohnes und des Heiligen Geistes möge das Vermächtnis von Prinz Eugen noch viele Monde weiterleben.
Ruhe in Frieden, du edler Ritter, Prinz Eugen von Savoyen. (18 October 1663 - 21 April 1736)
I am not Austrian, but this anthem makes me feel proud and patriotic for a country I never been to and the achievements of Prince Eugen of Savoy :)
*Zeitmaschinen sind Realität*
Normale Menschen: Ich werde alle Fehler von mir rückgängig machen!
Ich: Prinz Eugen wir brauchen dich und zwar sofort!
Ich: Sarajevo 1914
warum hast du ein anime profilbild :(
weil anime klasse sind :D
Endlich jemand der die letzte Strophe nicht weglässt, Danke!
Es fehlt aber die Strophe "Am einundzwanzigsten August soeben!"^^
@@gt2x443 Ja, da fehlen die Kanonen...
@@gt2x443 Mit den großen, mit den kleinen auf die ****** ;D
@@Todesbananez, auff die Türckhen auff die Heyden ... hat mir in der Schule immer am besten gefallen. 😉
@@gt2x443 Doktor Ludwig ritt auf und nieder, halt' euch brav, ihr Deutschen Brüder, greift den Feind nur herzhaft an!
I am a serb from belgrade/ ich bin ein belgrader
Together for Europa :D
Serb≠Turk :D
I am a Croat from Baranja/Baranya/Branau where Prinz Eugen owned land. I say we stand side by side and tackle the islamic threat together! No matter if catholic, orthodox or protestant, a Christian is a Christian, a Slav is a Slav, a European is a European. We should not rest until Bosnia is divided between our two great nations, until Bosniaks realise that their ancestors were christian Croats and Serbs, until Kosovo is safely in Serbian hands and Albania realize their Christian heritage and until Constantinople is once more safely in Greek hands.
@@StarLord1206 Now would be a really good time for Yugoslavia to reunite. Společně k vítězství
@@DeskJet1 No. Never again Yugoslavia. It would be the death of individual cultures replaced by a fake politicaly imposed one.
Just sovereign nations standing side by side against a common enemy.
Sehr schön, Danke fürs hochladen 👍👍👍
some below me have uttered my sentiments - no need to repeat them here
wieder gut gemacht Herr Dr.
Halt euch brav ihr deutschen Brüder
Prinz Eugen der eddle Ritter, feels so smooth and folk-like and poetic at the same time, how is this concoction possible 😮
Prinz Eugen der edle Ritter, makes me emotional for some reason, even though I am not a Savoyard or Germanic descent, it's amazing how folk and classical music can connect with people from all parts of the world. :-)
Super! Sehr schön! 😀👍
Sounds so ÖSTEREICHE!!!
That means Austrian right.?
I don't know how but the melody was stuck in my head for months without knowing I had even heard the song!!
Prinz Ludewig ritt auf und Nieder,
"Halt't euch brav, ihr deutschen Brüder,
Greift den Feind nur Herzhaft an!"
For some reason this part is always the most addicting
Ich habe dieses Lied noch im Musikunterricht meiner Realschule während der 1970er gelernt!
Wohl undenkbar in heutigen Schulen , mein damaliger , schon älterer , Musiklehrer hatte schon meine Mutter während des Krieges unterrichtet .
Ich will gar nicht wissen, was sie heute lernen, wenn sie bei uns schon mit Rapmusik angefangen haben.
@@dr.ludwig
Du kannst sicher davon ausgehen , das es KEIN traditionelles Liedgut ist , jedenfalls kein deutsches Liedgut.
Oder sie lernen , welche Lieder alle "Nazi" sind ?
@@61diemai meine Schulzeit ist zwar auch schon etwas her aber ja Deutsches wird nicht mehr gelehrt aber Noten schreiben, bekanntes wie Mozart,Bethoven villt noch. Aber dazu muss man sagen das hat 90% meiner damaligen klasse sowieso nicht interessiert.
@@huskypuppy9785
Wenn ich ehrlich bin , uns damals auch nicht , aber heute kann man ja leider sehen , das es eben doch wichtig war!
Tatsächlich weiß ich das noch ähnliche Lieder unterrichtet werden in Schulen auf dem Dorf. Ich besitze eine umfangreiche Sammlung an deutschen Liederbüchern und habe eine Musiklehrerin kennengelernt, die davon sehr angetan war. Ich hab ihr ein eigenes Exemplar von einem Werk geschenkt. Ich saß auch manchmal am Abend zusammen mit ihr hab alte deutsche Lieder gesungen.
Interessant ist, dass Eugen mit den Herrschergeschlechtern der Borbonen, Habsburger (spanisch u. österreichisch), Wittelsbacher, Baden-Baden und Savoyen direkt verwandt war. Das heißt, dass er sowohl Deutscher, Franzose, Italiener und Spanier war.
Ein Feldherr aus den besten Adelshäusern :D
Deshalb hat er ja selbst mit Eugenio von Savoy unterzeichnet.
@@Berzelmayr Schwachsinn, das lag lediglich daran, dass er der Deutschen Sprache nicht besonders gut mächtig war und er nie von jemandem darauf hingewiesen wurde, dass man seinen Namen im Deutschen anders schreibe, so zumindest Alfred v. Anreth
Und Jude
So ein Prinz Eugen bräuchten wir wieder!! 😉😉😉😉
Die dritte Türkenbelagerung von Wien ist im gange und wird sicher erfolgreich für die Türken enden!
Es ist unser Held❤️🇦🇹
Hail the Prince from Savoy. The greatest HRE general. My ancestor Sir Pancheri died upon the walls of Belgrade when it was liberated.
As a Turk, I respect Prinz Eugen, he was a successful general and I respectfully commemorate the Turkish soldiers who died in Zenta
I watched a docu about Mehmet who conquered Konstantinopel. A great leader too!
@@dr.ludwig glad to hear that is my favorite sultan :)
Despite our victories, you Turks were still great rivals and a good WW1 ally. Respect.
@@TheAustrianAnimations87 Thanks, I'm glad to hear that, after nearly 300 years of war, we have become allies 😄 By the way, your videos are very successful
Even as I kinda "adopted" Austria, I can't help but to admire the Ottoman Empire in ways. Nothing like a gentleman's rivalry.
Also - Marco d'Aviano, emperor Leopold's field chaplain, went along with Eugene on his balcan campaigns, and was famed for doing his utmost to make sure his troops treated their enemy with respect
Herrlich und genial... zu dieser Zeit
Who would, at hearing such enthusiastic song, not jump in help of his fatherland and country, willing to give his best effort for it?
I am proud to be named Eugen
Ah yes, I was waiting for this one.
When you are so cool that the cruiser ship that was named after you was able to survive a World War, assisted the 2nd heaviest battleship of Europe on a glorious combat and was able to survive 2 nukes on Operation Crossroads
Heil Prinz Eugen Franz von Savoie
The March is wonderful.
Our Dr, Ludwig is a prince in the service of the Kaiser!
The first time I heard that song was in school in music class at the age of maybe 10, almost 30 years ago. I was hooked to that song ever since💪😎!
Even at that time a comeback of Prinz Eugen was overdue!!!
Wunderbar😆😃
Der fehlt uns(2024)..Rip Rouven
Es wird langsam mal wieder Zeit für einen Prinz Eugen!!!!
Ein son ding noch
Ein paar wackere Schwaben (nach Uhland) würden auch reichen.
Stimmt Deutschland braucht ihn aber fast noch dringender
@Luca mag Bier Egal wer irgendwer muss aufraeumen was Merkel und Co angestellt hat.
Wir alle sind Prinz Eugen!
Wunderschon Lied ! Vielen Dank Dr. Ludwig
PRINZ EUGEN WOHL AUF DER RECHTEN! TÄT ALS VIE EINE LÖWE FËCHTEN ALS GENERAL UND FELDMARSCHALL!!: Me at 3am at the top of my lungs because of Prinz Eugen and Ludwig imao
Meine Mutter hat das Lied noch in der Nachkriegszeit in der Schule gesungen und kannte es noch bis zu ihrem Lebensabend auswendig.
I just realized Herr Prinz Eugens head shape looks like a thumb or long dinner plate.
Mir ist gerade aufgefallen, dass die Kopfform von Herrn Prinz Eugen wie ein Daumen oder ein langer Essteller aussieht.
Liegt bestimmt an der Perrücke, die das Gesicht so einrahmt.
Stabiles Video👍
Einfach wunderbar!
Why nobody mentions czech writer Jaroslav Gasek ? In Russia we know this Austrian marsch due to Gasek's masterpiece " Adventures of Good Soldier Sweik" :-)
Sounds so elegant until you see the translation.
Amazing subtitles!!!
good, now I know, what braven Soldaten Schwejk has been singing :)
⚔️🇦🇹🤝🇩🇪👑🇭🇷🤝🇭🇺⚔️ Thank you my Brothers at Arms💙 Croatia will never forget you🙏
They did not liberate Crotia,they did not care the people at all
I am greatful to Prinz Eugen that I have an "E" at the end of my middle name which I am not going to say but rhymes with "air". Thanks to Eugen, everyone can have E names, like Edgar, Edward, Eric, Enrique, Emma, Elisabeth, Elise, Erica, etc.
When Turkish girl breaks your heart
as a turk i agree with you
Ruhe in Frieden Majestät 💞
As a Serb i support Germany
Er war unsere weiter Onkel,mit Schlossern und Ackerbauen in Ostkroatien,Baranja(die liegt auch in Magyarorszag)
Wikipedia gibt das als "erste Deutsche Nationalhymne" an. Dies ist eher ein Kriegsbericht als eine Nationalhymne...
Kannst du mir die genaue Stelle mal zitieren?
@@dr.ludwig "Als ältestes deutschsprachiges Lied mit Charakter einer Volkshymne kann Prinz Eugen, der edle Ritter, verfasst 1719, angesehen werden."
Wikipedia: de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deutsche_Nationalhymne
Unter "Vorgeschichte" unter "Erste Schritte"
Interessant, du hast recht aus diesen Volkshymnen entstand dann auch unsere Hymne irgendwann
eternal glory to the Habsburgs and prince Eugen saviors of Europe.
people don't realise that 1 single man fought for most of the balkan and hungarian freedom
@@Qaqucauyep he was the person that stoped the Ottoman Empire forever . An underrated genius not only in the balkans but also in the war of the Spanish succession were he smashed French forces in Italy . Eternal glory to him savior of my country from the ottoman scum
Can anyone tell me the name of the band that performed this piece?
Wir brauchen Prinz Eugen Zurück!👍
Ein hoch auf prinz eugen der edle Ritter
Ich bin Prinz Eugen dankbar, dass ich am Ende meines zweiten Vornamens ein „E“ habe, das ich nicht aussprechen werde, das sich aber auf „air“ reimt. Dank Eugen kann jeder einen Namen mit E haben, wie Edgar, Edward, Eric,
Eine herrliche Sprache!
Prinz Ludwig sehr interessant Herr Doktor ☺
gruss aus peterwardein
Ich war dort einmal
Gruß aus Deutschland. Pozdrav iz Njemačke 👋
Mein Vater kam aus Semlin, gestern gestorben, da musste an das Lied denken. Er hat auch genug erlebt für mehrere Leben, angefangen mit der Bombadierung Belgrads als Kind im Zweiten Weltkrieg, Flucht (Vater im Krieg, Großvater als Zivilst ermordet, wie Hundertausende), Wiederaufbau, zäh, kämpferisch bis zum Schluss, weit über jedes normale Maß hinaus.
Sorry to hear about your loss may your father be in better place, if it isnt too private may i ask where you and your family live now?
@@МиланЈовановић-м3б Thanks! There is a bridge in Austria (Enns), the border between the Soviet and the US area from 1945-55, Grandma came with her 3 kids in Autum 44 to this bridge but couldn´t cross it. So she stayed in St. Valentin = Saint Valentin, where we still live, which became the Soviet side.
She was once called to the Soviet Command because a traitor claimed something. The translator there didn't say what she said, he just told the commander something. Fortunately, she also spoke Russian and at one point shouted: "It's all a lie." Then she was fine. Russian soldiers are known to be friendly towards children, including my father. (He and his brother stole a car tire while they were changing it...needed the rubber for model airplanes.)
May I ask where you come from?
PS: Years ago an archaeologist phoned all people with the same last name in Austria and soon found our family. They found a passport from an officer in an big Austrian war ship in the Adria from WW1. He was from Semlin and there were only one familiy with our name.. a uncle of his father as far as i remember.
@@ET_Geris I am from Serbia, specifically from Kragujevac. Our city was greatly developed by Austrian government during the brief period of liberation (1718-1739). Later we were capital of Serbia (1818-1841) and we had some notable German families that also helped in development of our city and had not collaborated with Nazi regime. Tragically after communist ,,libareted" our city in WW2 they killed all German families or exiled them and had sized their property.
I am studying history and i plan to major in Yugoslavian history specifically. My family fought for Austria in many wars against Turks. German contributions to our culture, my city, way of life and even vocabulary is immeasurable. So learning more about our German population is always a treat. Thank you for your reply and if you have more stories of your family lives in Serbia and Yugoslavia please write them, those stories are always important for our history and historiography.
@@МиланЈовановић-м3б (google translate) I was too young, my grandfather didn't mourn the war either (he wasn't even in the comradeship association, he said his comrades all stayed in Russia; came back in 1955, physically ruined), so 1. for me it's all just hearsay and 2. Others know a little more - but not much, his older brother is still alive.
There is a photo of my grandfather in a Chetnik uniform hanging here. When the Germans came he was happy because now the - regional - war is finally over (they thought). He changed from one uniform to the next - SS, (according to ethnicity and height) in hours. He had relatives - I think his uncle - among the partisans. He himself usually worked as a scout with his squad. It went like this: He told his uncle where in Belgrade they were patrolling, the partisans then blew up a mast somewhere else and nothing happened to anyone (especially his family... that was also the reason why my father stayed away from the Serbs throughout his life could suffer because his grandfather was killed in the great purge and not even his relative and officer in the partisan ranks could help him, an old man and pure civilian).
There is a story that is historically interesting, but I hardly know anything about it, let alone can prove it. Perhaps this story already exists in several versions as a kind of urban legend; I could not find it: On exploration (SS-scout, knowing the languages & people), normally far away from his battalion he went into a house with one (several?) comrades. There was a woundet man lying there. He knew right away that it could only be a partisan, but he didn't want to burden himself with a wounded man and they simply left again. When they were in the village, a traitor came and told him Tito was lying injured in the house. They immediately ran back, but of course he was already gone. When that happened, it was a critical point in history.
@@МиланЈовановић-м3б I wrote an answer but it looks as it has dissappeared, if it is I can write it again. Second part - about my grandfather, who first was a Tchetnik, than a SS sodier, with an uncle who was a partisan officer, so they could talk and avoid to collide which each other´s interest - of this was:
There is a story that is historically interesting, but I hardly know anything about it, let alone can prove it. Perhaps this story already exists in several versions as a kind of urban legend: on exploration - he normally worked as a scout with his troup of 8-12 SS soldiers, knowing the languages and people, almost always far away from his battalion - he went into a house with one (several?) comrades. There was a wounded man lying there in a bad. He knew right away that it could only be a partisan, but he didn't want to burden himself with a wounded man and they simply left. While they were in the village, a traitor came and told him Tito is laying wounded in that house. He rushed back to the house but of course it was too late, the man had dissapeared. If that is correct, it was a critical point in history.
We need a Martial version of this!
There you go:
ua-cam.com/video/KZuGGrl3K4g/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/0GFvJBFbO6w/v-deo.html
this is officially my happy song.
Grüsse aus Belgrad
Da musst dann aber auch "Brüder auf erhebt die Klinger!" hochladen, das hat ja die gleiche Melodie.
Und das Ostpreußische Reiterlied auch^^
2:40 who is ment with "Prince Ludwig"
I respect prinz eugen im from Turkey people should respect good generals i read a lot of about prinz eugen and turkish-austrian wars
Just like we can respect the achievements of the Ottoman Empire!
Prinz Eugen👑🫅👑🇩🇪
ahh, very nice, Prinz Eugenius is so very handsome and vehement.
Amazing
Hail my savior 🇦🇹🇭🇷
Who are the interpreters of this version? It is particularly beautiful.
Would Karl Markovics, James Norton or Christian Bale be more suitable to play Prinz Eugen in a movie?
it is also the official march of the Italian cavalry.
ich bin türke, aber ich mag prinz eugen ein wenig und respektiere ihn sogar.(darüber hinaus gedenke ich voller respekt der türkischen Soldaten, die in zenta gefallen sind)
🇹🇷🤝🇦🇹
Das ist eine sehr edle Einstellung, wenn man einen Rivalen respektieren kann. Genauso können auch wir das Osmanische Reich als starkes Reich respektieren, welches eine lange Blütezeit erlebte
Prince You Genius
Das tun wir 2024 zu wählen.. Zu gehen, nicht zu sterben, schlafen.
Grüße an meinen Musiklehrer
Woher kenne ich diese Melodie nur??? Grübel 🤔. Ah! Das „Bürgerlied“ 1848er Revolution.
I believe that Prinz Eugen of Savoy existed, he is my predecessor, in the long gone time path, in breath, strength, resistance, in stability, part of this half-perished-unsucessedable-future-of unpredictable events. He is my saviour. Believe in him. that's why I listen to him everyday when I feel lost.
Prinz Eugens sleepy eyes make him look more powerful and handsome in a rugged sense.
Biz Türkler ve Avusturyalılar çok savaştık. Sonucunda ise çokça ve şanlı bir tarih kaldı. her iki tarafta çok iyi kesinlikle. En son ise WW1 de İttifak olduk
prens eugen türklere karşı savaşmasaydı severim kendisini
@@MelihLeiteherkes kendi ülkesini savunmak için çalışıyor
@@Kartus. prens eugen normalde fransız fransa kralı louis ile arası b.k gibi olduğu için kutsal roma imparatorunun safına geçti
yani prens eugenin anavatanı fransa kutsal roma değil
I've always enjoyed coming back to listen to this song, especially now as I've learned more about my family history. The German side of my family lived in the military frontier region of Croatia in Hungary and may have been present in Austria's army during the wars against the Turks
At that time, Austria did not exist as a separate state. Like Bavaria, Württemberg, Saxony, etc., Austria belonged to the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation. The Habsburgs were German emperors and not emperors of Austria. And not only Germans from Austria served in the imperial lord, but Germans from all over the empire.